08 February 2019

Public Pressure Here In Mesa To Address Affordable Housing Issues

That's one of the take-a-ways from a new analysis by CEO Pratima Damani of a locally-based SP Group featured in a report published by GlobeSt,com on 05 Feb 2019.
Taken together with other new data that the City of Mesa was #1 Year-over-Year for the highest percentage-increases in rents for mid-sized cities in the entire nation, there are good reasons pointed out in the report to realize the realities in The Opportunity Zones program where 11 OZones were qualified here in Mesa as areas that have been distressed or neglected in contiguous low-income census tracts to incentivize investors. Except for an area in northeast Mesa, an area in southeast Mesa, an area in southwest Mesa,most OZones are downtown.
Readers of this blog might want to note that 2 areas - one north and the largest in southeast Mesa - qualified because they were low-income areas, but because they are contiguous to census that meet that criteria. Those two areas are where most of the million$ in new investments are concentrated for infrastructure expansion and commercial/residential development.
One $200-million/40-acre Gateway Park is ten times more than what AZ State Senator Bob Worsley said he 'gambled' downtown.
Why Opportunity Zones Will Likely Increase Rents In Vulnerable Areas
WASHINGTON, DC—Opportunity Zones. The commercial real estate industry has been abuzz with the potential economic boom that comes with developing real estate or funding businesses in these new, designated zones located in distressed areas or blighted communities. Affordable housing advocates, though, have been concerned that these tax breaks may not trigger development in neighborhoods that really need it, but instead just spur plans and growth in communities that were already targeted for investments. They also worry that rents are going to increase when properties are “substantially improved” to meet the applicable Opportunity Zone conditions.Their fears, at least about the latter point, may be realized, according to an analysis by the locally-based SP Group.
“We analyzed the current state of rental affordability in the designated opportunity zones using the 30% rulethat a household that spends more than 30% of its income on housing cost is considered cost burdened,” says CEO Pratima Damani. “Using this threshold, our team compared the median gross rents to the median household incomes in the census tracts designated as Opportunity Zones.
If current median gross rents rise by approximately 30% as a result of construction/renovation activity under the program, about 80% of the Opportunity Zone census tracts would become rent burdened, explains Damani. Interestingly enough, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities believes that
The Opportunity Zone program could essentially amount to a “subsidy for gentrification” in many areas instead of providing the housing and jobs for low-income communities.
According to the SP Group, by mid to late 2019, relatively affluent areas designated as Opportunity Zones will be the first to get flooded with capital as soon as Treasury issues the pending guidance.
The truly disadvantaged communities will take more effort at the federal, state and local levels to attract investor funds. Hopefully, it says, there will be more focus on preserving affordable housing in the challenged areas included in the Opportunity Zone program.
“We anticipate that rents are not going to decrease when properties are “substantially improved” to meet the conditions necessary to be considered Opportunity Zone properties.
Upward pressure on rents will likely increase public pressure on local governments to address affordable housing issues,” says Damani.

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