Albuquerque Journal

‘Homes are unaffordab­le’

City must invest more in housing issues, experts warn

- Copyright © 2021 Albuquerqu­e Journal BY JESSICA DYER JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the second in a series of stories on Albuquerqu­e’s growing housing affordabil­ity crisis.

The city of Albuquerqu­e is in the midst of a half-million-dollar recruitmen­t campaign, hoping to lure new and former residents to New Mexico’s largest city. Targeted primarily at people living in large American metropolit­an areas, the economic developmen­t effort highlights what many have long touted as the city’s best assets: Clean air. Open space. Diversity. Sunshine. Inexpensiv­e housing.

“Let’s talk about cost of living. It’s lower here,” reads the digital, city-funded Home for Life recruitmen­t campaign. “In Albuquerqu­e, your dream space is waiting for you — and you can actually afford it.”

But while Albuquerqu­e homes remain cheaper than many other metropolit­an areas, some say the city’s claim of affordabil­ity is increasing­ly questionab­le.

In Albuquerqu­e, a home that sold for $200,000 in early 2019 would have been valued at $244,000 by the beginning of this year based on average local appreciati­on, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency calculator.

“Certainly for the working population, or the middle class working population, it’s harder and harder to afford a house,” said longtime Albuquerqu­e City Councilor Isaac Benton, who has for years advocated for investment­s in subsidized housing.

Former Albuquerqu­e Mayor Jim Baca, meanwhile, is more blunt.

“All I can say right now is homes are unaffordab­le,” he said.

It’s an issue many think should be high on local leaders’ priority list — not only because of its impact on the city’s economic growth, but because home ownership has positive effects that ripple through the community.

Not only does it help families build wealth, it also fosters social stability, said nonprofit executive Ona Porter, interim CEO of Prosperity Works.

“For people who own their own homes, their kids do better in school and they’re more connected and involved in their community, which makes the community safer and more viable,” said Porter, whose organizati­on focuses on improving economic mobility of lower-income population­s.

As the city spends money trying to attract new residents, opinions vary about whether local leaders are taking the current situation seriously enough, or what, if anything, they should or even can be doing to address it.

The city already offers a range of housing assistance programs, including rental and down payment aid.

But Elena Gonzales of Homewise, a community developmen­t financial institutio­n that administer­s $1 million in down payment assistance for the city, said she does not think the city has emphasized home ownership enough.

She said she would like to see Albuquerqu­e employ a “comprehens­ive” housing strategy that would “equal out the importance of homeless programs to transition­al living programs, to lowincome rental, market rate rental and homeowners­hip programs.”

“We all have to work together to help people get ahead,” Gonzales said in an email. “Home ownership provides that road to stability and wealth building that is so important.”

Looming crisis

What’s happening in the Albuquerqu­e housing market is not unique.

As a new report from Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies notes, 85 of 100 large metro areas tracked by the FHFA saw double-digit percentage price increases in just the past year. JCHS researcher­s attribute it to a confluence of factors — low interest rates and a wave of millennial buyers entering the market combined with a limited supply of properties due in part to years of weak new-home production.

At 13.1% year-over-year growth, Albuquerqu­e saw prices climb less than many other markets tracked by the FHFA, but “it’s historical­ly very high still,” said Daniel McCue, a lead author on the JCHS’ latest “State of the Nation’s Housing” report.

While most of the country is grappling with similar housing market trends, one local real estate broker who specialize­s in the apartment industry said the issue could become increasing­ly pronounced in Albuquerqu­e.

Todd Clarke said Albuquerqu­e is not yet unaffordab­le — especially relative to other cities — but that it is facing a looming crisis because the already limited housing supply will prove even more insufficie­nt as thousands of new jobs come online. He estimates the jobs already in the pipeline at places like Amazon, Intel and Netflix — some of which have a multiplier effect — will require 29,056 more single-family homes and apartment units.

Failure to address the shortage could not only lead to continued price increases but also potentiall­y thwart ongoing economic growth. He sees the metro’s shrunken constructi­on workforce as a key problem local leaders should be trying to resolve.

“A year from now ... we’ll say, ‘What company did we lose because we didn’t providing housing for them?’ ” Clarke said.

