Building multi-family housing units slow down could cause higher rents
Kare 11, May 16, 2024
"We need more supply to meet that demand," said Cathy Bennett, who leads the Twin Cities Housing Alliance. The organization is only a few years old and is a non-profit tackling the industry's challenges.
"So that those who are most vulnerable to housing instability have a chance to be able to get into a home," said Bennett.
Opinion: Housing gets built where it’s welcome
Star Tribune, October 30, 2023
In response to "The Fair Housing Act, 55 years later" (Oct. 25) I'd like to respond: "Yes, and ... ."
Yes, we absolutely need more housing that's affordable and accessible. Yes, like many other critical topics, this discussion is frequently bogged down by nuance, disagreement and antiquated funding structures. Yes, we need to build everywhere, not just in Minneapolis and St. Paul.
And, I'd like to offer, this is where many conclusions are oversimplified. In my experience, there are plenty of financiers, developers and property managers who are eager to bring housing projects to suburbs and exurbs. Where I see more of a sticking point is navigating conversations in those exact communities. A long history of risk aversion, NIMBYism, mistrust and slow, unclear bureaucracy are bigger impediments than developers' interests.
First American City to Tame Inflation Owes Its Success to Affordable Housing
Bloomberg, August 9, 2023
No place in the US has put inflation in the rearview mirror quite as fast as Minneapolis.
In May, the Twin Cities became the first major metropolitan area to see annual inflation fall below the Federal Reserve’s target of 2%. Its 1.8% pace of price increases was the lowest of any region that month.
That’s largely due to a region-wide push to address one of the most intractable issues for both the Fed and American consumers: rising housing costs. Well before pandemic-related supply-chain snarls and labor shortages roiled the economy, the city of Minneapolis eliminated zoning that allowed only single-family homes and since 2018 has invested $320 million for rental assistance and subsidies.
Is now a ‘risky time’ for rent control in Minneapolis?
Finance & Commerce, June 1, 2023
Cathy Capone Bennett — executive director of the Twin Cities Housing Alliance, a nonprofit association of housing providers and associated stakeholders — agrees with the report.
“We do not believe that rent control of any sort will help with the significant housing issues that we have right now in our market,” she said.
Investors view the Twin Cities as a region, and she believes a rent-control policy in Minneapolis would impact the whole metro. “Capital markets, they’ll just take their money elsewhere,” she said, laying out a ripple effect of more expensive loans and higher costs to produce new housing, which would exacerbate the housing crisis.
Affordable housing advocates and developers need help, but not a rent cap
Star Tribune, February 15, 2023
The Twin Cities Housing Alliance of about 40 developers and the Minnesota Housing Partnership have led the chorus for more investment to produce more housing to accommodate working-poor households that make up to about $50,000 annually and pay more than 30% of their income in rent. The state median household income is about $80,000.
The additional funding would include long-term renewal of the state historic-building tax credit to accelerate conversion of more abandoned and underused properties into housing.
Mayor Frey on rent control recommendation: ‘It’s not happening’
KSTP, December 14, 2022
Cathy Capone Bennett with the Twin Cities Housing Alliance had a seat at the table during the discussions.
“I believe we need to focus on real solutions,” she said. “We believe that Minneapolis can be a real leader in addressing residents’,’ concerns with a targeted approach that gets in the hands of the lowest of incomes. … The working group’s recommendation is not going to solve that.”
Suburban voters sour on officials fighting growth and development
Star Tribune, November 12, 2022
The housing shortage has become personal for families at all income levels, said Cathy Capone Bennett, executive director of the Twin Cities Housing Alliance. The Twin Cities ranks 13th nationally for the underproduction of housing, according to a new study. from the national housing advocacy group Up For Growth.
"New development is needed to meet the needs across the entire housing ecosystem," Capone Bennett said. "People are feeling it in their families. They feel it when their 29- and 30-year-old kids still live with them and they can't afford rent or a house."
Young people who can afford houses in the suburbs are eager to bring urban amenities with them, including restaurants, shopping and walkability.
While election results provide a tangible metric, the pro-development movement in the suburbs has quietly taken root across much of the Twin Cities during the last decade, Capone Bennett said, pointing to building booms in cities including Hopkins, Edina and Woodbury.