Call & Times

Fleeing New Yorkers squeeze surroundin­g housing markets

- By SUSAN HAIGH

Angel Garcia, a single father approved for a mortgage loan of $300,000, had high hopes in early 2020 of finding a house he could afford in his hometown of Stamford, Connecticu­t.

Then the COVID-19 pandemic hit. Within months, New Yorkers began fleeing the city and the surroundin­g area, snapping up houses. Home prices that already had been out of reach for many jumped higher. Garcia, who oversees security at Stamford’s government building, ended the year still living with his 3-year-old daughter in a Stamford rental.

“It’s so hard with all the competitio­n out here and the prices, as they are now. They were already expensive,” said Garcia, who has a second job as a security guard.

An influx of people relocating to the state and in particular Fairfield County, on the New York state line, has been celebrated by many including Gov. Ned Lamont, who said in his State of the State address last week that it showed a desire for more spacious living arrangemen­ts and an appreciati­on of “Connecticu­t values.”

But it also has made it more difficult for many to find affordable housing in an area that rates among the country’s most unequal places in terms of income levels.

A shortage of affordable homes is being worsened by newcomers who often are buying homes quickly and with cash, said Joan Carty, president and chief executive officer of the Stamford-based Housing Developmen­t Fund, a nonprofit that finances developmen­t of affordable housing and provides loans to first-time homebuyers.

“We absolutely can see it. And it’s just making, I think, the level of inequity more glaringly obvious,” she said.

One day late last month, there were just five single-family houses for sale under $400,000, with the lowest priced at $325,000, in Stamford, which is 52 square miles (134 square kilometers) and is considered more affordable than other Fairfield County communitie­s, said Tammy Felenstein, executive vice president and managing director of sales at Brown Harris Stevens Connecticu­t LLC in Stamford.

“You hear stories, ‘Oh, this couple have lost three homes. They’ve been outbid every time.’ And that definitely happens,” said Felenstein. She said her brokers are “dying for inventory” in Stamford, a place that can seem like a bargain to many from New York City.

In metro areas across the country, big-city dwellers relocated this year to smaller cities, according to Updater, a relocation technology company that has tracked national moving trends during the pandemic. Connecticu­t saw more people move into it than out of it for the first time in three years, according to Updater, which said Stamford was the top destinatio­n for relocating New Yorkers.

Thomas Madden, director of economic developmen­t for Stamford, said that in a typical month before the pandemic, there were roughly $80 million to $110 million in housing sales. That shot up to $146 million in August, $152 million in September and $157 million in November.

“It’s insane,” he said. “The prices have gone up and the sales have gone up.”

Lamont, a Democrat, noted in his address the advantages of the influx.

“There are many reasons young families and new businesses are giving us a second look and choosing Connecticu­t,” Lamont said, suggesting people may be drawn to the state’s schools, city and town centers that offer “some of the best and safest outdoor dining experience­s in the country,” or the ability to quarantine in a small backyard rather than a small apartment.

“Whatever the reason,” Lamont said, “tens of thousands of young families have moved to the state for the first time in a generation because they recognize and appreciate our Connecticu­t values.”

In the same address, he pledged to expand his administra­tion’s “commitment to affordable housing.”

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