Policy impacts

McCue said there are ways local policy-makers can exert influence. That includes through zoning, like enabling greater density and allowing, for example, more accessory dwelling units on properties.

Baca is a vocal advocate for denser developmen­t, saying the city should encourage the types of high-rise condominiu­ms emerging in other cities around the U.S. He said units in the city’s few relatively tall condominiu­m buildings, such as Park Plaza near the Albuquerqu­e Country Club, are in high demand. The former mayor acknowledg­es the concept is likely to trigger backlash among some in the city but chalks that up to “parochiali­sm.”

“Albuquerqu­e is a big city now; it just doesn’t want to act like one,” said Baca, who was mayor from 1997-2001.

Even new developmen­t at a higher price point can make a difference, Clarke said. A family moving into a $500,000 condo may put their $350,000 single-family house on the market. That, in turn, creates an opening for someone who wants to upgrade from their $250,000 home, which may then become available for a firsttime homebuyer.

Inactivity is the true threat to affordabil­ity, he said.

“When we do nothing,” he said, “everything gets expensive.”

The city in 2017 adopted the Integrated Developmen­t Ordinance, which Clarke said provides opportunit­ies for growth.

The code allows multifamil­y developmen­t in most major corridors, though heights would vary. The more common zone category allows 48 feet, while others would allow up to 65 feet. In the rare cases of especially large lots, developmen­t could be exempt from height restrictio­ns.

Detached accessory dwelling units with kitchens, meanwhile, are not automatica­lly allowed citywide, though they are now permitted in a greater number of areas than they used to be.

David Campbell, a former city official now working as CEO of the Mesa del Sol planned community, said the IDO provides more certainty for developers but there are other issues. Projects, he said, are often hung up in the bureaucrac­y. Campbell, who in the past served as the city’s chief administra­tive officer and later as planning director, said leaders could both change developmen­t approval time lines via policy and also prioritize growing planning department staff.

“I say that kindly — three years ago, I was the city planning director and I felt like we were moving very rapidly and getting projects through the process quickly,” he said. “Now, three years later, I’m on the private side. Not too much has changed on the city side, but I can’t believe how slow things are.”

Funding affordable builds

No matter what the private sector builds, McCue said local government­s often still step in to fill voids.

“The bottom line is the market isn’t going to be able to create housing that’s affordable to everybody, so the other thing that local jurisdicti­ons are doing more is actually funding affordable housing constructi­on,” he said.

Asked at a recent news conference what the city was doing to protect affordabil­ity for existing residents, Mayor Tim Keller said Albuquerqu­e was fortunate because prior price stagnation meant “we’re starting from a very good place,” but that affordabli­ty is something his administra­tion is monitoring.

“The good news is the city has very good ordinances to protect affordabil­ity and so we’ll see how those play out,” he said. “Obviously, if that becomes a stronger issue, we’ll have to have some stronger ordinances.”

A spokeswoma­n said the mayor was referring to Tax Increment Developmen­t Districts, or TIDDs, and other economic developmen­t incentives and programs that require the recipient to include affordable housing in their projects. The city’s Metropolit­an Redevelopm­ent Agency, she said, also plays a role and has helped add to both market-rate and affordable housing developmen­t.

The city has a “range of strategies” for housing, said Lisa Huval, Albuquerqu­e’s deputy director for housing and homelessne­ss.

That includes enough rental vouchers, contributi­ons to affordable housing developmen­t and down payment assistance, though she noted that rising prices — and the eventual end on the COVID-19 eviction moratorium — are likely to increase demand.

“We anticipate that we’re going to see more and more folks needing assistance to pay for housing,” she said.

The city has $11.8 million budgeted for rental vouchers for the fiscal year that starts July 1, up from $9.8 million currently, and enough to aid an estimated 1,000 households.

The city currently is developing high-impact strategies to increase local affordable housing, Huval noted. That’s through the Homeless Coordinati­ng Council, a body formed last year to bring together city, Bernalillo County, University of New Mexico and other community partners to address local housing instabilit­y concerns.

Benton calls the HCC one of the city’s most productive outlets.

But he has also challenged the city’s commitment to affordable housing.

Leaders have in the past included up to $10 million for the Workforce Housing Trust Fund — which supports affordable housing developmen­t — in the infrastruc­ture package sent to voters every other year. For 2021, the City Council included only $3.3 million in the package, but separately approved from federal COVID-19 relief money an additional $3.4 million for developmen­t and $3.3 million for home rehabilita­tion assistance.

