DEPARTMENT: Center City Development & Operations
DEPARTMENT HEAD: John Jacks
COUNCIL DISTRICTS IMPACTED: Citywide
SUBJECT:
Amendments to the Center City Housing Incentive Policy (CCHIP) and Inner City Reinvestment/Infill Policy (ICRIP)
SUMMARY:
A Briefing on proposed amendments to the Center City Housing Incentive Policy (CCHIP) and replacing the Inner City Reinvestment/Infill Policy (ICRIP) with the City of San Antonio Fee Waiver Program.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION:
The Center City Housing Incentive Policy (CCHIP) and Inner City Reinvestment/Infill Policy (ICRIP) encourage the redevelopment of the inner city through financial incentives and technical assistance. Both policies are administered by the Center City Development and Operations Department.
Inner City Reinvestment and Infill Policy
In 2010, the ICRIP was approved by City Council to encourage infill activity and the creation of sustainable neighborhoods that are safe, walkable, mixed-use, compact and well-designed. The policy provides financial assistance, such as City and SAWS fee waivers, and staff support for assistance in navigating regulatory and procedural processes. The current ICRIP boundary was adopted in January 2013 and is 84 square miles. The most recent amendments to the program guidelines were approved by City Council on May 28, 2015. Since 2012, over 1,600 fee waiver applications have been approved. These applications represent $4.4 billion in investment and over 10,000 housing units. Of the 10,000 housing units, 4,200 or 42% are affordable or workforce housing.
Center City Housing Incentive Policy
In June 2012, City Council adopted the Center City Housing Incentive Policy (CCHIP) - an as-of-right housing incentive program designed to encourage economic development in the center city. The CCHIP was renewed with amendments in 2016, reducing the program boundary, improving administrative operations, and extending the program through June 2018.
Since its creation, the CCHIP has facilitated 64 projects. These projects represent a total investment of $1.4 billion and the CCHIP provided $102 million in incentives for these projects:
$3.7 M City Fee Waivers (General Fund)
$2.4 M Forgivable Loans or Grant (General Fund and will not be repaid)
$2.9 M Loans (General Fund and will be repaid)
$16.6 M SAWS Fee Waivers (SAWS)
$75.8 M Tax Rebates (Rebate on ad valorem taxes paid to the City by the developer as a result of the project)
$101.5 M
For every $1 of City-provided incentives for these projects, it has returned more than $13 in private investment. The projects will yield 6,810 housing units, 28,000 square feet of office space, and 230,000 square feet of retail. Of the 6,810 housing units, 1,544 or 23% are workforce or affordable housing.
On October 2, 2017, a Council Consideration Request was issued, requesting a review of City incentives for residential and commercial developments to include ICRIP and CCHIP, among others. On January 11, 2018, City Council approved a temporary moratorium on administrative approvals of CCHIP agreements, directing staff to reevaluate the existing program. Staff has initiated a review of both programs and commissioned a housing study to evaluate the success of the CCHIP and to perform a separate analysis on its impact to development.
ISSUE:
The recommended amendments to the Center City Housing Incentive Policy (CCHIP) as well as the replacement of the Inner City Reinvestment/Infill Policy (ICRIP) with the City of San Antonio Fee Waiver Program are based on stakeholder interviews, alignment with the SA Tomorrow Regional Center Plans, and market conditions. Additionally, staff’s recommendations have been coordinated with the Mayor’s Housing Policy Taskforce Report. Proposed amendments to CCHIP demonstrate increased support for affordable housing both downtown and citywide, while retaining its original intent as a downtown economic development tool through the creation of housing in San Antonio’s urban core. The new City of San Antonio Fee Waiver Program will prioritize the use of City fee waivers and SAWS impact fee waivers for affordable housing development, owner-occupied rehabilitation, historic rehabilitation, and business development.
Proposed ICRIP Amendments
• Replace the Inner City Reinvestment/Infill Policy (ICRIP) with the City of San Antonio Fee Waiver Program.
• No longer based on the location of the project (placed based) but on the project type.
• The Fee Waiver Program will only apply to the following project categories:
o Affordable Housing: Nonprofits and private developers constructing affordable housing (rental and for sale) within the city limits. Must be qualified by HNSD.
§ Rental units that receive the fee waivers through the program must be rent restricted and income restricted.
o Owner Occupied Rehabilitation: Participants in home repair/rehabilitation programs through the Neighborhood and Housing Services Department (HNSD) or non-profit organizations. Must be qualified by HNSD.
o Historic Preservation: Owners of residential and commercial structures eligible for designation as historic. Must be qualified by the Office of Historic Preservation (OHP).
o Legacy Business: Businesses that have been around for 20 years or more and contribute to the history, culture, and authentic identity of San Antonio. Must be designated as a Legacy Business through OHP.
o Small Business and Industry Development: Businesses and Industry Development that supports the SA Tomorrow Plan and is qualified by the Economic Development Department.
Staff may recommend fee waivers for projects that do not meet the criteria in the City Fee Waiver Program. However, fee waivers for projects that do not meet the eligibility criteria would require City Council approval.
Proposed CCHIP Amendments
• Remove single family areas from the boundary to avoid conflict with the established neighborhoods. This decreases the size of the boundary from 5.4 square miles to 2.64 square miles.
