By The Herald Editorial Board
It can seem judging by the building activity we see around us as if Everett and much of the rest of Snohomish County is seeing a building boom.
But bigger booms in jobs and in population have overtaken housing construction.
While construction of housing has increased about 24 percent in Everett in the 20 years between 1999 and 2018, its population growth has outpaced construction, rising 28 percent. Recent declines in housing construction have cut in to the gains seen in boom years in 2001 and 2006.
Even with a surge of 747 units of housing built in 2016, the city still averaged only 231 units a year between 2011 and 2018, compared to an average of 650 units a year in the first 10 years of the period, according to a City of Everett housing profile completed in 2019.
At the same time, median home prices have soared, pricing out middle-income homeowners and renters. A median-priced single-family home cost $194,750 in 2011; by 2018, the same home fetched about $390,000, more than doubling in price, and putting home ownership here out of the reach of many with middle-income employment.
That shortage of housing available for rent or ownership for middle-income families in Everett has prompted a multi-year effort by the City of Everett, called Rethink Housing, seeking strategies to secure the housing needs of current and future residents in a city that is expected to need 23,000 new housing units in less than 15 years.
As part of the effort, which includes a series of forums and chats this year, Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin invited Chris Gregoire to speak at an online Facebook forum last month. Gregoire, the former two-term governor, is chief executive of Challenge Seattle, a policy organization that, among other issues, is working to resolve the Greater Seattle regions own housing challenges.
Gregoire noted that Everett and Snohomish County share with Seattle and King County many of the same pressures on housing affordablility and lagging stock of housing, particularly for middle-income families.
In Everett, since 1990, while the median income level has increased 92 percent, median housing prices have increased by 173 percent and median rental costs have increased 162 percent, forcing middle-income employees out of the communities in which they work and into longer commutes.
Typically, the types of workers earning middle-income wages what has often been called family-wage jobs include health care workers, firefighters, police officers and other front-line workers, building trades workers and educators, the heart and soul of our communities, Gregoire said.
As a result of the exodus of those families, she said, public education suffers, community safety is compromised, traffic congestion worsens, homelessness increases, socioeconomic diversity declines and the regions economic growth slows.
Using the impact to public education as an example, Gregoire said, for teachers to be forced out of the community by the unaffordable cost of housing, it means fewer teachers can stay after school to help students, advise clubs or coach sports. And the loss of middle-income families can eventually result in a decline in school enrollment.
San Jose, Calif., provides a case study. Because of this lack of affordability, so many (teachers) have left that area, they had to close down three elementary schools, with more to come. If we stay on this course, theres no reason to assume that the same outcome wont happen to us, she said.
The same constraints are forcing longer commutes on firefighters, police officers, hospital staff, utility workers and others whose jobs often depend on their quick availability during a crisis.
What is happening is obvious: Were lacking affordability and compromising our quality of life because were on long commutes, were diminishing our air quality and were creating financial insecurity, Gregoire said.
Builders have good financial incentives to build for higher-income homeowners; while government and nonprofit agencies are working to get lower-income housing built. For King County, the governor said, higher-end housing comprises about 57 percent of what was recently built, with 30 percent of construction intended for lower-income residents. Housing for middle-income families made up only 12 percent of the market.
Information from the U.S. Census Bureau and Zillow estimates that the median income necessary to cover the rent for a new apartment is currently $2,800 a month in the Puget Sound region, but most middle-income households can afford only between $1,300 to $2,700 a month, if families stick to the recommendation of spending no more than 30 percent of their income on housing.
Closing that gap, Gregoire said, will require lowering the costs for property, financing and construction. Addressing a range of public-private initiatives increasing density through changes to zoning, encouraging transit-oriented development, providing below-market loans, extending housing tax incentives, streamlining permitting, reducing parking requirements along transit corridors and supporting construction and technology innovations all can add up to reduce rent or mortgage payments enough to make an apartment or home affordable to a teacher, nurse or police officer.
But it will require doing things differently than we have done and accepting change.
That resistance to change is nothing new when we consider current conceptions of neighborhoods and homes.
Most recently, Housing Hope proposed the construction of 44 units of housing a mix of single-family homes and apartments on three acres of land near Sequoia High School, intended primarily for homeless students at the alternative high school.
The project, designed with the consultation of neighbors, was of relatively low density and offered quality construction that would have fit in architecturally with the neighborhood and importantly would have filled a dire need to address a large population of homeless students in Everett. Yet the project was opposed by some, and its consideration was delayed and ultimately rejected by the Everett City Council.
The project was intended to fill a need for low-income families, but its not difficult to see similar objections raised again if apartments or other housing are proposed that strays from neighborhood norms.
We have to embrace change, Gregoire said. If we fail, the outcome is not a community we want to live in.
Making a success of rethinking housing in Everett and avoiding the potential for the citys decline by pricing out those vital to its community should begin with discussions of what residents want to see, what they are willing to accept and how to make change work.
