Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development...

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Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005

Transcript of Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development...

Page 1: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

Ideas from other states…Michigan

Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development

September 13, 2005

Page 2: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

Michigan Context

Michigan State Housing Development Authority (MSHDA) is the state’s:

• Housing Finance Agency—both single family and multi-family lending

• HOME Participating Jurisdiction• CDBG Housing recipient—25% of total CDBG • LIHTC Allocating Agency• Public Housing Authority — $120M in vouchers• Emergency Shelter Grant recipient

Page 3: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

Keep in mind…

• Michigan’s budget has been structurally imbalanced for the last several years and economic recovery is lagging other states…

• MSHDA rolls its own profits into grants supporting a variety of initiatives; however, we do not receive a state budget appropriation for programs or operations…

• Our new programs have focused on making the most of limited resources or identifying creative applications of resources already available…

Page 4: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

Office of Community Development

• CDBG County Allocation program for non-entitled county governments—biannual allocation mostly for homeowner rehabilitation

• Housing Resource Fund provides competitive grants to local units of government and nonprofit organizations using HOME, CDBG, and MSHDA funds

• Technical Assistance Program pays for direct training for nonprofits and local units of government

• Other Initiatives include Cool Cities, Homebuyer Construction Loan, and other special projects

• Inter-divisional Projects such as Employer Assisted Housing, ADR/DPA program, Links to Homeownership

Page 5: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

Housing Resource Fund

• Our competitive funding activity is driven by the following goal:• All communities will be vibrant, affordable,

sustainable, diverse environments where people choose to live and stay.

• Affordable Housing is a given, and

• The impact of housing investment in local market is equally important.

Page 6: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

Ideas worth sharing…

• Cool Cities program

• Neighborhood Preservation Program

• Homebuyer Construction Loan

• Employer Assisted Housing

• Community Land Trusts

Page 7: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

What is Cool Cities?

• Governor’s Initiative • “This is about creating hot jobs in cool

cities throughout Michigan. It’s about attracting and encouraging people – especially young people – to live, work and play in the cool cities we are working hard to create.”

- Governor Granholm

Page 8: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

So what’s it really mean?According to participants in survey of college students, attendees at state kickoff conference, and local advisory committees, Cool Cities should …

• have a 24/7 atmosphere, dynamic, vibrant

• be a revitalized, energized downtown with “3rd places”

• provide creative opportunities (a “thick” job market), diverse housing, and wired for technology

• be a well-designed and cared-for public space

• have respect for historic structures

Page 9: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

So where is the program?

• $100,000 Cool City “Catalyst Grants” to local projects bringing more residents and/or more activity to mixed use neighborhoods

• Michigan Main Street designations and technical assistance from national experts

• Blueprints for Downtown matching grants for downtown market analyses and 5 year action plan

• Blueprints for Neighborhoods provides neighborhood redevelopment analyses and action plans

• “Priority access” to a Tool Box of over 150 state grants, loans, and assistance programs for Cool Cities designated projects and neighborhoods

Page 10: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

Cool Cities Funding

• Not really a lot of money, about $1 million per year in catalyst grants mostly pieced together from very tight budgets of flexible state funds

• Better coordination of other state resources around “tipping point” neighborhoods—have you ever seen so many bureaucrats excited at once?

• The bully pulpit effect is free—drawing attention to vibrant urban neighborhoods, changing attitudes, attracting investment

Page 11: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

Neighborhood Preservation Program (NPP)

• Most non-NPP grants cover one activity—homeowner rehab, rental rehab, or homebuyer projects—and are targeted to achieve both affordable housing and community impact

• NPP program provides funding for several activities at one time to address multi-faceted neighborhood needs simultaneously

• Includes up to 40% of total funding for non-housing costs associated with beautification, infrastructure, and neighborhood marketing

Page 12: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

NPP

• Focus on creating “neighborhood of choice”

