|
Searching For Affordable
Homes in the Country
By Linda Fischer
Assistant Editor
Life in rural America has its ups and downs just like any place
else. And, just like any place else, finding a good place to live
at an affordable price is a challenge.
Experts on rural housing gathered recently at the 2002 Governor's
Conference on Housing in Missouri to discuss the special challenges
facing potential homebuyers and developers in the country.
 |
"Lack of affordable housing is a major problem in rural cities,"
said Mark Stalsworth of the Missouri Housing Development Commission.
"Development costs can be quite high in rural areas, sometimes higher
than in urban areas."
One reason for the higher cost is a scarcity of contractors, Stalsworth
said. Contractors go where they can find the combination of work
and high wages, and that's in cities.
Joseph Bayer, president of First Integrity Mortgage Services in
St. Louis, agreed.
"Labor is an issue," he said. "Where will you get labor if you're
going to build from the ground up? In urban areas, you have contractors
who have a labor force in place. In rural areas, you have contractors
who build two or three homes a year and who do not have a labor
pool to call on."
Another problem in country communities is a lack of planning and
zoning, said Becky Eftink, rural housing specialist with USDA/Rural
Development in Missouri. In very rural areas, there may not even
be an infrastructure such as sewer and water lines.
Credit problems and "payment shock" also can keep low- to moderate-income
people in the country from becoming successful homeowners, she said.
"For instance, a young couple may go from a $300 a month rent to
$1,000 a month house payment, and they don't have the experience
to handle it."
What can communities do to lessen the problems?
Eftink suggested working with technical schools to build a work
force for the housing industry. In addition, those in the industry
could create job "shadowing" programs to spark interest among young
people about careers in homebuilding. However, Stalsworth said some
small communities have built their pool of homebuilders only to
see them leave for more money in bigger towns.
Where there is little or no planning and zoning, community leaders
need to study towns that have good planning and zoning and adopt
similar ordinances, Eftink said. As for poor credit or "payment
shock," she said many problems could be avoided if high schools
taught financial literacy.
Bayer became interested in lending and in building houses in rural
areas about five years ago after hearing an impassioned speech by
a Federal Housing Administration official on the need for home loans
in the country. He formed a partnership with a builder for the express
purpose of constructing houses in rural Missouri.
"It's a slow process, to be quite honest," he said.
Part of the problem is that small rural banks generally do not offer
the loans that lower-income people need, Bayer said. Because most
of these banks just offer balloon notes, his St. Louis-based company
started lending through a network of rural banks, which gave them
the ability to offer new products in their areas.
Bayer's work in housing development has also given him a builder's
perspective. If a rural community decides to expand its housing
stock, there are issues to address and steps to take before proceeding,
Bayer said. They are:
1. Is the community in agreement that new housing stock is needed?
If not, the project will never succeed.
2. What will the target price of the house be? What price range
can the community handle without having "payment shock"? This determines
what kind of housing will be built.
3. Is there available labor?
4. The community has to accept that quality affordable housing costs
money. If the market is low-income people, then the builder can
construct quality houses, but they will have to be small.
5. The community should take advantage of government assistance
that is available for new construction in rural areas.
6. There has to be a firm commitment on the part of the developer
to follow the project through to the end. Some projects have been
started and then abandoned when problems arose.
7. Rural communities should consider manufactured housing. There
are quality manufactured houses that can be built on a concrete
foundation that "are a heck of a lot better than existing houses
at the same price," Bayer said. Many communities have adopted BOCA
(Building Officials and Code Administrators) codes so that they
can limit manufactured housing. "That is a mistake," Bayer said.
8. City officials need to be flexible. When the community has done
all the planning, it needs to empower one leader to break down barriers
and take charge of the project.
Another expert on the panel was Dottie Sheppick of Countrywide Home
Loans Inc., which originates and buys loans that are guaranteed
by USDA's Rural Housing Service. Lenders in the rural market are
needed, she said.
"It can be difficult for first-time home buyers with very few resources
to get a home loan in any area," she said. "In rural areas, it can
be even tougher because there are fewer lenders and less competition."
A positive trend is that some rural banks are offering more mortgages
that can be sold in the secondary market, opening up the doors to
more potential homeowners, she said.
When lenders do have products to offer people with low or moderate
incomes, they need to be creative in getting the word out, she said.
She suggested conducting homebuyer fairs; using radio and newspaper
public service announcements; working with rural service groups,
such as Rural Housing Service; and having meetings or distributing
fliers at county fairs, rodeos and restaurants.
"Go wherever people gather," she said.
-------------------
For information on USDA/Rural Development housing programs in your
state, visit www.rurdev.usda.gov,
click on "state offices" and click on your state.
For information on local housing programs, contact an agency in
your state:
Arkansas Development Finance Authority, www.state.ar.us/adfa
Illinois Housing Development Authority, http://www.ihda.org/
Indiana Housing Finance Authority, www.IN.gov/ihfa/
Kentucky Housing Corp., www.kyhousing.org
Mississippi Home Corp., www.mshomecorp.com
Missouri Housing Development Commission, www.mhdc.com
and
Tennessee Housing Development Agency, www.state.tn.us/thda.
back to top
|