This is all such who-ha. The bottom line is that I made a motion during the
affortdable housing hearings to make it 20 percent of BOTH rental and
homeownership projects when the developer got city assistanmce. Needless to
say some MCDA staff members were lobbying against either one of those
options, including the director Becky Yanisch,  and only the rental portion
went through. If they were so pro ont this issue they would have encouraged
us to embrace both. Maryland has this rule and it works great. You don't end
up concentrating poverty and you end up having real inclusionary housing
policy. 

Lisa McDonald
Tenth Ward Council Member

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Ford, Keith 
> Sent: Friday, October 06, 2000 10:08 AM
> To:   Multiple recipients of list
> Subject:      RE: New affordable housing new math
> 
> Tom is correct when he says "there  is no reason why the city could not
> have
> asked for some affordable units in light of our tax $ going into these
> projects". However that same rationale could apply, perhaps appropriately,
> to any project wherein the city invests money.
> 
> It could be a project by the MCDA, Public Works or whatever. I know -- the
> instance is here is that a private developer got public assistance. But
> isn't that true also when the City builds peripheral parking ramps around
> downtown, thus relieving office and retail buildings of that investment.
> How
> about when a neighborhood decides to invest some of its NRP dollars on
> pedestrian lighting, thus relieving property owners of some or all of what
> would typically be an assessment? How about the Park Board's investment in
> the Mill Ruins Park, that will benefit some folks more than others.
> 
> In each instance, policy makers have decided that there is a clear public
> benefit to the public investment, a benefit having nothing to do with
> affordable housing. The public investment in the lofts around the historic
> mills was made to preserve the mills and find an appropriate re-use. The
> City absorbed some of the extraordinary cost of the historic preservation.
> The council decided that was a priority worthy of public investment.
> Because
> the adaptive re-use in this case is expensive housing (thus meeting
> another
> city goal of attracting a wide range of income levels), the public
> investment will be recaptured a lot more quickly.
> 
> Don't get me wrong. None of this means the City Council couldn't or
> shouldn't put an affordable housing requirement onto any investment it
> makes. But I think it is helpful to try to remember why the City is making
> certain its investment in the first place.
> 
> Keith Ford
> Deputy Executive Director
> Minneapolis Community Development Agency
> (612) 673-5013            Fax (612) 673-5293
> http://www.mcda.org/
> 
> 
> 
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> > Sent: Thursday, October 05, 2000 11:06 PM
> > To: Multiple recipients of list
> > Subject: Re: New affordable housing new math
> > 
> > I appreciate Keith responding to the inquiries of the poster 
> > questioning why 
> > there are not affordable housing units included in many of the new 
> > developments along the river even though they are subsidized 
> > with tax pay $ 
> > going to very expensive housing.   Keith points out that the 
> > City's recently 
> > adopted affordable housing policy only requires that 20% of 
> > city assisted 
> > rental units are affordable.  
> > 
> > This answer points to a couple of things: one, even though 
> > the policy does 
> > not require that homeownership units assisted by the city 
> > include affordable 
> > units there  is no reason why the city could not have asked for some 
> > affordable units in light of our tax $ going into these 
> > projects; and two it 
> > seems only appropriate and prudent given our affordable 
> > housing crisis that 
> > we amend the current policy to include city assisted, tax 
> > payer subsidized 
> > home ownership units.
> > 
> > Tom Streitz
> > Kingfield
> > 

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