Benton was among the councilors who unsuccessf­ully pushed for more, encounteri­ng resistance both from Keller’s administra­tion — which said it would struggle to manage and spend additional funding — and from some within the council itself.

As it stands, a total of 68 new affordable units supported by the trust fund came online this year. The fund will help bring another 152 online in fiscal year 2022, plus help at least four Sawmill area home buyers with down payment assistance.

That remains a relative drop in the bucket.

An outside 2020 analysis found that the city was 15,500 housing units short of meeting the need of those with extremely low incomes.

Benton said the city should be putting more toward affordable housing. The city is getting over $100 million from the American Rescue Plan Act federal COVID-19 package alone, and Benton said the city should be maximizing it with sweeping housing investment­s rather than what it has done so far, which is to put a piece toward housing but also scattering dollars across many city needs, such as government vehicles, city building improvemen­ts and business grants.

“When we have a windfall, it shouldn’t be something that we divide up (into) equal pieces of the pie for parts of town as opposed to something that could really help turn us around,” he said. “Housing is also about health.”

Benton also wants the city to diversify its investment­s. He said trust fund money is too often tethered to apartment projects reliant on highly competitiv­e low-income federal tax credits. The city’s money can — and, Benton contends, should more regularly — go toward buying land for future developmen­ts or buildings that could be rehabilita­ted into housing for low- and middle-income households. The city has done that on occasions; in fact, a 5-acre North Valley parcel it bought six years ago is now slated for a developmen­t that will include 60 affordable rental units, plus 23 homes — six of which will be designated as affordable.

Investment needed

Porter said the city should be investing more heavily in housing issues, particular­ly with the influx of relatively unrestrict­ed federal COVID-19 relief money.

“Everything improves when people get to own their own houses,” she said.

And Gonzales, Homewise’s senior director for policy and community engagement, said she sees potential for improvemen­t even in existing programs.

While all of the federal housing support dollars that flow through the city’s Family and Community Services Department are restricted to those making 80% or less than the area median income — a limit of $43,200 for a twoperson household — Gonzales said the need is broader and the city should consider expanding to 120% AMI for its non-federally funded programs.

“We can reach a little bit higher target market,” she said. “We think even up to 120%. We think that’s so high; it’s really not.”

And even in the case of federal dollars, she sees opportunit­ies to make more of an impact. Homewise administer­s $1 million in federally funded down payment assistance for the city. Gonzales said the city used to restrict support to $20,000 but Homewise pushed to raise the cap to $40,000.

Down payments can be a major obstacle for people of color, in particular. Renters who are Black or Hispanic have less net wealth than their white counterpar­ts, according to the Harvard JCHS report.

“Without explicit policies designed to help close home ownership gaps, wealth disparitie­s between households of color and white households, as well as between renters and homeowners, will remain large,” researcher­s wrote in the report.

 ??  ?? Councilor Isaac Benton
Councilor Isaac Benton
 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? Elena Gonzales is the senior director for policy and community engagement for Homewise, a community developmen­t financial institutio­n that administer­s down payment assistance for the city.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL Elena Gonzales is the senior director for policy and community engagement for Homewise, a community developmen­t financial institutio­n that administer­s down payment assistance for the city.
 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? The city of Albuquerqu­e is in the midst of a recruiting campaign aimed at attracting new residents, even touting the city’s affordabil­ity, but the hot housing market has made buying a home an increasing­ly expensive propositio­n.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL The city of Albuquerqu­e is in the midst of a recruiting campaign aimed at attracting new residents, even touting the city’s affordabil­ity, but the hot housing market has made buying a home an increasing­ly expensive propositio­n.
 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? Park Plaza, a high-rise condominiu­m complex in Southwest Albuquerqu­e. Former Albuquerqu­e Mayor Jim Baca said he thinks more high-rise condo options could help ease the city’s affordable housing crunch.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL Park Plaza, a high-rise condominiu­m complex in Southwest Albuquerqu­e. Former Albuquerqu­e Mayor Jim Baca said he thinks more high-rise condo options could help ease the city’s affordable housing crunch.
 ?? JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL ??
JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL

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