Affordable Housing Finance
REGIONAL REPORT
West
Citi Pilots California Bond Program
AFFORDABLE HOUSING FINANCE
• June 2010
Colorado reserves LIHTCs
BY DONNA KIMURA
SACRAMENTO, CALIF.—California officials and representatives
of Citi have come
up with an innovative plan
to help jump-start construction
lending for affordable
housing projects in the state.
Under a $350 million program, Citi
will be given an option to purchase general
obligation bonds directly from the
state, which would then provide proceeds
to fund Department of Housing
and Community Development (HCD)
loans.
The move comes after many construction
lenders have been unwilling to
make loans based on an HCD loan commitment
because of fears that the state
money may not be a reliable source at the
time of takeout.
The Citi deal provides a layer of assurance
for construction lenders that
funds will be available when projects are
ready to receive permanent financing,
says Steven Fayne, managing director at
Citi Community Capital.
The option plan has never been
done before, according to Fayne, who
describes it as a creative solution to help
affordable housing deals get moving.
For Citi, the benefit is the “ability
to do lending in the affordable space,”
he says.
HCD administers a variety of housing
programs, including the popular
Multifamily Housing Program, that have
been supported by Proposition 1, a $2.85
billion housing bond passed by voters
in 2006. Prior to that, voters approved
Proposition 46, a $2.1 billion housing
bond, in 2002.
The state loans are often funded at
the time a project has completed construction
and converts to permanent
financing. Construction lenders have historically
been willing to make loans based
on the state funds being in a project.
However, a weak bond market and
state fiscal crisis have meant
that California has largely
been out of the bond business
in the last few years. At
the end of 2008, the state
Department of Finance directed
agencies to cease making
any new contracts or obligations
for projects that were
funded from bonds, including
Propositions 1C and 46.
Lenders became reluctant to provide
construction loans to projects that
had state commitments. This froze many
new construction projects in the state,
says Fayne.
It left the affordable housing industry
in California looking for solutions.
Citi Community Capital is within
the municipal securities group of the
bank, so there is a lot of interaction with
the public finance bankers, which helped
in developing the bond option plan, according
to Fayne.
The state Treasurer’s Office and
HCD then worked with the bank to craft
the program.
Separately, the state Department
of Finance issued a budget letter at the
end of April that lifts a state bond freeze
that had been in effect since December
2008.
The new letter allows HCD and
other agencies to begin moving forward
on new Notices for Funding Availability
and commitments for projects that are
funded by bonds, says Chris Westlake,
deputy director at HCD. He notes that
recent bond sales have been successful,
and funding will now flow to previously
awarded projects.
State officials say their intent is to
have funds on hand to cover the HCD
loans so the Citi option may never have
to be exercised. The state may
just go to the market to sell
the bonds.
However, if that doesn’t
happen, Citi will be there as a
standby.
Colorado awards LIHTCs
In other news, the
Colorado Housing and
Finance Authority (CHFA) reserved
about $4.7 million in low-income
housing tax credits to five projects in
May. CHFA’s Tax Credit Committee reviewed
15 applications requesting more
than $15 million in credits in the recent
first round.
Reservations were made to:
-
Point of the Pines Gardens,
an 89-unit assisted-living project being
developed in Colorado Springs by
MEJansen Development Co., LLC;
-
Bluff Lake, a 92-unit project by
Mercy Housing in the Stapleton masterplanned
community in Denver;
-
Dahlia Square, an 88-unit project
by McDermott Properties in Denver’s
Park Hill neighborhood;
-
Glenwood Family, a 56-unit project
in Glenwood Springs by Archdiocesan
Housing, Inc.; and
-
Pikes Peak Senior, a 70-unit project
in Colorado Springs by Hendricks
Communities.
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