Rethink Housing forums
The City of Everetts Rethink Housing sessions continue through the coming months. Among scheduled events online:
A virtual chat session is scheduled for 1 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 12, inviting members of the public to share thoughts and ideas about the citys housing policies. A second chat session is scheduled for 6 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 28
Nan Roman, chief executive of the National Alliance to End Homelessness, will speak in an online forum at 2:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 14.
A full listing of events is available at EverettWa.gov.
More here:
Editorial: Changes needed to build more middle-income housing - The Daily Herald
- Tobin proposes 120-unit apartment building in Hollywood, amid record multifamily construction pipeline - The Real Deal - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- Modular Housing Construction in Chatsworth Builds Apartments for Homeless - San Fernando Valley Sun - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- What's that going to be inside Meridian Plaza? - The Edwardsville Intelligencer - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- A noodle bar and a cafe are coming to North Front Street below a new apartment tower - The Philadelphia Inquirer - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- New, 270-unit Staten Island apartment building opens with 138 apartments for formerly homeless - SILive.com - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- Sewer, water installations for new apartment building closing a Jackson street - MLive.com - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- New apartments coming for busy North End, downtown Boise intersection. Rent may be cheap - Idaho Statesman - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- A rental reckoning is coming to Twin Cities housing - Star Tribune - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- New York Doesnt Have Enough Housing. Why Is It So Expensive to Build? - The New York Times - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- Residents ordered to evacuate high-end Cambridge condos over safety concerns - NBC Boston - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- Metro Vancouver eyes standardized six-storey wood apartments - Vancouver Sun - November 21st, 2024 [November 21st, 2024]
- Multifamily permitting drops in urban areas - Multifamily Dive - September 7th, 2024 [September 7th, 2024]
- Apartment Construction Is Slowing, and Investors Are Betting on Higher Rents - WSJ - The Wall Street Journal - September 7th, 2024 [September 7th, 2024]
- Multifamily home construction still slowing, but predicted rate cuts could lower barriers - Star Tribune - September 7th, 2024 [September 7th, 2024]
- The Construction Site Outside My Building Is Filthy. What Can I Do? - The New York Times - September 7th, 2024 [September 7th, 2024]
- Single-family construction is on the rise in the Twin Cities, while apartment construction is in a free-fall. - Star Tribune - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- Deacon Development Group Announces Grand Opening of 126-Unit Merx Apartment Building in Portlands Slabtown - The Registry Seattle - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- Housing construction in greater Boston stymied by sky-high costs - The Boston Globe - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- Multifamily construction spending trending lower in May - Yield PRO magazine - July 6th, 2024 [July 6th, 2024]
- SuperBungalows, a New Cross-Laminated Timber Apartment Building, is a Los Angeles First - Architectural Record - May 27th, 2024 [May 27th, 2024]
- Gallery: See what's under construction near Cornell this spring - The Ithaca Voice - May 27th, 2024 [May 27th, 2024]
- In West Tampa, Rome Yards construction begins with affordable and workforce apartments - 83degreesmedia - May 27th, 2024 [May 27th, 2024]
- Ennead's Mass-Timber Apartment Building in Austin Pioneers 'Productized' Housing - Architectural Record - May 27th, 2024 [May 27th, 2024]
- Inside Elyria-Swansea's 16-story apartment building that has a plant-filled canyon running through it - Denverite - February 26th, 2024 [February 26th, 2024]
- Here's the status of major apartment projects in Lancaster County - LNP | LancasterOnline - February 26th, 2024 [February 26th, 2024]
- Construction marches on for new low-income senior apartments in Colorado Springs - Colorado Springs Gazette - February 26th, 2024 [February 26th, 2024]
- Fatalities as fire engulfs apartment blocks in Spain - Construction Briefing - February 26th, 2024 [February 26th, 2024]
- Nine states pledge to transition to heat pumps for residential HVAC and water heating - Building Design + Construction - February 16th, 2024 [February 16th, 2024]
- Construction on a new apartment complex to begin in Fox Lake - WiscNews - January 5th, 2024 [January 5th, 2024]
- Park Slope's Grand Prospect Hall-Replacing Build Hits Snags - Brownstoner - January 5th, 2024 [January 5th, 2024]
- Crews Quickly Put Out Brush Fire Near Apartment Building Under Construction - Times of San Diego - January 5th, 2024 [January 5th, 2024]
- Construction to begin on Lawrence apartments in Buffalo - Buffalo News - January 5th, 2024 [January 5th, 2024]
- Construction of 190-apartment residential neighborhood in Sugovushan continues [PHOTOS] - AzerNews.Az - January 5th, 2024 [January 5th, 2024]
- Developer hopes to have prefab apartments in seven CT towns - Hartford Courant - January 5th, 2024 [January 5th, 2024]
- Apartment building destroyed after fire in Southeast Fresno - KMPH Fox 26 - April 5th, 2023 [April 5th, 2023]
