At Thursday’s City Council meeting, the last before the
summer recess, Councilwoman Maria Quiñones-Sánchez introduced a bill that would require many private developers
to build permanently affordable housing units. The legislation would sweeten
this potentially bitter pill by increasing height, density, and floor area
ratio limits in many zoning districts, allowing larger buildings with more
units.
The bill would require the construction of one unit of
affordable housing for every nine of market-rate housing in developments where
10 or more units are being built or “substantially improved.” Of the 10 percent
of units that are required to be affordable, one quarter would have to be
offered on the site of the project itself, while the others could be provided
by building the units elsewhere, by paying into the Philadelphia Housing Trust
Fund, or by leasing or selling units to the Philadelphia Housing Authority
(PHA).
The new requirement would override the city’s current,
incentive-based program to encourage mixed-income residential development by
offering zoning perks—like allowing more density or taller buildings than the
zoning code would normally allow — in exchange for developers including
affordable units in otherwise market-rate projects.
Quiñones-Sánchez’s bill, by contrast, would require
developers to build housing and greatly increase the maximum potential
density and height limits in many of the city’s zoning categories.
The bill’s co-sponsors included Council President Darrell
Clarke, Jannie Blackwell, and Kenyatta Johnson. All the sponsors represent
districts with large numbers of impoverished residents as well as some of the
hottest real estate markets in the city.
“In conversation with developers around the city, we’ve
realized that we have a lot of opportunity and growth potential if we look at
our zoning code,” said Councilwoman Quiñones-Sánchez. “It should not just be
about One Water Street [a luxury apartment tower in Old City that used the
current mixed-income zoning bonus]. As development spreads to all the
neighborhoods, what are the incentives folks need to build the affordable
housing that government alone cannot do?”
The legislation, which amends the city’s housing code,
would increase height limits to 45 feet on many lots zoned for smaller-scale
multi-family buildings and along many neighborhood commercial corridors, but
only where developers will be required to build the affordable units. (If you
build eight or fewer in such a zoning district, for example, the height bonuses
would not apply.) This is intended as an offset to the cost of building
the affordable housing.
Similarly, the legislation would increase the maximum
number of dwelling units allowed in these areas by 50 percent, if they hit the
unit threshold.
The maximum base floor area ratio (FAR), which determines
how tall and wide a building can be, would be increased by a factor of 1.3 in
13 different zoning categories in such cases as well—a substantial increase that
could allow much larger buildings in some residential areas of the city.
“In order for developers to provide affordable housing
development, they need to have an ability to get more height,” said
Quiñones-Sánchez.
Affordability in the bill would be defined in two ways,
one for the “metropolitan core” — defined as much of University City east 38th
Street and Center City from Washington Avenue to Girard Avenue — and one for
the rest of the city.
In the core, affordable units would be rented to those
earning up to 50 percent of area median income or sold to buyers up to 80
percent of area median income (AMI). For context, 50 percent of AMI is $42,000
for a family of four.
In the rest of the city the definition of affordability
would be even more generous. In most of Philadelphia, affordability would be
defined as 30 percent of AMI for renters and 50 percent for owners. 30 percent
of AMI is $24,300 for a family of four.
“As far as I know, I haven’t seen any other city that has
an inclusionary housing program that targets people at 30 percent of area
median income,” says Beth McConnell, policy director for the Philadelphia
Association of Community Development Corporations. “That’s a very significant
part of this legislation because it helps people who need affordable homes the
most.”
The clause in the bill that would allow developers to
lease or sell affordable units to the housing authority is meant to make
helping those poorest tenants easier (although it isn’t clear how exactly that
would work). It is also unclear if the housing authority, which is facing the
likelihood of sharp budget cuts from the Trump administration, would have the
capacity to handle these new units.
“There’s a framework for helping people making $20,000 a
year, that’s why in the legislation we bring in the housing authority as a
partner,” said Councilwoman Quiñones-Sánchez. “Government funding alone can’t
meet our needs, but this will allow us to utilize and leverage the capacity of
the private sector.”
That’s not the only way in which the affordability
provisions stand out. The bill also stipulates that all affordable housing
created by this inclusionary housing program, for ownership or rent, must
remain income-restricted for 99 years. (Many public incentive programs of recent decades have allowed developers to
pull away from the affordability requirement after a shorter period, often
between 15 and 30 years.)
The bill requires that the 25 percent of the affordable
units provided at the building site be “reasonably dispersed” throughout the
building and that all the tenants have access to the same amenities. In New
York City, units recently created by its inclusionary housing programs have been critiqued for providing different
amenities and even different entrances for low-income tenants.
In Philadelphia, the most recent controversy around
inclusionary housing was around One Water Street, one of the only buildings to
have taken advantage of the city’s inclusionary zoning bonuses. In that case
the developer decided at the last minute to not build the affordable units and
sought different height and density bonuses instead. In the end, it paid into the Philadelphia Housing Trust
Fund.
Sanchez’s bill has sharper teeth to prevent such an
occurrence from happening again, although a package of alterations to the city’s zoning code
passed earlier this year already sought to protect the existing zoning bonuses
from such occurrences. The new legislation would punish those who do not comply
by revoking building permits, certificates of occupancy, and rental licenses.
There is also a $500 a day fine for non-compliance.
Developer reaction to the bill has thus far been notably
temperate, despite the ambitious nature of the legislation. “The BIA Board of
Directors have been in discussions with City Council for months regarding
mixed-income housing,” Brian Emmons, president of the Building Industry
Association (BIA), told PlanPhilly over email. “The BIA will be working with
the sponsors of the legislation over the summer and look forward to creating a
solution that will keep development moving and solve the affordability issue
that we have in Philadelphia.”
The BIA’s moderate response is probably related to the
fact that the legislation was introduced at the end of a session and will be
discussed throughout the summer with the Mixed-Income Housing Working Group, a
group of stakeholders and political representatives. Changes are likely even
before the bill reaches committee in the fall.
What skeptics there were refused to speak on the record.
But there are concerns that such a law would dampen development and that
similar efforts in cities like New York—and there are hundreds of such policies in the United
States—have worked where markets are red hot.
In a press release, Council President Clarke praised the
bill for combating housing segregation and economic inequality. In an interview
with PlanPhilly, Councilwoman Quiñones-Sánchez was quick to praise Clarke for
his introduction of the city’s first inclusionary housing bill back in 2007.
But that effort came just as the housing crisis kicked
off and it was never utilized. Since then the concept of introducing more
robust inclusionary housing legislation has been knocking around City Hall for
years. Now she believes its time has come.
“In council, we hear every day about people feeling
pushed out and we really believe that we have an opportunity to bring
affordable housing to the neighborhoods,” said Quiñones-Sánchez. “We’d like to
generate units in whatever development can still occur in the heavily developed
core of the city, but this is really about how this development spreads.”
Source: Plan
Philly
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