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Week of August 30, 2004

Front Page

* Presidential Candidates Square Off on Housing Issues
* September Is Associate Member Appreciation Month
* New Apartments and Condos an Unlikely Source of Classroom Crowding, Study Finds
* Housing Snapshot

President's Message

* Please Take the Time to Help Us Solve the GLI Crisis

Housing Politics

* Association Health Plan Legislation Needed to Stem Rising Number of Uninsured

Housing and Economics

* New Home Sales Cool in July, But Remain Above Last Year’s Record Pace
* Existing Home Sales Slip in July, But Pace Was Third Highest Ever
* Eye on the Economy

Workforce Housing

* Missouri County Aims at Increasing Supply of Housing for Workers

Business Management

* Tech Talk: The Time Is Right for Buying a Computer

Small Builders and Remodelers

* Index Finds Strong Remodeling Activity in the Second Quarter
* Opportunities Abound as Baby Boomers Elect to Age in Place

Building Systems

* Builders in Deer Creek Converting From Modular Building to Modular Production
* Concrete Council Member Helps Rebuild San Diego Home Destroyed by Fire

Green Building

* Awards to Recognize Best Sustainable Practice

Seniors Housing

* Enter the 2005 Best of Seniors Housing Awards

Member Dividend

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Labor

* Residential Construction Superintendent Courses Pack the House at SEBC

Building Products

* Latest in Steel Framing ‘How To’ Series Focuses on Interior Walls

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* NAHB Board Meets in Columbus, Ohio, Sept. 29-Oct. 3
* Orange County, Calif., Builders Encourage Students to Pursue Home Building Careers
* Membership Planners to Gather at National Conference, Oct. 23-24
* Reduce Business Costs With NAHB Members-Only Discounts
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* Calendar of Events

NBN Back Issues

 

Missouri County Aims at Increasing Supply of Housing for Workers

Business and community leaders in St. Charles County, MO — a rapidly growing suburb of St. Louis — are leading efforts to alleviate a well-documented shortage of workforce and affordable housing in their area, according to Paul Dribin, executive director of the Gateway Affordable Housing Management Association.

Dribin’s company, Dribin Consulting, was commissioned in 2001 by the county executive to determine whether a local housing authority was needed. In his research he found that housing was virtually unavailable in St. Charles for families with incomes in the $30,000 range and that rental units were in extremely short supply at all price levels.

At the top of the list of what was causing the county’s high housing prices were overly restrictive land use requirements and building codes and other regulatory barriers.

“Ironically, the reason most people moved to St. Charles County was becoming its problem,” said Dribin. “Originally, people moved there to purchase housing that was more affordable than comparable housing closer to the city. But as land diminished and demand grew, housing became scarcer and less affordable.”


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A second study concentrating on how the county could address its housing problem without having to use large amounts of new local funding or create new governmental organizations recommended taking the following steps:

  • Create a new mixed-use zoning category
  • Allow for smaller minimum lot sizes of 5,000 square feet
  • Allow clustered development to save land
  • Allow “properly constructed and aesthetically compatible” manufactured housing
  • Implement quality-based development standards
  • Allow homes with narrow lot lines
  • Encourage mixed-use development that includes single-family detached homes, condominiums, apartments and commercial development
  • Build or rehabilitate apartments utilizing Low Income Housing Tax Credits in mixed-income development
  • Encourage employer assisted housing
  • Preserve the existing housing stock, including providing incentives for its rehabilitation
  • Reform the permitting and approval process
  • Create a workforce housing parade of homes and design competition

A new non-profit, Home St. Charles, is being organized under the local Economic Development Council to achieve several objectives based on the recommendations to the county.

Priorities currently include passage of legislation allowing a minimum lot size of 7,500 square feet; receipt of $350,000 of annual HOME funds from the St. Louis County Consortium for downpayment assistance; working with major developers and the local home builders association to hold a workforce parade of homes; and working with several employers to implement employer assisted housing programs that will match HOME funds for their employees.

Dribin said that a number of lessons have been learned as the county has attempted to undertake a workforce housing program:

  • Understand your community. Do not initially attempt programs that are significantly beyond the comfort level of the community.
  • Build alliances. Don’t look only to the “usual suspects,” but expand your alliances to other interested groups. In the case of St. Charles County, the business community has been the driving force.
  • Challenge standard assumptions about what can be done.
  • Start small to maximize the initial chances for success. Build upon those successes.
  • Have easily measurable tasks.
  • Be inclusive.
  • Listen.
  • Be prepared to change your plans.
  • Maximize market-based solutions. Communities are far more comfortable with this than with government-imposed solutions.
  • Give credit to others.

NAHB and Fannie Mae will be holding “Close to Home: A Symposium on Workforce Housing” in the National Housing Center in Washington, D.C. on Dec. 8. The symposium will feature new research on the housing needs of America’s working families and will include panels that will address defining the problem, overcoming barriers, workforce housing success stories and partnerships for solutions.

For more information on the symposium, e-mail Blake Smith or call him at 800-368-5242 x8583 or contact Kym Kilbourne, x8447.
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