Ideas shared on how to address housing needs

Published 8:49 am Friday, March 16, 2018

Austin has made strides to address its housing shortage, Austin Area Chamber of Commerce Director Sandy Forstner said Wednesday, but there is much work to be addressed.

“Our employment is expected to grow 150 jobs a year over the next 10 years,” Forstner said, one of four panelists speaking during the Governor’s Regional Housing Forum, held at Riverland Community College.

Employers “tell us that their employees choose to live in other communities, due to lack of housing,” he said.

Email newsletter signup

And that ripples through the economy of Austin, where the impact is felt from schools to retail sectors, he said.

Austin is not alone.

The Austin Area Chamber of Commerce Executive Director was part of the Southeast Minnesota Regional Housing Forum Wednesday at Riverland Community College.

Representatives from scores of housing, government, church, community action and non-profit groups throughout southeastern Minnesota and gathered at the college to discuss a housing shortage, the first of seven such forums to be held in the state.

The forums have one major goal: To listen to what different areas of the state are doing to address availability and stability of their housing.

“Our charge … is to have ready, by the end of June, recommendations” to the governor about what actions can be taken to address shortages.

“Housing is the foundation … if you don’t have housing, you don’t have stability in your lives,” said Olmsted County Commissioner and former state senator, Sheila Kiscaden.

She is one of 28 to serve on the Governor’s Task Force on Housing, following its establishment by Gov. Mark Dayton in December.

Three work groups make up the task force, who address housing ownership, rental housing and housing stability. Housing stability, said Kiscaden, addresses barriers to housing, from shortages to people issues — the disabled and mentally ill among them.

“How do you plan for these people without supports for the rest of their lives,” she said. “How does that fit into housing stability, and what does it take to stay there?”

Task force members agreed that the way people addressed housing could vary specifically in each community.

“We are not here with answers; we are here with ears,” Kiscaden said.

There was a lot to hear.

Albert Lea Assistant City Manager Jerry Gabrielatos, Randal Hemmerlin, executive director of the Red Wing Housing and Redevelopment Authority, and Ann Austin of United Way of Freeborn County joined Forstner on the panel. While several issues were common to all, how different areas handled them varied widely.

Austin Mayor Tom Stiehm appointed a housing task force some years ago, and since that time, a tax abatement program on new home construction has been successful, Forstner said, with abatement applications approved for 25 new homes in Austin, and another 30 in Mower County over the past year, Forstner said.

Other recommendations from the Austin task force included addressing gap financing, use of tax increment financing, and working on ordinances dealing with rental properties.

Gabrielatos said, however, that a tax abatement program — similar to Austin’s — has only garnered lukewarm acceptance. There were 15 that showed interest in the past year.

“The challenge for us … is that we’re giving money away, but we’re not getting any bites,” he said, despite advertising on Facebook and use of mailers to Realtors and contractors.

Albert Lea also held a housing summit and “while people were interested, the thing we heard … was about the need for rehab dollars.”

Hemmerlin said Red Wing faced a scarcity of new housing, with no rental housing built since 2004, and only a handful of homes built following the 2008 housing crisis.

He brought to the Red Wing City Council an idea for an affordable housing trust fund in 2015, which the city accepted. The fund, which assists developers, is funded through an HRA levy and city dollars. Use of TIF is also being explored for a 294-unit rental project now being considered by the city, he said. The city has also created a Homebuyers Assistance program.

A 61-unit rental project, built last year, has proved to the city that higher rents — always thought to scare away tenants — has not held true. Rents of $1,200 and higher have not been a barrier to rentals, he said.

But Ann Austin noted that what may be successful in Red Wing may not fly in Albert Lea. She wasn’t sure those kinds of rents would be affordable in her city.

But that did not mean there were not options.

“I think there are many opportunities for housing development,” adding she knows of a lot of peers who find it more affordable to rehabilitate existing homes.

“I think that is something we can capitalize on,” she said.

She added a growing immigrant population are showing interest in owning homes.

The challenge to housing, she added, has to be answered by asking, “how do we work with people moving to our community, and how do we assess their needs?”

However that is done, there are solutions, she said.

“I think people are inventful and insightful” in the housing conversation. “I believe we can find the right answers together.”