A Tale of Housing Challenges in Two Cities:
From the summer 2003 issue of Regional Connection
Sue Klinkhamer of St.
Charles, Ill. and Zenovia Evans of Riverdale are two mayors from very different
suburbs.
Both looked at the
challenges their communities faced — from traffic congestion to an underused
downtown — and saw a common thread among them:
housing.
With support and guidance from the
Metropolitan Planning Council, each has found ways to provide better housing
choices in her backyard.
The kind
of housing that contributes to a healthier Chicago region.
A lot of mayors would like to have
Sue Klinkhamer’s problems. One of the Chicago region’s most desirable and
prosperous suburbs, St. Charles — situated along the picturesque Fox River in eastern Kane
County — grew from a population of 22,491 in 1990 to 27,896 in 2000, and is projected to grow another 28
percent by 2030.* Average home sale prices of $345,000 contribute to St.
Charles’ appeal to the upwardly mobile.
And, business is booming in St. Charles. Mayor Klinkhamer says that when a
developer wanted to build a new Meijer store that would provide 500 jobs, her
reaction was unexpected: “I thought, who’s going to work there, and how are they
going to get to work?”
City of St. Charles Mayor Sue Klinkhamer.
The downside to the growing property tax revenues that enrich communities
like St. Charles is a trend being felt throughout the Chicago region: fewer
options for folks at the other end of the housing spectrum. With local rents
starting at $900/month, workers at the new Meijer store would not be able to
live anywhere near St. Charles. “It was eye-opening when my hairdresser told me
she’d love to live in St. Charles, but couldn’t afford it,” Mayor Klinkhamer
lamented.
Fifty miles away in southeast Cook County, Riverdale has nearly the opposite
problem: “the value of our houses is reasonable and economical,” says Mayor
Zenovia Evans. The problem? “The south suburbs get a bad rap. People think of
the area as industrial … and closing steel mills haven’t helped our image. We’ve
got the housing. We just need to make sure it’s quality housing, and that the
jobs are available to make Riverdale a good place to live.”
Village of Riverdale Mayor Zenovia Evans. Photo by Andrew
Campbell.
Nestled alongside a thicket of rail lines that serve
both commuters and manufacturers, Riverdale has been one of the region’s
workhorses since the early 20th Century, providing a convenient location from
which to move goods. After World War II, Riverdale’s population boomed — from
2,865 in 1940 to 12,008 in 1960 — with the lure of industrial jobs, and new
housing came with. Today, much of that housing is in need of renovation. But,
Mayor Evans is thinking even bigger: “I want to improve the image — of not just
Riverdale but the surrounding communities — as a place to live. This can only
happen through meaningful investment.”
The Right Homes in the Wrong Places
Recognizing the same mismatch
throughout the region — a housing stock that did not fit with communities’
visions of their futures — MPC conducted a rental market analysis in 1999, and
found that housing challenges were affecting all of northeastern Illinois.
The 2000 census confirmed these
findings: areas in Lake and Will counties, for example, experienced dramatic job
growth that rapidly outpaced the growth of the resident population and the
available housing there (see graph).
Overall, while northeastern Illinois’ six-counties had grown by 11
percent in population and 16 percent in jobs since 1990, 28,000 fewer apartments
were available.
The story is similar when one looks at homeownership
figures. In Elk Grove Village, Ill., for example, a community of more than
33,000 near O’Hare International Airport that boasts more than 90,000 jobs, the
average home sale price is $191,000, which makes homeownership difficult for
most residents. Workers in two-income households can afford a $150,000 home on
average, or $80,000 for single-income households. Commute times that have
increased 10 percent since 1990, according to the Texas Transportation
Institute, provide further evidence that people pursuing job opportunities in
such areas cannot afford to live anywhere near them. To tackle this regional
jobs-housing mismatch, MPC looked at a number of approaches — employer-assisted
housing programs, tax incentives that encourage affordable housing development,
Housing Endorsement Criteria
to support high quality, well planned developments, and
more.
