Apartment Finance
Today
BOTTOM LINE
Workforce Housing
Making it Work
APARTMENT FINANCE TODAY • July/August 2010
Here are three ways to cobble together the financing for
a niche workforce
housing product.
BY Les Shaver
On a Mission: Affirmed
Housing used tax credits
to build Ten Fifty B, a
184-unit project serving
workforce housing needs
in the San Diego market.
Photo: Costea Photography
WORKFORCE RENTAL HOUSING, ideal
for professionals such as teachers, firefighters,
and nurses, has always been treated as
a stepchild in the affordable housing world.
The majority of financing vehicles for rental
product target the poor, specifically the
Low Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC),
which targets those earning less than
60 percent of area median income (AMI).
When workforce housing—aimed at filling
the gap between unaffordable marketrate
housing and affordable housing supported
by public sector subsidies—does get
attention, it is typically the for-sale variety.
“When we talk about workforce housing,
we end up talking about for-sale products,”
says Rick Haughey , senior fellow for the
National Housing Conference (NHC), a
Washington D.C.-based advocacy group.
“I think [governments] saw a real need for
homeownership because there was a group
that couldn’t own a home. But I’m not sure
there’s much of a push in the rental sector.”
And with local and state governments
struggling, it’s even more difficult to produce
workforce housing—be it for-sale or rental.
For every New Hampshire that adds a workforce
housing program, there’s a Florida
that has to close its doors down because of
budget issues. “Cities, counties, and communities
don’t have a lot of money,” says John
K. McIlwain , the senior resident fellow/ J.
Ronald Terwilliger Chair for Housing at the
Washington, D.C.-based Urban Land Institute
(ULI). “Sources are drying up because
of their difficult financial situations.”
While financing vehicles are few and far
between, here are three possible streams to
tap into to help with the creation of rental
workforce housing.
1. Find federal funds.
On the surface, LIHTC funds don’t
work for workforce housing because the
sector usually covers those making between
60 percent and 120 percent of AMI. But in
an expensive market, 60 percent of AMI
could be considered workforce housing.
For instance, Ten Fifty B , a 184-unit project
developed by San Diego-based Affirmed
Housing Group in high-cost San Diego, is a
LIHTC project serving workforce needs.
“It will be targeting mostly 60 percent of
AMI,” says Jim Kroger , a partner in the San
Francisco office of Novogradac & Co. , a national
accounting and consulting firm with a
focus on real estate. “Tax credits and bonds
don’t go over 60 percent levels. But I see
some projects targeted at 60 percent AMI
that don’t hit 30 percent and 40 percent
levels [targeted at the poor].”
CHANGING
TIMES
Is workforce housing
still necessary?
RESEARCHERS SAY that
since the height of the
boom in ’07, home prices
have fallen to ’03 levels,
while rental rates fell
4.4 percent from early ’08.
“The need for workforce
housing is not as acute because
of the [price] drops,”
says John K. McIlwain, the
senior resident fellow/J.
Ronald Terwilliger Chair for
Housing at the Urban Land
Institute (ULI).
The Great Recession
caused other concerns to
usurp the attention of local
and state governments.
“[Many programs] are for
lower-income housing,”
McIlwain says. “Workforce
gets less attention.”
But workforce housing
will become more critical
as the housing market
tightens over the next few
years. “It will continue to be
bad in cities like New York,
Chicago, and Washington,
D.C.,” McIlwain says.
That means governments
must stay involved.
“It’s pretty hard to produce
workforce housing without
assistance at the state,
local, or federal level,” says
Chickie Grayson, president
and CEO of Columbia, Md.-
based Enterprise Homes.
Typically, however, HOME Investment
Trust Funds and C ommunity Development
Block Grants (CDBG) —not LIHTC funds—
are the federal drivers of workforce housing.
Both of these funds are funneled from the
federal government and distributed at the
local level. HOME funds let state and local
governments create affordable housing
for low-income households. The funding
provides formula grants that communities
can use to build, buy, and/or rehabilitate
affordable housing for rent or homeownership—
or to provide direct rental assistance
to low-income people. The CDBG program
is more flexible and provides communities
with resources to address a wide range of
community development needs, including
business grants to produce jobs.
“In a block grant, if a property meets the
slum and blight requirements, you can go
above the typical minimum incomes,” says
Chickie Grayson , president and CEO of
Columbia, Md.-based Enterprise Homes.
2. Turn to the local government.
Local governments do a lot more
than distribute funds when it comes to
initiating workforce housing. They have to
take an active role in order for workforce
housing to become a reality. In Portland,
Ore., for instance, the city supplied floors
above a library for a 47-unit, transit-oriented
development called The Bookmark Apartments
, built by Portland-based developer
Shiels, Obletz, Johnson.
Cities can also help developers with the
biggest hurdle of all: obtaining land. “A lot
of times the key is the locality giving free
[or discounted] land,” Haughey says. “Then
the developer might build income- or rentrestricted
apartments.”
This isn’t uncommon, Grayson adds.
“In some cases, local government will have some land available that they can provide at
a below-market price,” she says. “If you can
get the land for less, that’s helpful.”
But Haughey says localities are cognizant
of the use of the land they’re handing
out. That sometimes restricts a development’s
AMI requirements. “If it is marketrate,
it can be difficult for a community to
justify giving land. The locality has to make
a conscious choice that they don’t want a
pure affordable [project] with an intention
of not concentrating lower-income people.”
3. Seek mortgage relief.
Outside of grants or discounted
land, below-market interest rates can help a
workforce deal pencil out. Sometimes these
soft second mortgages may be a cash flow
mortgage, where developers only pay a percentage
of cash flow after the first mortgage.
Other times, they may be at a below-market
interest rate. And sometimes, the loans may
not have to be repaid until the property is
sold or refinanced in 10 to 15 years.
These soft second mortgages could come
from any number of places. McIlwain says
the Federal Home Loan Bank offers one
such program. But again, localities play a
huge role. “Many cities have these mortgage
programs and some counties do,” McIlwain
says. “Some make loans from local housing
trust funds.”
Regardless of the source, McIlwain adds,
the goal is the same: “The trick is to fill in
the gap between the first mortgage that the
property can support with reduced rents
and the total financing cost.” |