Orange County NC Website
18 <br />and the answer was yes, they had. She said after looking at several studies, they had decided to <br />focus on the chronic needs of the homeless and that group was pretty much already identified. <br />Alderman Gist stated that did not mean that those that were experiencing short-term <br />homelessness would be ignored. She stated the Task Force had looked at all the options to keep <br />affordable and livable units within the Land Trust, and at the economic and the demographics of <br />those in those units. Alderman Gist stated they could not continue to build one-bedroom, small <br />condominiums that would only meet a very small population of those needed to be served. She <br />said instead of having developers build such units, they could implement the PILS program and <br />keep people in existing units and have those units remain operational, as well as to help deal with <br />other homeless issues. Alderman Gist stated that was why they were asking their fellow elected <br />officials to give serious consideration to the PILS program. <br />Alderman Broun stated she wanted the elected officials to think holistically to include in the plan <br />not just how to provide housing for the chronically homeless but to match that housing with the <br />appropriate and necessary services. Alderman Gist stated those services were included ~in the <br />plan. <br />Commissioner Foushee stated it was important for all of them to understand that during this <br />economic climate, that the model could not be sustained primarily on government funding. She <br />said the PILS program would provide the opportunity for all of them to assess what their exact <br />needs were at any particulaz time, whether it be additional units or maintenance of existing units, <br />as well as to provide subsidy where it was needed. Commissioner Foushee stated it had been <br />mentioned during the Task Force meetings that there should be a possibility as it was in other <br />jurisdictions that they dedicate ad valorem funding for affordable housing. She said with their <br />tax climate at this point, that was not the way to go, so they had quickly placed that at the bottom <br />of the list of how to provide funding streams. <br />Commissioner Foushee stated that Robert Dowling had presented these recommendations to <br />Chapel Hill on September 8, and it appeared that they were in agreement that this was a time to <br />reconsider how the payment-in-lieu system worked. She said she would hope that having been <br />given the charge to bring forwazd these recommendations that they would be considered in a way <br />that would move them forwazd. She stated the recommendation regazding using scattered sites <br />was a way for providing somewhat more immediate housing to the chronically homeless, <br />because that would use existing housing in established apartment complexes. Commissioner <br />Foushee stated they were talking about $1.5 million over 25 yeazs, and it was not something that <br />could continue to come from ad valorem funding only. <br />9:34:46 PM Alderman Coleman asked did they know if they had the authority to impose an <br />affordable housing transfer fee. Council Member Kleinschmidt sated they did that in Chapel Hill <br />using the Special Use Permit process. <br />Alderman Coleman stated Commissioner Foushee had mentioned the $1.5 million over 25 years, <br />and asked was that actually based on the assessment of programmatic recommendations. <br />Commissioner Foushee stated that was the figure that Robert Dowling had presented to them. <br />13 <br />