HomeMy WebLinkAbout01052022 PACAB Laydown JaffaJanuary 5, 2022 67? �? 6 1 / D
Brenda Ballou
From: Bruce Jaffa <bruce@jaffaconstruction.com>
Sent: Monday, January 3, 2022 7:22 PM
To: Brenda Ballou; Christy Terry
Subject: PACAB Employment Research
Attachments: Seward employment and Growth Planning.docx; Seward Employment and Growth
Planning Presenters.docx; How affordable housing gets built.docx; Seward Economic
Growth Plan - 2013 - v BETA draft (2).pdf
External Email: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize
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Brenda,
Attached is an outline I would like to get into the Agenda for discussion. I will ask for a motion to approve a plan to invite
"presenters" to both Regular and Work sessions over the Jan/ Feb time with the hope we can generate a result for the
Administration and Council in March. I have included a list of participants who have agreed to present a 5-10 minute
status for their organization in regards to hiring problems they are facing. With a short Q&A to follow I assumed we
could have 2 speakers per meeting for roughly 30 minutes total.
I have spoken to all and received their willingness to participate in this time frame. Following Board action we can select
pairs and issue regular invitations. I would include the outline either as I have written it or as revised so that all the
speakers get a general idea of the game plan to form their remarks to the core of the problem.
Yes I know and all agree Housing Housing is the elephant in the room but there is more to this problem than that.
On the City's web page "Why Choose Seward" includes a list of amenities that should be reviewed for current accuracy
as well I would like this to be available to PACAB for future discussion
.http://www.cityofseward.us/buisness/economic-dewvelopment/why-choose-reward
I am not sure that the 2013 Seward.Com Economic Growth Plan has been updated or if a different study is available but
there are statistics and statements relevant to the current issue
Bruce Jaffa
Quality Control Manager
907-224-8002
907-240-0362 Mobile
www.JaffaConstruction.com
Seward Job Market, Growth and Planning
PACAB January / February 2022
The following is only a preliminary outline with very broad industry descriptions. It
is intended to form only a starter point of topics for discussion and review. Due to
the urgent need, this review by PACAB will be at a very high level, intended to
identify needs, problems, bottlenecks, or obstacles that might impede hiring or
retention of needed employees in the Seward area.
1. Industries mostly effected with Permanent Positions
a. Education
i. AS LC
ii. AVTEC
iii. KPB Schools
b. Retail Sales
c. Health
d. Corrections
e. Government Services
f. Longshore & Shipping
g. Other
2. Industries mostly effected with Seasonal and Temporary positions
a. Fisheries
b. Tourism
c. B&B and Hotels
d. Construction
e. Marine Repair
f. Other
3. General category of positions
a. Skilled Craft
b. Unskilled
c. Service Industry
d. Professional
4. Current Sources of Recruitment
a. Internet Search
b. Transfers
c. J1 Visa
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Seward Job Market, Growth and Planning
PACAB January / February 2022
d.
1-116 Visa
e.
In State Hiring Agents
f.
Past worker lists
g.
Labor and Trade Unions
h.
Other
5. Impediments to Employee Prospects
a.
Housing
i. Availability
1. Rent / Lease
2. Purchase
3. Employer provided
ii. Cost
1. Property
2. Utilities
a. Electric
b. Water and Sewer
c. Roads
3. Regulatory
4. Financing
5. Other
b.
Access to Amenities/ Lifestyle
i. Health
ii. Recreation
iii. Education
iv. Culture
v. Transportation
c.
Cost of Living
d.
Training or added experience
e.
Other
b. Solutions / Options
2of2IPage
Seward Job Market, Growth and Planning
PACAB January / February 2022
3of2IPage
Seward Job Market, Growth and Planning
PACAB January / February 2022
Presentations:
Tim Jagielski, JAG Industries
Tom Tougas, Hotel and Cruise
Tara Reimer, ASLC
Kathy LeCompte, AVTEC
Larry Harmon, Harmon Construction
Craig Ambrosiani, Seward Hospital
Seward Fish
Jena Peterson, Real Estate Sales and Management
Henry Burns, Seward High school
Ruth D'mico, USFS
Aaron Plickat UA (Plumbers and Pipefitters) former President of Building Trades
Longshore, IBEW, Operators, Carpenters, Piledrivers, Boilermakers/
Shipbuilders, Public Service
Where names appear I have confirmed willingness to appear and present.
Underlined names are still tentative.
1of21Page
How affordable housing gets built
What steps are involved in creating affordable
housing?
