Title: Vancouver Affordable Homeownership Forum
1Vancouver Affordable Homeownership Forum
- Washington Homeownership Center and The Federal
Reserve Bank of San Francisco
2Vancouver Affordable Homeownership Forum
- Agenda
- Intro and Goals Craig Nolte, FRB-SF
- Washington Homeownership Center Jeff Caden
- State of Homeownership WA Homeownership Report
- Local homeownership issues Tom Cusack, HUD
- Discussion
- Local Solutions to Affordable Homeownership
- Working Paper Jeff Caden
- Next Steps
3Affordable Homeownership Forum
- Washington Homeownership Center and The Federal
Reserve Bank of San Francisco
4Washington Homeownership Center
- First step to homeownership for potential
first-time homebuyers in Washington with less
wealth - The states largest and most comprehensive
clearinghouse of information related to
first-time homeownership for those with less
income
5Washington Homeownership Center
- Changed name from Community Home Ownership Center
(CHOC) to Washington Homeownership Center (WHC) - New URL www.homeownership-wa.org
- New toll-free Homeownership Hotline
- (866) 600-6466
6Washington Homeownership Center
- 700 surveys sent to potential service providers
- New service provider database
- Matches appropriate services with client
location, income, barrier, and step in
homeownership process - Tracks referral source
7Washington Homeownership Center
- Why do we exist?
- Increasing the size of the pie
- 60,000 incremental homeowners in 15 years
- Connecting the Dots
8Washington Homeownership Center
- What is our place in the homeownership continuum?
in the housing continuum? - It takes a village Washington Homeownership
Center is YOUR village - Sharing - Partnership
9Washington Homeownership Center
Homebuyer Education Curriculum Statewide
Outreach to Prospective First-time
Homebuyers Building partnerships statewide
10 The State of Homeownership in Washington
- Washington is 43rd of 50 states in homeownership
rate (66) - Median home price 275,000 (187,500 U.S.)
- 252,000 Clark County
- 390,000 King
112005 Washington Homeownership Report
- Objectives
- Understand the barriers and opportunities in
increasing LMI homeownership opportunities - Identify areas where increased homeownership for
families and individuals with less wealth could
be achieved most readily
122005 Washington Homeownership Report
- Statewide
- 300,000 renting households in Washington between
50 and 100 of AMI - WHC priorities Spokane, Clark, and Thurston,
followed by Pierce and Yakima counties.
132005 Washington Homeownership Report
- Statewide
- 41 of 2004 home sales could have been afforded
by households with 80 of median income, and - 60 of 2004 home sales could have been afforded
by those with 100 of median.
142005 Washington Homeownership Report
- King County 71,900
- 16 of sales affordable for 80 of median, and
- 35 for those at or above 100 of median
- Clark County 67,900
- 57 of sales affordable for 80 of median, and
- 74 for those at or above 100 of median
152005 Washington Homeownership Report
- Clark County 67,900
- 4,147 homes could have been afforded by 80 AMI
- 5,382 homes could have been afforded by 100 AMI
- Cowlitz County 55,000
- 851 homes could have been afforded by 80 AMI
- 990 homes could have been afforded by 100 AMI
162005Washington Homeownership Report
- Clark County 67,900
- 15,000 renting households under 50 median
- 15,000 renting households between 50 - 100 AMI
- Cowlitz 55,000
- 5,000 renting households under 50 median
- 3,500 renting households between 50 - 100 of
median
17Annual Statewide Homebuyer Education Survey
- 10,000 attendees per year at Commission-sponsored
homebuyer education seminars - Scantron pre-class survey, WHC follow-up survey
- 52 achieved homeownership within 12 months
- 65 became home owners within 18 months
18New Home Owners
62
52
48
38
19Income of Participants 2002 - 2004
20Most Helpful Resources 2004
21Homeownership Conversion 2004
Purchased
22Down Payment Assistance
- Only 30 used down payment assistance
- Programs used
- WSHFC 49
- Hometart 11
- AFL-CIO 1
- Seller assisted programs 8
- IDAs 4
- County/City specific programs, USDA 27
- Native American Loan Programs 1
23Summary
- Conversion of 15,000 new homeowners 1 increase
- Reframing of low income assistance programs is
critical in reaching moderate income families - Increased partnership and creativity is needed to
reach those with less wealth
24Solutions Working Paper
- Identify potential LMI first-time homebuyers
- Statewide Benchmark - 2005 Washington
Homeownership Report - Opportunities Lowest hanging fruit
- Barriers
- Lack of affordable housing inventory
- Lack of awareness for counseling and assistance
programs, and an assumption that homeownership is
not a possibility
25Solutions Working Paper
- Bring them into the home buying process
- Reframe assistance programs
- Dissemination and Communication of message
- Increase partnerships between real estate
professionals and non-profit counseling agencies
26Solutions Working Paper
- Assist conversion to homeownership
- Coordination with non-profit and governmental
agencies - Partnerships between Gov/NP and private sector
- Development and Enhancement of Supporting Programs
27Solutions Working Paper
- Lower the barriers to entry
- Expand IDAs
- At 21 5,000 cap current funds 350 clients
- Public-private partnerships with lending
institutions - Expand Down-payment assistance programs
28Solutions Working Paper
- 5) Lower the cost of existing housing inventory
- Expand CLTs and Self-help programs
- Promote Employer Assisted Housing (tax
incentives) - REET exemption for first-time homebuyers
- Innovation
- Lease-to-own CLTs
- Employer-assisted CLTs (tax incentives)
29Solutions Working Paper
- 6) Increase new affordable housing inventory
- Sales and Use Tax exemptions for new construction
sold to households earning less than 80 of AMI - HB 2984 local inclusionary zoning