Consultant Tom Beckwith discusses a proposed Sequim Affordable Housing Action Plan on Oct. 30 before 40 people saying “this is a dynamic tool that affects you every day.” (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

Consultant Tom Beckwith discusses a proposed Sequim Affordable Housing Action Plan on Oct. 30 before 40 people saying “this is a dynamic tool that affects you every day.” (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

Housing plan details 11 options for affordable options in Sequim

SEQUIM — In the coming months, Sequim city leaders plan to consider a proposed Affordable Housing Action Plan that consultants have said could impact residents’ way of life for years to come.

Consultants Tom Beckwith and Eric Hovee on Oct. 30 told about 40 people in the Sequim Civic Center about Sequim’s demographics and current housing situation and what it could mean for affordable housing in the future.

The proposed plan outlines 11 tasks, ranging from deferring building fees to proposing new types of developments in the city. Beckwith said cities typically use multiple elements to see more effectiveness in providing affordable housing.

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Beckwith said the proposal is a standalone report that the city’s Comprehensive Plan can pull from for future updates, but first it must be approved by Sequim’s Planning Commission and then the City Council.

The plan being considered proposes the city use all or a combination of these:

• Establish different taxing rates for affordable housing purposes, i.e. freeze property values for a certain amount of time. Hovee said different cities target certain areas they might want to revitalize.

• Allow and encourage the use of innovative housing products and designs, i.e. allow land to be subdivided into smaller parcels for smaller homes such as Katrina cottages and/or micro-housing at 220 to 300 square feet with centralized amenities.

• Implement an accessory dwelling unit program that drops the city’s requirement where the homeowner must live in the main home for someone to live in a smaller home behind the main home.

• Implement incentive zoning without cash offsets that allows smaller units with incentives in place for developers without a cost to city residents.

• Implement incentive zoning with cash offsets that defer fees such as impact fees.

• Package a demonstration property that displays some of these different types of homes in an area such as the Bell Creek Opportunity Zone by U.S. Highway 101 and Sequim Avenue.

• Initiate a mixed-use project with 10 percent to 15 percent affordable units that goes through a competitive process.

• Refinance overextended households and establish an affordable housing deferred loan or shared equity program where the eligible homeowner’s house is acquired and sold back to them under terms they can afford within 30 percent of gross income devoted to housing occupancy costs.

• Renovate eligible housing with shared and limited equity loans programs, which Beckwith said keeps housing stock in good condition for when it’s turned over so it can be sold easier.

• Expand and capitalize a housing trust fund that’s dedicated to affordable housing.

• Update this plan frequently.

“This is a dynamic tool that affects you every day,” Beckwith said.

Statistics

Consultants said Sequim hosts more than 1,700 low-income apartment options; some offer housing tax credits and rental assistance while others do not.

Only 40 percent of Sequim’s residents are in the workforce due to the high number of retirees, Hovee said, with a majority of Sequim’s workers commuting into the city, primarily in the service industry.

Beckwith said projections show Sequim’s 65-and-older population will continue to grow.

Individual city residents’ median per capita income is $26,716 per person and $58,497 for a family, consultants report.

Of the city’s population, 12.9 percent of residents live at poverty level while 9.6 percent of families live in poverty.

Estimates state 41 percent of people with a home pay more than 35 percent of monthly income toward a mortgage while 53 percent of renters are paying more than 35 percent of income for a home.

Hovee said if someone is paying more than 35 percent toward a home then another necessity is not being met.

Not enough data is available for the local impact for Airbnb’s, consultants said.

“It does hold up available units in the market,” Hovee said. “Even though it’s a six-month market, it’s lucrative enough for them to continue.”

For more information on the proposed Affordable Housing Action Plan, visit www.sequimwa.gov or call 360-683-4139.

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Matthew Nash is a reporter with the Olympic Peninsula News Group, which is composed of Sound Publishing newspapers Peninsula Daily News, Sequim Gazette and Forks Forum. Reach him at mnash@sequimgazette.com.

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