The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Development
Mark Teixeira — over how to pay for affordable housing in in town neighborhoods that are rapidly gentrifying around the Beltline.
The city has been criticized for falling short of its goal to create 5,600 affordable houses and apartments in the Beltline corridor. Officials have tried to address the situation. Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms campaigned on ago alto create a $1 billion fund for affordable housing, and the West side Future Fund is renovating dozens of blighted properties into affordable apartments and homes.
Like many private developers, though, Urban Creek said it needed extra funds from the city tomake it financially worthwhile to include affordable units among its mix of market- rate andl uxury units. Quarry Yards is one of the largest contiguous, undeveloped tracts in the city and has direct access to both a MARTA rail line and the Beltline, a 22- mile paved walking path and green space located on former railroad rights- of- way.
“Would Invest Atlanta and the Beltline consider awarding a grant to help offset the lost cash flow from doing more affordable housing?” Colin Curlee, a development associate at Urban Creek, wrote in a Jan. 14 email.
Urban Creek asked for a grant of $ 2.2 million to $ 4.1 million to cover the cashflow shortage, but city officials balked, according to emails.
“Beltline is amenable to funding but those amounts are a bit high for them,” Alan Ferguson, senior vice president of community development at Invest Atlanta, the city’ s economic development authority, told Urban Creek in a Jan. 16 email.
Atlanta Beltline Inc., the city agency tasked with developing the Beltline, has provided grants for affordable- housing development. The grants, though, are capped at $ 2million per project, said Beltline spokeswoman Jenny Odom.
The city requires new developments to set aside 15% of its housing supply for units priced at 80% of the area median income, or 10% of the units priced at 60% of the area median income.
Urban Creek and the city did not resolve the disagreement over financial subsidies, and communications ended in February, according to Invest Atlanta. Representatives from Urban Creek did not respond to requests for comment. A Microsoft spokeswoman declined to comment.
Urban Creek also sought an unusual type of municipal bond to finance affordable housing units. Called a lease- purchase bond, or a bond for title, the bond is issued by a government entity, then transferred tot he private developer to make the bond payments. Property taxes are reduced for the developer under Georgia law.
“This property tax reduction is often the most valuable single incentive available to a company,” said John Gornall, an economic development attorney at
Arnall Golden Gregory who has advised clients on bonds for title andwas not involved in the Urban Creek project.
Urban Creek had sought a $ 100 million lease- purchase bondfromthe city, according to emails, which didn’t suggest that part of the agreement was under dispute. Still, the two sides did not finalize an agreement, said Invest Atlanta spokesman Matt Fogt.
Invest Atlanta has issued four lease- purchase bonds this year to help finance affordable- housing development, including a $ 44 million bond to finance the 230unit Tama Glenwood complex in East Lake.