Saturday, October 20, 2007
Creating a Housing Trust Fund
Here is a recent article by Mary Brooks, the national expert on Housing Trust Funds, that was published in Shelterforce. Mary goes over 6 key aspects of a successful HTF campaign. It is certainly worth a look.
Thursday, October 18, 2007
Powerpoint from Affordable Housing Forum
Here is the powerpoint presentation given by Loretta Owens at the Mayoral Forum on Affordable Housing.
Renters and Owners in Davidson County
This is probably my favorite depiction of housing in Nashville. We worked on this for many weeks trying to get it just right.
Action Research Maps
here is a great bunch of maps and other info that Josh Bazuin, Emanuel Gunn, Daniel Leland, Jill Robinson, & Benjamin Siankam in Prof. Susan Saegert's Action Research graduate seminar put together. They describe it as a work-in-progress; Prof Saegert summarized the early findings this way:
The big picture issues seem to be the increase in the population below the poverty level, the increase in foreign born and Latino populations. On the housing front, units of owner occupied housing have increased more in sync with population increases but rental units have not.
The big picture issues seem to be the increase in the population below the poverty level, the increase in foreign born and Latino populations. On the housing front, units of owner occupied housing have increased more in sync with population increases but rental units have not.
Info Sheet

Here is the handout that was given out at the Mayoral Forum on Affordable Housing.
Graph "3" with the income distribution of Davidson County tells a pretty interesting story.
Thanks again to Paul and Loretta from the Housing Fund for their support in creating this handout.
Karl Dean on Housing on Camera
Here is Karl Dean's closing remarks at the Mayoral Forum on Affordable Housing.
Not enough low-income rental units

This is one of the more powerful graphs I have made. It shows the amount renters at each income level (in the solid orange) and the amount of units available that are affordable at that income level (gross rent=30% of that income level). The dotted gray line represents the amount of units rented in 2000 the solid gray line shows the amount of units in 2005.
Basically, what it shows is that if everyone lived in housing that was just "affordable" to them (they pay exactly 30% of their gross income on housing), that in 2000 there would have been a shortfall of 12,000 units. Further, it shows that things have gotten worse since then. In 2005, there was a projected shortage of over 17,000 affordable rental units. We know that, actually, things are worse than this, because some higher income people are paying less than 30% of their income on housing, further reducing the availability of rental housing for low income families.
Thanks to the Housing Fund, Inc. for their help in refining this graph with me.
This Blog
I have decided to try and start blogging about housing issues in Nashville. Hopefully this will create a forum to share thoughts and ideas about housing issues, especially about access to housing, as they come up from time to time. I think I will start by putting up some graphs I made, some of these were co-created with The Housing Fund, Inc. over last summer, others were created for fun or for specific projects I have been working on. I hope they are interesting.
Anyway we will see how long this lasts.


Cheers,
Mick
Anyway we will see how long this lasts.


Cheers,
Mick
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)