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Georgia’s estimated $34-plus billion in heirs property could ease wealth, housing gap

In Georgia alone, an estimated $34-plus billion in property has no owner with a clear title. If the value were unlocked, this heirs property – most of it presumed to be in black hands – could help address the black-white divide in homeownership and issues related to poverty, according to an emerging body of research by the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta and others.

Posted inLatest News

Housing starts to tumble as state’s economy slows, GSU’s top economist predicts

A drop-off in housing starts in metro Atlanta will be one likely consequence of a state economy forecast to slow through 2021, according to a new report by Georgia State University’s top economist. A short supply of housing has already helped drive up sales and rental prices and fueled the lack of affordable housing, according to the Atlanta Regional Commission.

Posted inGuest Column

Historic Westside Gardens: The case to establish food security along with affordable housing

By Guest Columnist GIL FRANK, co-founder and executive director of Historic Westside Gardens

In the affordable housing crisis that brews in Atlanta, lower-income people and marginalized populations suffer most.

Historic Westside Gardens focuses on food justice, primarily on the Westside, where it is essential to note at the outset that around 70 percent of residents are lower-income renters. … Historic Westside Gardens chose to focus on the lack of food access, the “food desert” problem, while recognizing that people do not live their life in a silo. HWG is aware that, for residents, food access is not, today, their priority. Housing is their priority. How to link these two rights?

Posted inLatest News

Tree protection rewrite edging toward affordable housing talk of ‘granny flats’

By David Pendered
Atlanta’s public process of revising the city’s tree protection ordinance is to continue next week at two community meetings. A final proposal isn’t expected for months as the discussion gets into the weeds over profit margins for developers and, possibly, affordable housing.
One potential friction point involves the city’s determination of the extent of development allowed on any piece of land. Denser development on any given property can increase profit margins for a developer.
The development community has expressed the view that city codes allow development on all of the land that’s not reserved as set-backs from the property lines. As a city report relates developers contend that it is:
• “Imperative that property owners must be able to fully utilize the ‘buildable area’ of their lot.”
Meanwhile, in regards to affordable housing, buildable area has yet to become part of the public conversation. The concept comes into play in the context of the current buzzwords of “accessory dwelling units” or “granny flats.”
Some developers endorse the notion of building a smaller homes behind big, expensive ones as a way to provide affordable rental dwellings. The language used, “granny flats,” “in-law homes,” can be more pleasing than describing them as a rental unit to help a buyer afford a home more costly than otherwise affordable.
The trade-off is that to develop the primary and accessory dwellings, a greater amount of the buildable area would be developed than if just a single house were built.
This procedure would increase the value of a developed property and, thus, the profit margin for the developer.
The upshot could be the removal of more trees – because the removal would be allowed under the city’s definition of “buildable area.” This is where the development community is arguing for a continuation of existing definitions.
Atlanta’s existing tree ordinance defines “buildable area” as follows:
• “Buildable area means that area of the lot available for the construction of a dwelling and permissible accessory uses after having provided the required front, side, rear and any other special yards required by part 15 or part 16 of the city code.”
This issue of buildable area is one of several that are to be negotiated in coming months.
Any proposed tree protection ordinance is likely to appear well into 2020. Before the administration can put forth a proposed tree protection ordinance, the administration is slated to make three more public presentations: To the Atlanta City Council, to explain changes since a previous meeting; two more meetings with the general public. The council is slated to break for winter recess after its Dec. 2 meeting.
Atlanta acknowledged from the outset that tree preservation comes at a financial price.
That’s evident on the face of two of the city’s six benchmarks for establishing a new tree protection ordinance. These benchmarks say the intents and purposes of such an ordinance include:
• “Balance City development goals: affordability, mobility, growth;
• “Ensure there are equitable distribution of benefits and costs for all residents.”
The implementation of these concepts in one reason the city in 2014 shelved an effort to update a tree protection ordinance last updated in 2006, according to the city’s timeline.
Note to readers: Atlanta is conducting meetings on the tree protection rewrite Wednesday, Nov. 6 from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Atlanta Technical College, Dennard Conference Center, 1560 Metropolitan Ave.; and Thursday, Nov. 7 from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Trinity Presbyterian Church, 3003 Howell Mill Road.

Posted inLatest News

No quick fix for affordable housing shortage, as evidenced by project in Oakland City

Atlanta isn’t likely to swiftly build its way out of the shortage of affordable housing. Case in point: The clock’s been ticking more than a year on one project near the Atlanta BeltLine that’s to be built by a non-profit developer on land that was donated. The first shovel could hit the ground late this year or in early 2020.

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