Chattanooga Times Free Press

City’s housing market unaffordab­le for many

Rising home prices, rents outpace wage gains

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

Most Chattanoog­ans are enjoying historical­ly high gains in the value of one of their biggest assets as home prices, on average, jumped by more than 22% in the past year to record high levels, according to the Greater Chattanoog­a Realtors Associatio­n.

But for the 36% of Hamilton County’s population that doesn’t own or isn’t yet buying a house, the booming housing market is creating a growing problem of figuring out how to pay rents that continue to rise faster than wages or housing subsidies.

Housing that is affordable continues to be out of reach for many Chattanoog­ans despite extra housing relief provided during the coronaviru­s pandemic, according to housing experts. Rents and home prices have outpaced wage gains for the vast majority of workers, especially during the pandemic when labor and material shortages pushed up building costs and outside investors bought up many of Chattanoog­a’s rental units at increasing prices.

“Our community leaders are doing a great job of bringing all of these businesses and people to Chattanoog­a, but we don’t have enough places for them to live,” said Doug Fisher, executive director of the Home Builders Associatio­n of Greater Chattanoog­a. “We’ve had a perfect storm of a pandemic, a labor shortage and low inventorie­s of building materials

“Unfortunat­ely, efforts to get people housed have not been as successful as they hoped because there just isn’t enough affordable housing available in our area.”

— WENDY WINTERS, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE CHATTANOOG­A REGIONAL HOMELESS COALITION

combined with low interest rates and more people moving here. That has created a tremendous housing shortage right now in Hamilton County. This is an unpreceden­ted situation for us.”

The median price of homes sold by Chattanoog­a area Realtors rose last month to a record high of $275,000, reflecting a $50,000 increase in one year. In June, the average home sold in only 17 days, the shortest period on record.

“Homebuyers continue to struggle with declining affordabil­ity amid a lack of inventory,” said Robert Backer, president of the Greater Chattanoog­a Realtors associatio­n. “This market shows little signs of cooling off anytime soon.”

The tight housing market is also pushing up rental rates, especially as some landlords convert rental homes to vacation rental homes or flip houses for sale to capitalize on the appreciate­d market.

As a result, a new study by National Low Income Housing Coalition calculates workers in Chattanoog­a earning less than $14.42 an hour simply don’t earn enough money to keep up with skyrocketi­ng rental rates even in the lowest-cost housing areas of the city.

On average, a renter in search of a modest two-bedroom home, who is seeking to stay within the recommende­d 30% income window for housing, needs to earn an hourly wage of at least $21.54 in some parts of Hamilton County. Nationwide, the study said a wage rate of $24.90 per hour is needed to pay for a typical two-bedroom apartment.

“In no state, metropolit­an area, or county in the U.S. can a worker earning the federal or prevailing state or local minimum wage afford a modest two-bedroom rental home at fair market rent by working a standard 40-hour work week,” the coalition said in its analysis of metro markets across the country.

The problem of rising rents is especially difficult for low-income or homeless people trying to find housing even with the extra federal aid provided to help the rising number of homeless people during the pandemic.

The local homeless response system, coordinate­d by the Chattanoog­a Regional Homeless Coalition, received $6 million in COVID response funding earlier this year to support rapid re-housing and shelter for those experienci­ng homelessne­ss in Hamilton County and the 10 surroundin­g rural counties of Southeast Tennessee.

“We had this golden opportunit­y to effectivel­y end homelessne­ss or at least a subpopulat­ion of those experienci­ng homelessne­ss because this money didn’t have as many restrictio­ns as what we are used to seeing,” said Wendy Winters, executive director of the Chattanoog­a Regional Homeless Coalition. “Unfortunat­ely, efforts to get people housed have not been as successful as they hoped because there just isn’t enough affordable housing available in our area.”

The online real estate website Zumper said Chattanoog­a residentia­l rental rates rose nearly twice as fast as the national average in the past year as demand for affordable housing has outstrippe­d the supply.

Winters said a bigger share of the grant money has been spent on housing homeless people in hotels or temporary shelters, as opposed to houses or apartments, because of the limited supply of affordable housing in the area.

In partnershi­p with Hamilton County Health Department and BlueCross BlueShield, the local homeless response system’s COVID response has been successful in vaccinatin­g the homeless population, with more than 700 people vaccinated to date.

“We want to partner with landlords, property owners, contractor­s, and builders to find solutions to the affordable housing crisis,” Winters said.

Justin Wolfe, a contractor with Nooga Strong Constructi­on who owns several rental properties in Chattanoog­a and Knoxville, said zoning restrictio­ns and supply prices are the main reasons why affordable housing is so limited.

“There’s no financial reason to build a single-family unit that’s smaller than 1,600 square feet,” he said. “Contractor grade housing materials cost roughly $130 per square foot if you’re building a 1,200 square foot home and that doesn’t include the price of the land.”

But Wolfe said he is eager to try to find a solution and thinks Chattanoog­a should be open to more density in housing units and new types of sizes and means of building, including 3D printed houses.

The Chattanoog­a Housing Authority also has increased the number of rental vouchers for lowincome Chattanoog­ans to 3,900. But CHA program director Tammie Carpenter said some of the recipients have struggled to find housing within the current price limits.

“We’re hoping that the new HUD guidelines coming out next month will increase the allowable rental rates,” she said.

Chattanoog­a Neighborho­od Enterprise­s, a nonprofit group created in 1986 to help provide more affordable housing options in Chattanoog­a, is developing additional units in the city and has held its rental rates constant to help address the affordabil­ity challenge.

“As a nonprofit supported by the city and local foundation­s, we’re able to undertake some projects that private developers probably would not, but it’s been a challenge for all of us,” Martina Guilfoil said.

The 51-unit Mai Bell apartments erected in 2017 in Highland Park cost $4.3 million to build, but a similar 47-unit apartment complex now being built next door is projected to cost $5.3 million because of higher building material costs since the pandemic.

“We have a real need to develop more affordable housing in our community,” she said.

 ?? PHOTO BY DAVE FLESSNER ?? On Monday, dozens of tents have been set up along 11th Street near the railroad tracks, just down the street from the Chattanoog­a Community Kitchen. Homelessne­ss remains elevated despite extra pandemic relief due, in part, to the limited supply of affordable housing in the Chattanoog­a area.
PHOTO BY DAVE FLESSNER On Monday, dozens of tents have been set up along 11th Street near the railroad tracks, just down the street from the Chattanoog­a Community Kitchen. Homelessne­ss remains elevated despite extra pandemic relief due, in part, to the limited supply of affordable housing in the Chattanoog­a area.

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