After seeing the alarming findings of the Regional Rental Market Analysis
and assessing various strategies
to break down the barriers to better housing choices, the Metropolitan Mayors
Caucus created a housing task force and asked MPC to be its partner.
Mayor Klinkhamer volunteered, since she
was interested in creating more diverse housing options in St. Charles, but
needed help showing aldermen the benefits.
“You say affordable housing and people think of a seven-story building
with laundry hanging out of the windows.
It was frustrating that people couldn’t see that everyone needs a place
to live.” Similarly, Mayor Evans seized the opportunity to brainstorm with other
mayors on strategies for encouraging local reinvestment, as well as solutions to
Riverdale’s image problem.
“We’re
just as amenable to new business and development as communities in the north and
west.”
For an example of how Housing Endorsement Criteria
can help, click here for an image of
St. Charles' First Street Redevelopment,
which will set aside 10 percent of apartments at affordable rent
levels.
Step One: Housing for Village Employees
Employer-assisted housing
programs seemed like a logical, first-step approach to both towns’
challenges.
Both mayors saw
the value of municipal employees living nearby.
Not only would they reap all of the
expected benefits of employer-assisted housing — shorter commutes, more free
time and time with family, and the satisfaction that comes with buying a home —
they would also know the community better and be more invested in it.
In Riverdale, employee homebuyers would
contribute to revitalizing their community by investing time and money in their
homes and neighborhood life.
In St.
Charles, average-wage workers would have access to the very expensive housing
market their jobs served. MPC designed a model program, secured additional state
incentives through the Illinois Housing Development Authority and introduced the
municipalities to local experts who could administer the program through the
Regional Employer-Assisted Collaboration for Housing (REACH).
Riverdale’s program, a
partnership with the nonprofit Regional Redevelopment Corporation (RRC)
announced last November, already boasts one new homebuyer thanks to down-payment
assistance from the Village and counseling provided by RRC.
Others are at various stages of the
process.
The City of St.
Charles program, in partnership with the nonprofit Joseph Corporation, benefited
from the track record of fire-detector manufacturer System Sensor (now owned by
Honeywell).
They boast 40
successful employee homebuyers after a two-year pilot with MPC and the Joseph
Corporation.
In January, the City
council approved funds for the program — to cover housing counseling costs for
participating employees — to which Kane County also contributed.
So far, three employees have been
approved for the program and have begun counseling.
Inspired by employer-assisted
housing as a simple, cost-effective investment with far-reaching benefits for
their communities, both mayors began looking for ways to do even more.
St. Charles is home to large industrial
park of companies that Mayor Klinkhamer sees as logical ones to recognize the
benefits of having their employees nearby and expanding St. Charles’ housing
stock.
She is working with the
local chamber of commerce to target companies to educate about employer-assisted
housing, and potentially contribute to a pool of funds for housing counseling
costs.
In Riverdale, the municipal
program has “generated quite a bit of interest,” Mayor Evans says.
She has also made presentations to local
chamber of commerce members, and is looking for ways for the Village to support
outreach and counseling costs for businesses offering housing to their
employees.
The State of Illinois is
helping.
First-time homebuyers,
whose companies are working with MPC and who meet income criteria, can qualify
for matching grants up to $5,000 from the Illinois Housing Development
Authority.
In addition, the
Illinois Affordable Housing Tax Credit Program provides a $.50 tax credit on
income tax liability for every $1 in cash, land or property donated for
affordable housing creation or invested in employer-assisted housing
programs.
Step Two: More and Better Housing Choices
Next, MPC introduced
the Mayors Caucus Housing Task Force to housing endorsement criteria that
attract and reward proposals for new housing that promote community and economic
development while addressing the needs of people who live and work in
northeastern Illinois.
These criteria create a
common language among developers, aldermen and community leaders that stresses
the value of a full range of good housing options.
The
benefits were obvious to members of the Metropolitan Mayors Caucus, who voted to
adopt the criteria last March.
