As affordable housing disappears, states scramble to shore up the losses
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[October 07, 2024] By
JESSE BEDAYN and ARUSHI GUPTA
LOS ANGELES (AP) — For more than two decades, the low rent on Marina
Maalouf’s apartment in a blocky affordable housing development in Los
Angeles’ Chinatown was a saving grace for her family, including a
granddaughter who has autism.
But that grace had an expiration date. For Maalouf and her family it
arrived in 2020.
The landlord, no longer legally obligated to keep the building
affordable, hiked rent from $1,100 to $2,660 in 2021 — out of reach for
Maalouf and her family. Maalouf's nights are haunted by fears her
yearslong eviction battle will end in sleeping bags on a friend's floor
or worse.
While Americans continue to struggle under unrelentingly high rents, as
many as 223,000 affordable housing units like Maalouf's across the U.S.
could be yanked out from under them in the next five years alone.
It leaves low-income tenants caught facing protracted eviction battles,
scrambling to pay a two-fold rent increase or more, or shunted back into
a housing market where costs can easily eat half a paycheck.
Those affordable housing units were built with the Low-Income Housing
Tax Credit, or LIHTC, a federal program established in 1986 that
provides tax credits to developers in exchange for keeping rents low. It
has pumped out 3.6 million units since then and boasts over half of all
federally supported low-income housing nationwide.
“It’s the lifeblood of affordable housing development,” said Brian
Rossbert, who runs Housing Colorado, an organization advocating for
affordable homes.
That lifeblood isn’t strictly red or blue. By combining social benefits
with tax breaks and private ownership, LIHTC has enjoyed bipartisan
support. Its expansion is now central to Democratic presidential
candidate Kamala Harris’ housing plan to build 3 million new homes.
The catch? The buildings typically only need to be kept affordable for a
minimum of 30 years. For the wave of LIHTC construction in the 1990s,
those deadlines are arriving now, threatening to hemorrhage affordable
housing supply when Americans need it most.
“If we are losing the homes that are currently affordable and available
to households, then we’re losing ground on the crisis,” said Sarah
Saadian, vice president of public policy at the National Low Income
Housing Coalition.
“It’s sort of like having a boat with a hole at the bottom,” she said.
Not all units that expire out of LIHTC become market rate. Some are kept
affordable by other government subsidies, by merciful landlords or by
states, including California, Colorado and New York, that have worked to
keep them low-cost by relying on several levers.
Local governments and nonprofits can purchase expiring apartments, new
tax credits can be applied that extend the affordability, or, as in
Maalouf’s case, tenants can organize to try to force action from
landlords and city officials.
Those options face challenges. While new tax credits can reup a lapsing
LIHTC property, they are limited, doled out to states by the Internal
Revenue Service based on population. It's also a tall order for local
governments and nonprofits to shell out enough money to purchase and
keep expiring developments affordable. And there is little aggregated
data on exactly when LIHTC units will lose their affordability, making
it difficult for policymakers and activists to fully prepare.
There also is less of a political incentive to preserve the units.
“Politically, you’re rewarded for an announcement, a groundbreaking, a
ribbon-cutting,” said Vicki Been, a New York University professor who
previously was New York City’s deputy mayor for housing and economic
development.
“You’re not rewarded for being a good manager of your assets and keeping
track of everything and making sure that you’re not losing a single
affordable housing unit,” she said.
Maalouf stood in her apartment courtyard on a recent warm day,
chit-chatting and waving to neighbors, a bracelet with a photo of Che
Guevarra dangling from her arm.
“Friendly,” is how Maalouf described her previous self, but not
assertive. That is until the rent hikes pushed her in front of the Los
Angeles City Council for the first time, sweat beading as she fought for
her home.
Now an organizer with the LA Tenants' Union, Maalouf isn’t afraid to
speak up, but the angst over her home still keeps her up at night.
Mornings she repeats a mantra: “We still here. We still here." But
fighting day after day to make it true is exhausting.
Maalouf's apartment was built before California made LIHTC contracts
last 55 years instead of 30 in 1996. About 5,700 LIHTC units built
around the time of Maalouf's are expiring in the next decade. In Texas,
it’s 21,000 units.
When California Treasurer Fiona Ma assumed office in 2019, she steered
the program toward developers committed to affordable housing and not
what she called “churn and burn," buying up LIHTC properties and
flipping them onto the market as soon as possible.
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An aerial view shows Hillside Villa, bottom center, an apartment
complex where Marina Maalouf is a longtime tenant, in Los Angeles,
Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2024. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
In California, landlords must notify
state and local governments and tenants before their building
expires. Housing organizations, nonprofits, and state or local
governments then have first shot at buying the property to keep it
affordable. Expiring developments also are prioritized for new tax
credits, and the state essentially requires that all LIHTC
applicants have experience owning and managing affordable housing.
“It kind of weeded out people who weren’t interested in affordable
housing long term,” said Marina Wiant, executive director of
California’s tax credit allocation committee.
But unlike California, some states haven't extended LIHTC agreements
beyond 30 years, let alone taken other measures to keep expiring
housing affordable.
Colorado, which has some 80,000 LIHTC units, passed a law this year
giving local governments the right of first refusal in hopes of
preserving 4,400 units set to lose affordability protections in the
next six years. The law also requires landlords to give local and
state governments a two-year heads-up before expiration.
Still, local governments or nonprofits scraping together the funds
to buy sizeable apartment buildings is far from a guarantee.
Stories like Maalouf's will keep playing out as LIHTC units turn
over, threatening to send families with meager means back into the
housing market. The median income of Americans living in these units
was just $18,600 in 2021, according to the Department of Housing and
Urban Development.
"This is like a math problem,” said Rossbert of Housing Colorado.
“As soon as one of these units expires and converts to market rate
and a household is displaced, they become a part of the need that’s
driving the need for new construction.”
“It’s hard to get out of that cycle,” he said.
Colorado's housing agency works with groups across the state on
preservation and has a fund to help. Still, it's unclear how many
LIHTC units can be saved, in Colorado or across the country.
It's even hard to know how many units nationwide are expiring. An
accurate accounting would require sorting through the constellation
of municipal, state and federal subsidies, each with their own
affordability requirements and end dates.
That can throw a wrench into policymakers' and advocates' ability to
fully understand where and when many units will lose affordability,
and then funnel resources to the right places, said Kelly McElwain,
who manages and oversees the National Housing Preservation Database.
It's the most comprehensive aggregation of LIHTC data nationally,
but with all the gaps, it remains a rough estimate.
There also are fears that if states publicize their expiring LIHTC
units, for-profit buyers without an interest in keeping them
affordable would pounce.
“It's sort of this Catch-22 of trying to both understand the problem
and not put out a big for-sale sign in front of a property right
before its expiration,” Rossbert said.
Meanwhile, Maalouf's tenant activism has helped move the needle in
Los Angeles. The city has offered the landlord $15 million to keep
her building affordable through 2034, but that deal wouldn't get rid
of over 30 eviction cases still proceeding, including Maalouf's, or
the $25,000 in back rent she owes.
In her courtyard, Maalouf's granddaughter, Rubie Caceres, shuffled
up with a glass of water. She is 5 years old, but with special
needs, her speech is more disconnected words than sentences.
"That’s why I’ve been hoping everything becomes normal again, and
she can be safe,” said Maalouf, her voice shaking with emotion. She
has urged her son to start saving money for the worst.
“We'll keep fighting,” she said, “but day by day it's hard.”
"I’m tired already.”
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Bedayn reported from Denver.
___
Bedayn is a corps member of The Associated Press/Report for America
Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit
national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms
to report on undercovered issues.
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