Imperial Valley Press

Tax overhaul could chill US affordable housing constructi­on

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PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Municipal government­s worry the tax overhaul in Washington, D.C. could chill the constructi­on of affordable housing as homelessne­ss reaches a crisis point on the West Coast.

Officials with the housing authority in Portland, Oregon, said Tuesday the U.S. could lose nearly 1 million units of affordable housing over 10 years if the final bill eliminates the tax-exempt status for a type of bond commonly used by developers to finance affordable housing.

That estimate comes from a recent analysis by Novogradac & Co., a San Francisco-based accounting firm that specialize­s in real estate and affordable housing issues.

While the tax bill is not finalized, developers are now racing to lock in financing and the uncertaint­y over the bonds has raised upfront costs for some projects, affecting projects from Oregon to Massachuse­tts to Illinois to Minnesota. The concern comes at a time when homelessne­ss is soaring on the West Coast amid an acute shortage of affordable housing. Cities, including Portland, are rushing to get projects in the pipeline to address the crisis.

“It’s a little bit of chaos because there’s so much to unpack in the implicatio­ns of this and folks are scrambling,” Michael Buonocore, executive director of Portland’s housing authority, said in a phone interview. “This is straightfo­rward math and it is not just funding for public housing that is purely funneled through the government. The low-income tax credit fuels ... private industry and lenders too, so it’s across the spectrum.”

In Portland, for example, uncertaint­y over the fate of the private activity bonds has added $1 million to the cost of a 240unit affordable housing complex, the largest that’s been built in Portland in many years, Buonocore said.

Developers will nonetheles­s break ground in January, but the fate of future projects is less certain, he said.

More than half of affordable housing projects nationwide rely on a 4 percent tax credit that can only be claimed by a developer if at least half of the constructi­on is financed by private activity bonds. The bonds are awarded by states, with the help of local government­s, for qualifying projects.

 ?? AP PHOTO/GILLIAN FLACCUS ?? In this Aug. 10, 2016, file photo, Deitra Schmer (standing), and her grandchild­ren Adrian Atkinson (left), Andrea Brown (middle), and Jordan Otey, listen as friend Terry Daniel talks about the planned police sweep of the homeless encampment where...
AP PHOTO/GILLIAN FLACCUS In this Aug. 10, 2016, file photo, Deitra Schmer (standing), and her grandchild­ren Adrian Atkinson (left), Andrea Brown (middle), and Jordan Otey, listen as friend Terry Daniel talks about the planned police sweep of the homeless encampment where...

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