• Experienced grantees with proven capacity

• True buy-in by neighborhood is critical

• Often multiple phases over several 2 year grant cycles

Page 13: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

NPP Funding Sources

• Housing activities supported by HOME, CDBG, and MSHDA funds

• Non-housing activities supported with CDBG or MSHDA funds

Page 14: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

Homebuyer Construction Loan

• Brand spanking new program• Provides mezzanine debt at attractive

rates to small/midsize urban pioneer developers

• Actual construction loan—not subsidy—to facilitate market rate development in “tipping point” neighborhoods

Page 15: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

Interesting Features

• New underwriting process compared to MSHDA’s traditional multi-family lending programs

• Significant reliance on due diligence reviews of primary lender

• Goal is processing time—exclusive of developer responses periods—of 60 days from intake to commitment

• Willingness to finance mixed use projects without requiring split ownership

Page 16: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

Homebuyer Construction LoanFunding Sources

• $10 Million in MSHDA reserves to capitalize the initial revolving loan fund

• Fannie Mae American Communities Fund may provide additional capital as program ramps up

Page 17: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

Employer Assisted Housing (EAH)

• Matched DPA for employer assisted housing programs—currently in 3 pilot cities, hoping to expand to 20 largest cities

• Providing up to $5,000 of non-amortizing, no interest DPA ($10,000 including employer portion) and MRB financing at discount rates to buyers up to MSHDA income limits ($69,800 in most cases)

• Focused on encouraging employees to invest in neighborhoods near their job—“walk to work” programs with some participants

Page 18: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

EAH Participants

• Initial focus of pilot program is on large institutional employers including medical, higher education, financial services, and local government

• Detroit Medical Center, Sparrow Hospital, City of Lansing, Lansing Board of Water & Light

• Currently working to roll out more broadly across the state

Page 19: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

EAH Funding Source

• MSHDA portion of DPA is financed from MRB bond proceeds

• Small interest rate premium (25 basis points) is applied to EAH-DPA loans to maintain returns—current rate is 5.375% fixed for 30 years

• Expansion of program has been limited by administrative demands of marketing to multiple employers and managing those relationships…

Page 20: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

Community Land Trust (CLT)

• A mechanism for providing permanently affordable homeownership by separating the ownership of the land from the house

• Limited equity/appreciation formula provides home for less than market value and passes on benefit to subsequent buyers

• Provides supply of affordable units in otherwise high-cost markets, especially along west Michigan lakeshore in resort areas such as Traverse City, Charlevoix, Petoskey, and Mackinac Island

Page 21: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

CLT Example• Locally based nonprofit CLT receives grant funding to

help develop a home with a market value of $150,000.• CLT identifies eligible buyer and sells home for $90,000.• CLT retains ownership of the underlying land which is

leased back to the buyer• After five years, for example, the market value of the

house is $200,000 and the buyer is ready to move on.• CLT has pre-emptive option to repurchase house for

original sales price plus 20% of market appreciation ($90K plus $10K)—$100,000

• If studies and projections are accurate, $100K is equally affordable to a similarly situated family in five years.

Page 22: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

CLT Caveats

• Legal implications of the ground lease model are complex and significant

• Application of property tax code to CLT model is still murky and handled differently by each jurisdiction

• Financing leasehold mortgages is less readily available, though Fannie Mae helps

• Assumes high capacity, stable, well-established nonprofit sponsor

• MSHDA is proceeding cautiously and seeking outside legal advice on possible alternative mechanisms to accomplish extended affordability

Page 23: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

CLT Funding Sources

• CLT projects are HOME eligible using resale requirements

• Some projects funded with MSHDA funds

• Significant technical assistance investment

Page 24: Ideas from other states… Michigan Indiana Conference on Housing & Community Economic Development September 13, 2005.

For more information…

Stephen LathomHomebuyer Development SpecialistMSHDA Office of Community Development735 East Michigan Avenue, PO Box 30044Lansing, Michigan [email protected]

www.michigan.gov/mshda