AUDIO: Great Barrington's Affordable Housing Trust takes on the community's largest economic challenge
Manage episode 417371548 series 3573426
There’s no discussion of the economic future of the southern Berkshires that doesn’t have the cost and availability of housing at its center.
Trends well underway in the last decade were accelerated by the COVID19 pandemic: The cost of houses to buy or rent has skyrocketed, fueled by an increase in properties acquired by part-time residents and others used exclusively for short-term rentals, a failure to keep up with demand via new construction, cash buyers who snap up properties before local working people can assemble financing, and a zero-percent vacancy rate for rentals.
The result of these and other factors has been an unusually large percentage of full-time residents spending more than a third of their income on housing costs, considered the standard for affordability. That’s pushed them further away, geographically, from jobs and family as they seek housing that’s affordable. It’s meant businesses of all kinds are struggling to attract and keep staff, from the service- and tourism-industry jobs critical to the region, to higher-paid health care workers who simply can’t find a house to buy.
This episode of the podcast is a conversation about the current housing landscape with Bill Cooke and Ananda Timpane, two members of Great Barrington’s Affordable Housing Trust. It’s an appointed municipal board, made up of volunteers, and focused on securing funds and investing in housing solutions, from down-payment assistance, to subsidizing affordable units built by private developers, to advancing proposals for accessory dwelling units that can house more people and help those already living here afford to stay.
The Berkshire Argus: Important stories fully told.
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