Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Red state home prices lure young blue buyers

Urban renaissanc­e could shift shade of future elections

- By PATRICK CLARK

Dayton, Ohio, gave the world the Wright Brothers and the electric cash register. As recently as 1990, manufactur­ing jobs were the backbone of the local economy. But in the two decades since, the area has lost thousands of blue-collar jobs, and the local housing market still wears the scars of the foreclosur­e crisis.

Those attributes make the city representa­tive of the Rust Belt malaise that carried Donald Trump to his Electoral College victory. Montgomery County, composed of Dayton and its environs, opted for President Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012. This year, the county favored Republican Trump over Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton by 1.3 percentage points, or about 3,000 votes.

But the demographi­cs that shifted to the real estate mogul’s favor in places like Dayton might be short-lived. Health care companies and Internet marketers are powering a nascent knowledge economy in the Ohio city, one that also boasts an innovation district seeking to lure tech companies from more expensive locales. City developers have spent recent years trying to replicate the success of the Cannery Lofts, a trendy Dayton rental building carved out of an old downtown warehouse. And there are three new microbrewe­ries and a handful of historic districts where listings pitch homes to “urban pioneers.”

That mix of urban renaissanc­e and bargain real estate has made the city appealing to young workers. During the first 10 months of this year, 51 percent of homebuyers were under 35 years old. That’s the highest share in the U.S., according to a Realtor. com analysis.

Clinton’s loss despite her 2.5 million popular vote lead over Trump illustrate­d the concentrat­ion of traditiona­l Democratic voters in a handful of coastal states. Will the appeal of cheap housing help Rust Belt cities like Dayton attract young, well-educated workers? And if they do, will they change the political culture of states that turned away from the Democrats on Nov. 8?

Millennial voters backed Hillary Clinton, though not to the same degree they opted for Obama. Homeowners, meanwhile, are more likely to make it to the polls than renters, according to Census data. It’s not crazy to think that a cohort of millennial homeowners clustering around smaller, more affordable cities could be a bulwark for Democrats in future elections.

Amanda Hensler, 32, and her husband Zach, 34, were Dayton-area natives who originally left town for jobs in New Jersey. “I was pregnant, wanted to come back home and be close to family,” she said of her return. In June, they bought a house in a Dayton neighborho­od called historic South Park, where their mortgage payment is half their old monthly rent. Zach works from home for a Pittsburgh-based tech firm; Amanda, a former teacher, is working part time and taking care of the couple’s 17-month old son.

There’s a good reason that Dayton is popular with young buyers: It’s cheap. The median listing price was $120,000 in October, according to Zillow, and home values are still below their 2008 peak. Realtors say that one issue complicati­ng sales inside the city limits is finding lenders willing to make loans for less than $50,000. For those who can get a loan, there’s a small army of local investors fixing and flipping foreclosed homes.

None of this is unique to Dayton. The list of U.S. metros where young homebuyers are wielding the most heft in the housing market is full of post-industrial cities with well-built houses and pockets of economic promise. In a city such as Buffalo, N.Y., or Grand Rapids, Mich., a technology cluster or a successful medical center can set off a mini-real estate boom.

“If you think about the price of entry in these housing markets, it might be a $20,000 down payment,” said Jonathan Smoke, chief economist at Realtor.com. “In San Francisco, it might take 10 times that amount.”

One of the immediate reactions to the presidenti­al election was the suggestion that Democratic voters could seek to influence the Electoral College in future contests by moving inland. While such wholesale shifts seem as farfetched as prediction­s of an exodus to Canada, the one thing that does seems to motivate Americans, namely money, seems to already be doing the trick.

There’s evidence that the big coastal housing markets are becoming too expensive for even well-paid profession­als. Urbanism, meanwhile, is transporta­ble. And thanks to wireless Internet, so is work. A big house in a small Midwestern city is something that a lot of coastal liberals can afford. And while older workers with families and establishe­d careers are unlikely to pack up their lives, younger people see cheaper cities as a chance for a foothold in the housing market.

“There’s clearly been a kind of cascading of young workers being forced out of some of the top metros and tech hubs and looking at this kind of city,” said Mark Muro, senior fellow at the Metropolit­an Policy Program at the Brookings Institutio­n. “They often bring a blue sentiment with them.”

“You could argue that it’s already happened in Colorado and Nevada, where the exodus of California­ns has drasticall­y shifted the statewide politics,” said Aaron Renn, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.

On the East Coast, North Carolina has attracted Democratic voters from more expensive states. Whether or not smaller Rust Belt cities can have the same effect on their states might depend on whether they attract workers from outside the region. Cities such as Dallas and Nashville have become draws for relocators across the country, said Renn, but Midwestern metros such as Columbus, Ohio, and Indianapol­is mainly have attracted residents from within their states.

“I think the question of whether people are homeowners or not is less important,” said Jed Kolko, chief economist at job listing site Indeed. com. “The bigger point is that younger people were more likely to vote for Clinton than older people were. If the age mix shifted younger in many of the older manufactur­ing towns, it would probably move their votes bluer.”

Not all young people are alike. Adam Martin, 32, a partner at local real estate firm Loxley Martin, recently sold a house to a 19-year-old pizza delivery employee. “Someone like that can buy a house for $60,000 and have a mortgage payment that’s lower than his rent,” he said. Those kinds of young buyers probably have less impact on the culture of the city than college-educated profession­als who move in from out of state. Neverthele­ss, Martin said he believes Dayton’s downtown revival was being powered by a youthful population that would shift political preference­s to the left.

“I think the culture is changing,” he said. “There’s a younger generation that’s getting out there and fighting for what they want and having a say in the community that they live in.”

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