• Create a tiered system based on land values, rental rates, and occupancy levels.
o Tier 1 provides the maximum amount of incentives and rewards projects if the project includes an affordability component.
o Tier 2 requires that 10% of the units be committed to families making up to 80% AMI and 10% be committed to families making up to 60% AMI or that the project be above 5 stories (more density).
§ Rental units must be rent restricted and income restricted.
• Provide an infrastructure grant through funding from the Inner City Incentive Fund (ICIF) for projects in Tier 1 that have at least 10% of the units as affordable housing.
• Develop an affordable housing fund and designate an amount equal to 25% of the ad valorem tax increment paid by the developer of a CCHIP project to the fund, to support affordable housing projects.
• Projects requiring rezoning from single-family residential are not eligible for incentives through the CCHIP unless the rezoning is done through the SA Tomorrow Regional Center planning process for the Downtown Regional Center Plan or Lone Star Regional Center Plan.
• Any project that receives CCHIP incentives will not be eligible for a short term rental program permit for a Type 2 property (not owner or operator occupied).
• Extend the program for 2 years.
All CCHIP projects still require design review by the Office of Historic Preservation.
The complete City Fee Waiver Program and Center City Housing Incentive Policy guidelines are attached.
The CCHIP and City Fee Waiver Program can leverage affordable housing opportunities City wide. Especially when the programs are supplemental to projects that use other affordable housing tools like the Public Facilities Corporation, 9% Low Income Housing Tax Credit, 4% Low Income Housing Tax Credit, and the disposition of publicly owned land. The proposed City Fee Waiver Program and the amendments to the CCHIP prioritize affordable and workforce housing and are in alignment with the Mayor’s Housing Policy Taskforce Recommendations.
• The City allocates $2.5 million annually and SAWS allocates $3 million annually for the waiver of their respective fees for eligible projects. Previous practice has been to allocate the fee waivers to projects on a first come first serve basis regardless of project type. Staff is recommending that each project type have a dedicated allocation to avoid larger projects consuming the entire allocation. Projects that are in the Central Business District (Tier 1) and incorporate an affordable component are eligible for grant funding to support infrastructure.
• The affordable housing definitions for both programs will align with HUD income definitions which use the regional area median income as the foundation and include adjustments for family size. The intent of the policy provision is to address those most in need of affordable housing while providing a tool for affordable housing providers that also utilize state and federal programs including HOME, CDBG, LIHTC, FHLB and CRA.
• Affordable housing units facilitated through both programs are rent restricted and income restricted.
• The CCHIP creates a dedicated funding source for affordable housing City-wide that could yield approximately $14.4 million over a 10 year period. This funding could support approximately 400 housing units between 30%-60% Area Median Income.
• The Mayor’s Housing Taskforce Report sets a target of 9,516 new rental units at the 30%-60% AMI city wide. The known CCHIP projects that are either in the pipeline or pending City Council approval will address 1,245 of the target or 13% with the CCHIP pipeline addressing 88% or 1,022 of the 1,165 target for housing units at the 60%-80% AMI. This includes the low income housing tax credit projects and public facilities corporation projects that use the CCHIP.
The proposed City Fee Waiver Program and the amendments to the CCHIP are also in alignment with the SA Tomorrow Comprehensive Plan.
• The CCHIP limits eligibility to areas where future land use is in line with SA Tomorrow planning efforts
• The CCHIP requires projects to meet greater density requirements than earlier versions of the program
• The CCHIP proposes creation of a new affordable housing fund, which can provide further incentives aligned with regional centers and SA Tomorrow goals
• City Fee Waiver program incentives will be available within the San Antonio city limits, but exclude areas over the Edwards Aquifer recharge zone, areas of limited purpose annexation and extraterritorial jurisdiction (ETJ) to help address sprawl
• City Fee Waiver program (currently known as ICRIP) focuses on project types, including affordable housing, owner occupied rehabilitation, historic rehabilitation, and business development/legacy businesses
o While affordable housing and historic rehabilitation projects will be limited to geographic areas based on land values and historic status, the economic development incentives will be aligned with areas with poverty rates of 20% or more, Opportunity Zones, and regional centers as they’re adopted by Council in line with SA Tomorrow planning efforts
The Economic and Workforce Development City Council Committee (EWDC) received a briefing on the proposed amendments on August 7, 2018. The Comprehensive Plan City Council Committee also received a briefing on August 15, 2018. Staff followed both briefings with extensive stakeholder outreach, including with affordable housing providers, neighborhood associations that are within or adjacent to the CCHIP boundary, Centro, and the downtown developer community. A follow-up briefing was given to the EWDC on October 2, 2018. Staff proposes City Council consideration of the proposed amendments on November 29, 2018.
ALTERNATIVES:
City Council may elect not to forward the proposed amendments to A Session, which would adversely impact the ability to support desired growth through a predictable set of incentives in the urban core. If action is not taken on the City of San Antonio Fee Waiver Program, the Inner City Reinvestment/Infill Policy (ICRIP) would remain operational in its current form.
FISCAL IMPACT:
This item is for briefing purposes only. Council consideration is pending during A Session on November 29, 2018.
RECOMMENDATION:
Staff recommends forwarding for Council consideration the proposed changes to the Center City Housing Incentive Policy (CCHIP) and replacing the Inner City Reinvestment/Infill Policy (ICRIP) with the City of San Antonio Fee Waiver Program.