Now
the Housing Task Force is encouraging individual municipalities to adopt housing
endorsement criteria.
Both
Riverdale and St. Charles have done so, alongside other municipalities such as
Arlington Heights, the Village of Round Lake Park and Wilmette.
Mayor Klinkhamer has
invoked the criteria in her recent efforts to find local support for a downtown
redevelopment project that would include a mix of shops on the street level and,
importantly, upper-level apartments, 10 percent of which will be priced at
levels affordable to local workers.
“The challenge for the city council was to put their beliefs into
action,” she said.
“The aldermen
were enthusiastic about the plan.
They believed in the concept and believed in doing it, just not in their
areas.”
The
housing endorsement criteria put in writing the idea that a balanced variety of
housing choices make a city an appealing choice to locate a new business.
“H
ousing,” the
criteria say, “when appropriately located, encourages the expansion of existing
and the location of new businesses and industries within the region.”
In Riverdale, Mayor Evans took
these ideas to the Campaign for Sensible Growth and Urban Land Institute (ULI)
Chicago, who have partnered since 2001 to offer Technical Assistance Panel
services to communities to help shape how they grow.
A 2003 ULI panel will assess the
concerns of Riverdale leaders and residents about one particularly troubled
privately owned housing community, and then provide guidance on how to improve
the site while retaining affordable housing options — and thus enhance the
area’s appeal as a place to live and work. The panel will be followed with a
yearlong commitment by the Campaign and ULI to provide ongoing assistance.
Step Three: Regional Efforts & Help from the State
“The Metropolitan Mayors Caucus
has been an important ally in tackling the housing crunch because they recognize
better than anyone that housing is truly a regional issue,” says MPC Housing
Director Robin Snyderman.
“Ours is
a mobile region, and the numbers show that people will go as far as they have to
for a good job.
If we want to spend
less time commuting and more time with our families, we have to be serious about
providing better housing choices.”
MPC took a regional
approach in tapping the housing authorities of Chicago and Cook and Lake
counties as partners in an initiative to encourage developers to include more
affordable housing. Each authority provides Housing Choice Vouchers, a federal
program that helps very low income people pay their rent. Working with the
Illinois Housing Development Authority, MPC’s Regional Housing Initiative pools
the unused vouchers as financing incentives to developers whose proposals meet
the housing endorsement criteria.
The incentive hit the ground running, providing funding for 25 affordable
apartments in 2002, to be developed in Lake and Cook counties as part of
broader, mixed-income communities.
There
are
also promising
signs of attention to the housing crunch at the state level.
At MPC’s Annual Meeting Luncheon last
June, then-gubernatorial-candidate Rod Blagojevich cited the need for a state
housing policy to guide and reward development of affordable housing. An early
encouraging signal was his appointment of a housing committee to advise his
transition team, which MPC staffed. State Rep. Julie Hamos (D-Evanston), a
participant on the committee, has kept the ball rolling to implement its
recommendations. After hearing legislative testimony last fall from a wide
variety of business leaders, among others, on the critical shortage of housing
for their employees, Rep. Hamos was appointed chair of the new Illinois House
Housing and Urban Development Committee. Thanks to her leadership, the Illinois
Housing Initiative (HB 2345) is on its way to becoming law. Along with the Local
Planning Technical Assistance Act, it will provide incentives to municipalities
to implement sensible housing plans.
“Mayors Evans and Klinkhamer are
leading the charge in tackling our regional housing shortage by finding
innovative ways to fill in gaps in their communities,” says King Harris,
chairman of Harris Holdings, Inc., vice chair of MPC’s Board of Governors and
former CEO of System Sensor.
“But
the State of Illinois should be doing more to reward such efforts — making it
easier for busy mayors who are trying to do the right thing.
Organizations like MPC can help, by
educating the public that a lack of affordable housing affects everyone.”
*Editor's note: St. Charles population figures above vary from those
given in the print version of this article. The numbers above are for the
City of St. Charles. The numbers in the print version were given for St.
Charles Township. MPC regrets the error.