Browse
Search
Agenda - 05-07-2013 - 5e
OrangeCountyNC
>
Board of County Commissioners
>
BOCC Agendas
>
2010's
>
2013
>
Agenda - 05-07-2013 - Regular Mtg.
>
Agenda - 05-07-2013 - 5e
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
6/9/2015 12:19:56 PM
Creation date
5/6/2013 9:56:15 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
BOCC
Date
5/7/2013
Meeting Type
Regular Meeting
Document Type
Agenda
Agenda Item
5e
Document Relationships
Minutes 05-07-2013
(Linked From)
Path:
\Board of County Commissioners\Minutes - Approved\2010's\2013
RES-2013-037 Resolution Authorizing the Submission of FY 2013-2014 Annual Action Plan for the FY 2010-2015 Consolidated Housing Plan for Orange County, North Carolina
(Linked From)
Path:
\Board of County Commissioners\Resolutions\2010-2019\2013
RES-2013-038 Resolution Authorizing the Orange County FY 2013-2014 Home Program Design
(Linked From)
Path:
\Board of County Commissioners\Resolutions\2010-2019\2013
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
60
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
work and provide services within the community. She said that most of the families <br />served, lived in overcrowded apartments, paid over 30% of their income for rent, and <br />had high utility cost and lack of repair service. She noted that once the people move into <br />Habitat homes, mortgage cost is often less than prior rental costs and utility cost is <br />lower, which leaves more income to be spent in the local economy and to meet basic <br />needs. <br />Susan Levy said that low and very low income households were also served <br />through a new exterior repair program called Brush of Kindness, and she stressed the <br />pressing need for these types of repair projects and the goal of increasing this service. <br />She said Habitat had nearly 2000 volunteers, who logged more than 1700 volunteer <br />hours. She noted that Habitat home owners paid a total of $304,455 in property taxes. <br />She said that HOME funds have been a critical factor in building efforts. She said that <br />225 homes have been built. Four homes are currently under construction and the <br />demand for homes by qualified families has consistently exceeded demand. She noted <br />that there are only seven lots left in Phoenix Place and Habitat will soon be moving on to <br />a 28 home subdivision in Efland Cheeks Township. She recognized several home <br />owners present who will be moving into Habitat Homes in the near future. She <br />concluded by saying that Habitat will be requesting 2013 home funds for second <br />mortgages for 15 new homes. <br />Deborah Burton said she is building her home here in Hillsborough in partnership <br />with Habitat for Humanity and Orange County Schools. She thanked the Board for <br />making this possible and asked them to continue funding this year to make this possible <br />for other families. <br />Robert Dowling, Executive Director of Community Home Trust (CHT), said CHT <br />implements inclusionary housing in Orange County and currently has 200 homes in its <br />inventory. He said the expectation is to sell an additional 25 homes in the next 6 <br />months; many of these homes will require public subsidies totaling more than $300,000, <br />which is available from HOME funds and other sources. He said there is a lot of <br />turnover with townhomes and condominiums, not single family homes. When these <br />properties turn over, subsidies are lost. He noted that median income has become flat <br />but the costs of the homes increase, which increases the need for subsidies. He said <br />they will be coming to the Board of County Commissioners to ask for HOME funds in the <br />amount of $60,000. He noted that $40,000 will be used to keep homes affordable and <br />$20,000 will be for operating support. He said they could never have done this with the <br />support of local governments. He said that this is the most difficult housing market he <br />has seen. <br />Commissioner Dorosin said he is appreciative of all the work that has been done <br />and he echoed the comments from the retreat. He said this plan should likely be re- <br />visited sooner than 2015 in light of changes mentioned. He said this is an opportune <br />time to be thinking more creatively. He said he has been haunted by the recent purchase <br />of Abbey Court, which has 252 units and sold for $7 million. He said these were the <br />most affordable units in Orange County and now it looks as if the rent is going to be <br />raised along with assessments. He said there is a need to talk about different ways of <br />doing things, including manufactured housing and he would value advice from the <br />professionals and the Affordable Housing Advisory Board. <br />Chair Jacobs noted that 1.3, page 32 talks about people not having indoor <br />plumbing. He questioned how much this count has been reduced and Tara Fikes said <br />she would get him that information. <br />Chair Jacobs said the Board heard on Friday that the Community Home Trust <br />was recruiting people from Durham County to move into unoccupied Orange County <br />housing. <br />Y 2013 -2014 action Plan 4 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.