1. Creating a Development Strategy (information gathering)
2. Finding a site
3. Predevelopment and site assessment
4. Developing a Request for Proposals (RFP)&selecting a developer
5. Constructions`
6. Occupancy and ongoing operations*
7. The municipality's ongoing role....
A version of this post originally appeared on Red in.
Financing affordable housing isn't easy.
Our new interactive tool shows that without subsidies, which can be hard to come by,
it's virtually impossible for developers to build homes that are affordable to low- or
extremely low income families. That's because lenders loan money for housing
development based on the property's expected income, and when rents are set to
affordable levels, there's a huge gap between the money needed to build and the
money lenders and investors provide.
Yet, new affordable apartment buildings --albeit not enough of them —are built. So how
do those developers do it?
The primary source of development funding is the Low -Income Housing Tax
Credit (LIHTC), a federal tax credit administered by state agencies. Most affordable
housing that gets built receives an allocation of tax credits. (You'll see in our simulation
that the LIHTC tax credits are the default for 100-unit buildings.)
To receive tax credits, a proposed development must dedicate at least either 20 percent
of its apartments to people who earn less than half of the area median income or 40
percent of its apartments to people who earn less than 60 percent of area median
income. To be affordable, the rent for those apartments must be no more than 30
percent of the target income level. In practice, most properties dedicate most or all of
the units to affordable use.
Yet, even if a proposal meets these conditions, tax credits aren't guaranteed. States
allocate tax credits through a competitive process that varies by state and in most places
has many more applications than available credits.
And even if you get the tax credit, as our tool shows, it's not enough. This is where
developers have to get even more creative.
Most affordable housing financing deals involve a mortgage, tax credits, and two or
three other sources of money. It's not uncommon, however, for developers to rely on
upward of 20 financing sources as they try to fill the gap between what it costs to build
affordable housing and the money they have available.
Some of that money comes from federal block grants like the HOME Investment
Partnerships Program or the Community Development Block Grant Program. Some of it
comes from foundations, local trust funds, or state housing trust funds. Sometimes
states or localities will give developers relief from their property taxes. There are also tax
credits for clean energy or for using a historic building. In rural areas, the US
Department of Agriculture sometimes subsidizes affordable housing.
And then there's rental assistance: the promise of federal rental assistance can make a
big difference in the development stage because developers can confidently tell lenders
and investors that they will have renters and those renters will be able to pay (because
the government is actually paying much of the rent). Rental assistance allows developers
to serve lower -income renters while still ensuring necessary revenue to operate the
property and pay debt service. Still, only about one in four people with low enough
income to qualify for housing assistance actually receives it.
The problem with this multitude of funding sources ---besides the fact that funds are
limited ---is the lack of standardization. Most of these tax credits and subsidies are
awarded through competitive processes, but those processes often run on different
timelines and require different applications. And if you need even three or four funding
sources beyond the LIHTC to move forward with a proposed apartment building,
winning one grant but having to wait six months for another can be fatal to the project.
(Some states, such as Massachusetts and Minnesota, coordinate the state run grant and
tax credit programs to mitigate this problem).
Funders also change what they want to fund. For example, Illinois recently prioritized
housing in areas of opportunity in awarding grants to affordable housing developers.
This year, however, they've added priorities for projects that help with
community revitalization. Changing allocation year to year is mostly good from a public
policy perspective, because it means public dollars flow to highest need. But shifting
priorities can pose a challenge to developers looking to build affordable housing,
because acquiring land, planning a development, and applying for funds is a multiyear
process.
Given that developers must rely on many sources —sometimes as many as 29—beyond
a mortgage loan and the LIHTC tax credit to build affordable housing, it's important for
states to consider ways to better coordinate the variety of grants and tax relief
opportunities available, and it's important for all levels of government to ensure there
are enough subsidy funds available to meet the need. Developers must overcome many
obstacles, such as permitting, land acquisition, and gaining community support.
Governments should take steps to make sure closing the financing gap is not the
obstacle that dooms development.
The Assisted Housing Initiative is a project of the Urban Institute, made possible by support
from HAI Group, to provide fact -based analysis about public and assisted housing. The
Urban Institute is a nonprofit, nonpartisan research organization and retains independent
and exclusive control over substance and quality of any Assisted Housing Initiative
products. The views expressed in this and other Assisted Housing Initiative commentaries
are those of the authors and should not be attributed to the Urban Institute or HAI Group.
Ethan Handelman is vice president for policy and advocacy at the National Housing
Conference. He serves on the board of Housing Unlimited, a nonprofit in Montgomery
County, Maryland.
Illustration by Christina Baird/Urban Institute