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Op-ed: Bonnie Finley: Longmont City Council Member: Numbers Don’t Lie

Affordable housing is in the news frequently these days. Some politicians would have you believe nothing has been done to help Longmont’s affordable housing situation these last few years.
Bonnie Finely
Source: City of Longmont webiste

This content was originally published by the Longmont Observer and is licensed under a Creative Commons license.

Affordable housing is in the news frequently these days. Some politicians would

have you believe nothing has been done to help Longmont’s affordable housing

situation these last few years. And yet, somehow, Longmont is the most

affordable community in Boulder County. Just to set the record straight:

  • In 2011/2012, we convened a Workforce Housing Task Force made up of

    community members, who worked long and hard to provide the city with a

    blueprint on affordable housing.

  • The 2017 City Council increased the money going toward affordable

    housing to over $1,000,000 per year as per that blueprint.

  • That Council also decided that half of the new marijuana taxes collected

    will go toward low-income housing programs as well.

  • Another one of its suggestions was to ask the voters if they would

    increase taxes for affordable housing. Good idea? Are we all willing to

    foot the bill for affordable housing?

Now the current majority of city council wants to tax the very people who build

houses 12% more than everyone else by passing the inclusionary zoning

ordinance. Boulder has had an inclusionary zoning ordinance for many years and

yet they are the least affordable community in Boulder County.

  • Could you or would you continue to be a viable business in Longmont if

    you were taxed an additional 12%? Could you do it without raising the

    price of your goods and services by an equal amount?

  • According to the National Homebuilders Association the average net profit

    to builders per home is 6.4%. Where is the 5.6% to just break even going

    to come from to pay the 12% tax?

  • The cost of this inclusionary zoning policy will come from increased

    housing prices for the rest of us.

Perhaps larger builders could increase the cost of their product and spread that

cost out enough to make the numbers work. Smaller local builders and

developers cannot. Therefore, the very policy Council is going to enact will

disproportionately hurt small local businesses/builders/developers in favor of

large, non-local businesses. Does that sound like good public policy to you?

Inclusionary zoning will help build housing projects for lower income citizens-

3500 subsidized units by 2035 is the current goal. However:

  • It will increase the cost of housing for Longmont’s other 80,000

    residents.

  • Longmont will no longer be an affordable place to live in Boulder County.

    We have an average median home price of $425,000 and Boulder’s

    average median price of a home is $925,000.

    This is good news for those who already own a home, bad news for everyone

    else-except the 3500. Adopting policy that will discourage the supply of homes will most certainly cause prices of existing homes to increase. Just look at San Francisco, Boulder or Aspen.

Why would we intentionally punish the very industry that can provide the housing

we need? Wouldn’t it be better to work with them? For example:

  • Let’s take city owned land and issue a Request For Proposal to our

    builders to create innovative, creative, affordable housing solutions.

  • Let’s amend our codes further to enable that same creativity on private

    land as well. The true solution to the affordable housing crisis is not in

    increasing the costs to build a home in Longmont. It is in working with

    the builders to find a better way to provide the housing stock we need.

  • Let’s take a look at the suggestions made recently by the Workforce

    Housing Committee and adopt codes and revise development procedures

    that would allow builders to save time/money and build a more affordable

    product.

  • Let’s look at putting an issue on the ballot that would spread the cost of

    providing subsidized housing to everyone in the community. Let the

    community decide our level of commitment to affordable housing.

The possibilities are endless. We just need big picture thinkers. Solutions are

always better when everyone is at the table, not when one single industry is the

only thing on the menu.

Last time we had an inclusionary zoning ordinance, builders simply went to

Frederick and Firestone. Longmont was left without new housing stock. The

simple economic law of supply and demand should have foretold the problems

we had especially after the flood with a 0% vacancy rate and an increase in rents

and housing prices. Do we really think that inclusionary zoning this time will

be different?

Bonnie Finley

This is an opinion piece that was submitted to the Longmont Observer and does not necessarily represent the opinion of the Longmont Observer. If you have an opinion piece you'd like published, please visit our 'Submit an Opinion' page.