Resale restrictions give buyers access to below-market prices
Resale restrictions give buyers access to below-market prices
Steve Bergsman
Inman News™
At a time when everyone is looking for stability in the housing market, perhaps some attention should be directed to community land trusts (CLTs).
What? You've never heard of them? Don't feel badly. I hadn't heard of them either until I recently came across a news item on the Internet that read, "Delinquencies and foreclosures remain low in community land trusts."
Good news in the housing market always catches my eye, so I decided to investigate further.
First, the basics. A community land trust holds working land in a trust format to ensure the land is put to public use, usually serving a disenfranchised population. About 80 percent of all CLT organizations across the country (and there are about 250 of these groups) work in the affordable housing arena. At last count, about 10,000 homes are in CLTs.
CLTs work in different ways, but the most common approach is the one that makes CLT unique: a CLT separates home and "land underneath" ownership.
There are couple of reasons for this. First, a low- to moderate-income buyer needs only to purchase the improvement -- i.e., the house -- which makes the purchase more affordable.
"The nice thing about CLTs is that they don't really stop at the purchase -- they continue to provide stewardship to ensure that homeownership is successfully sustained over time," said Emily Thaden, a program manager for Our House, the shared-equity homeownership program of The Housing Fund Inc. in Nashville, Tenn.
Secondly, there is an operating-organization economic reason for separating land and house.
Under the old housing aid model, communities subsidizing homeownership helped low- and moderate-income families get into new housing. If housing prices suddenly took off, only the homeowner benefited although all the cost of getting into the new house was through public monies.
"I don't know of any corporation that makes an investment of tens of thousands of dollars and just throws it away after five years," said Roger Lewis, executive director of the National CLT Network. "The CLT model allows organizations to keep some of the appreciation by attaching conditions of permanent affordability within the homeownership."
The key condition being the homeowner can't resell the home at any price.
"You are getting a house at a low price and it has to be sold at a low price," said Lewis. "The rights of the private market are restricted in a community land trust house. That's the trade-off."
Restricting the sale price allows the current homeowner to realize some wealth from owning the home, while the opportunity to buy affordable housing is then passed on to the next owner, said Thaden.
Besides being a good explainer, Thaden is also a fine researcher. She was the person who undertook the study to determine how CLT homeownership numbers stacked up against the general market.
Her findings showed:
"The findings make sense, as CLTs are ensuring that homeowners obtain sound, affordable, fixed-rate mortgages," said Thaden. "And because of the stewardship model, the homeowners in CLT homes are ending up with better outcomes if they are becoming delinquent."
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