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| AROUND THE
STATE - DECEMBER 2005 ISSUE |
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Meeting the Housing Shortage -
Northwest A trio of businessmen takes on the challenge of providing low-cost homes.
By Charlotte Crane
In 2003, three businessmen incorporated the Escambia
County Community Land Trust to develop housing to help
relieve a shortage of affordable homes for the county's
low- and moderate-income residents.
Then came Hurricane Ivan. Damage from the storm took
5,000 to 6,000 homes from the housing market,
increasing the shortage even further. Some 900
families still live in FEMA trailers. Adding to
affordability issues was a surge in home prices,
which have risen more than three times faster than
per capita income in the county over the past five
years.
There's also great disparity between white and
African-American homeownership, 71% vs. 51%.
The trust - only the fourth such entity
in Florida and the first in northwest
Florida - uses a model aimed at both
creating a stock of affordable homes and
keeping the homes affordable over time.
The trust develops housing for sale to
low- and moderate-income people but
excludes the land in the sale, thus
lowering the price. The buyer pays for
the home and gets a 99-year lease on the
land.
If the new owners sell the home
later, they're limited by the
original purchase agreement from
taking the full amount of market
appreciation, and instead, usually
are allowed only a percentage. The
structure means the owner can't
realize a windfall, but it maintains
affordability for subsequent buyers.
Within six months, the trust
plans to complete 25
single-family homes on scattered
sites, priced from $100,000 to
$130,000. It's eyeing land for
subdivisions. And it also has
acted to keep a supply of
affordable rental units on the
market; it recently paid $4.3
million for Maison de Ville, a
144-unit apartment complex in a
Pensacola neighborhood
vulnerable to upscaling by
developers.
"The CLT model is a viable
vehicle for homeownership
for people who want more
than a rental existence,"
says Executive Director John
Wyche, a business/political
consultant. "Homeownership
is also the beginning of
wealth-building," says
partner Marvin Ginns Sr.,
owner of MicroMarketing.
Third partner, First Option
Mortgage broker O.J. Rembert,
will offer CLT buyers credit
counseling and help with
mortgage applications.
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