- Commercial and Multifamily Construction Starts Post Solid Recovery in 2021 - Construction.com - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- More high-end apartments on the way at Tobin estate as second phase of construction starts - San Antonio Express-News - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- 49-unit WDM affordable apartment project expected to be completed by fall - Business Record - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Construction of Willow Valley Communities' 20-story downtown building to begin after sales of its apartments - LNP | LancasterOnline - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- New Zealands bipartisan housing reforms offer a model to other countries - Brookings Institution - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- HDC Hyundai Development raided in connection with Gwangju apartment building collapse - The Korea Herald - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Bend's big shift from single-family homes to more multifamily housing tops city's expectations - KTVZ - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- New Construction Is Not Always the Answer - ArchDaily - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Boston-based boutique hotelier buys Wilton Manors apartment building for $8M - The Real Deal - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Miami Mayor Francis Suarez Says City Is Growing Faster Than Ever At Panel Discussion With Developers - CBS Miami - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- These Will Be the Hottest Up-and-Coming NoVA Neighborhoods in 2022 - northernvirginiamag.com - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Downtown DeLand CRA throws big incentive to apartment developer - The West Volusia Beacon - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- Why a 4-storey apartment could be coming to a residential street near you - CBC.ca - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- He Was in Witness Protection in Maine. But His Harlem Life Kept Calling. - The New York Times - January 25th, 2022 [January 25th, 2022]
- NYCs Wealthy Enclaves Lost Housing in Past Decade as Combining of Apartments Outpaced New Construction - THE CITY - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Holladay planning $27M apartment project in Fletcher Place by former Milano Inn - Indianapolis Business Journal - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Building construction price indexes, Q4 2020 - Lumber still an issue - Electrical Business - Electrical Business - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- WHATS THIS? ANOTHER 50+ AFFORDABLE APARTMENTS UNDER CONSTRUCTION - Florida Keys Weekly - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- 538 new houses, condos and apartments proposed on Ann Arbors north side - MLive.com - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- 7-story building with parking garage, restaurant and apartments to be built near new courthouse in Harrisburg - PennLive - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Developer of in-progress $31M housing project in Williamsville seeks tax breaks - Buffalo News - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Downtown Vancouver is on the rise - The Columbian - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Demolition in Ohio City signals big visible first step toward creation of park at Irishtown Bend - cleveland.com - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Developer closes on financing for $124M apartment project in West St. Paul - TwinCities.com-Pioneer Press - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Apartment Developers Increasing Unit Sizes For New Projects In Response To Pandemic - Bisnow - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- A makeover for Norfolks deluxe apartment in the sky - WAVY.com - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Teacher housing plan moves ahead in Palo Alto - Palo Alto Online - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Guilderland and Pyramid seek to reverse ruling that halted companys projects - The Altamont Enterprise - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Another South U block demolished to make way for next Ann Arbor high-rise - MLive.com - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- The Pandemic Disproved Urban Progressives Theory About Gentrification - The Atlantic - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- The Sydney apartment tribes reshaping the harbour city - Sydney Morning Herald - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- 1 dead in 4-alarm Yonkers apartment building fire - Yahoo News - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- ATF helping to investigate massive fire at Waldo Heights apartments - KMBC Kansas City - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- With little effect on ground, work on Minneapolis 2040 plan continues behind the scenes - Minneapolis Star Tribune - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- Construction of housing project for the elderly begins in Dupont - Insurance News Net - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- COVID will leave lasting changes in Minnesota office and apartment projects - Minneapolis Star Tribune - December 23rd, 2020 [December 23rd, 2020]
- Three-story office building proposed to slide in between apartments, alley in Downtown Boise - boisedev.com - December 23rd, 2020 [December 23rd, 2020]
- US apartment construction boosts housing supply in November - Yahoo News - December 23rd, 2020 [December 23rd, 2020]
- Looking ahead: Fishers major projects in 2021 include the Nickel Plate Trail tunnel and First Internet - Current in Carmel - December 23rd, 2020 [December 23rd, 2020]
- Downtown development to focus on apartments | News - Bowling Green Daily News - December 23rd, 2020 [December 23rd, 2020]
- Developer Who Almost Landed Amazon HQ2 Planning Scores Of Apartments In Its Place - Bisnow - December 23rd, 2020 [December 23rd, 2020]
- Avenue breaks ground on 34th Street apartment complex - The Leader - December 23rd, 2020 [December 23rd, 2020]
- Hayle Harbour development celebrates milestone with topping out ceremony - In Your Area - December 23rd, 2020 [December 23rd, 2020]
- Here are 2020s most active architects - The Real Deal - December 23rd, 2020 [December 23rd, 2020]
- Apartments planned along Columbia River between Camas, Washougal - The Columbian - December 23rd, 2020 [December 23rd, 2020]