Page 4

Loading...
Tips: Click on articles from page
Page 4 5,129 viewsPrint | Download

HOUSING CRISIS

Twenty years ago, my wife and I were young professionals determined to purchase our first home before the birth of our daughter. We barely made it. It was 2001, in a periodic seller’s market where properties were listed for hours, not days, and cash offers above listing price were routine.

What we thought was a challenging market then now seems easy compared to the past two years. Limitations of skilled labor and developable land, unpredictable supply chains, and gravitation to high profit margins in higher-end homes have led to a dearth of development in the price range that works for young people making their way in the world.

This has made it even more difficult for people to find permanent homes in places that already have high second-home ownership rates. Using several towns in the Northern Forest as a sample, we see high portions of their homes categorized as seasonal or occasional use: Colebrook, 60 percent; Lincoln, 70 percent; Greenwood, Maine, 51 percent; Greenville, Maine, 60 percent; East Burke, Vt., 40 percent; Long Lake, N.Y., 96 percent; Blue Mountain Lake, N.Y., 96 percent.

While Covid produced increases in the region’s population and helped, at least in the short term, address an overall loss of people from the region, unintended negative consequences abound, including significantly higher home prices and conversion of many long-term rental properties to second homes or short-term rentals.

Young people are increasingly left out of the housing market and quality rental units are nearly impossible to find.

Clearly, there are serious challenges at the low-income end of the housing market as well, but many federal and state programs support non-profit housing development restricted to low-income residents.

These programs do not fully meet demand, but resources and political will exist, and are increasing, to help the most vulnerable populations.

The rise of high-end homeownership at one end of the housing spectrum and efforts to increase the volume of incomerestricted housing at the other end leave middle-income residents with very few options. This has disastrous implications for our communities and economy.

In some cases, employees are driving hours round-trip for work, increasing their transportation costs and the associated environmental impact. In other cases, crucial jobs in hospitals, schools and manufacturing are going unfilled — further contributing to community decline.

At the Northern Forest Center, we are addressing this problem in specific communities, building on our successful redevelopment work in Millinocket, Maine, and Lancaster, NH. We’re now a developer ourselves, creating a new model using integrated capital to improve existing downtown building stock and return it to productive use.

Our model allows for a longer timeframe and deeper investment than traditional developers can accommodate. In many cases, catalyzing additional private investment requires taking on a community’s worst and most expensive renovations. This is slow work. It needs to be accelerated and replicated in many more communities to meet the scale of demand for middle-income housing.

Improved policies and funding targeted to in-town redevelopment would not only make it more attractive for developers to serve the crucial middle-income market, but they would also accelerate community and economic development goals.

We’re particularly interested in what’s developing in New Hampshire, where a $100 million InvestNH Housing Incentive Fund will be managed through the Department of Business and Economic Affairs. This is a bold experiment to help address the critical housing gap that serves communities’ iden tified needs and doesn’t restrict occupancy by income.

Some have and will criticize these approaches. But we all have an interest in making our communities more accessible to middle-income individuals who want to live in rural places.

If we do this well by encouraging in-town development, increasing energy efficiency, and sourcing local materials, we’re demonstrating clear values that can attract people committed to a broad sense of community and environmental stewardship.

Rob Riley of Canterbury is president of the Northern Forest Center, which co-founded the national Rural Development Innovation Group with the Aspen Institute and the U.S. Endowment for Forestry & Communities.

See also