Affordable housing project breaks frozen ground

Affordable housing project breaks frozen ground

From left, Salisbury Affordable Housing Commission Chair Jennifer Kronholm Clark, Litchfield County Center for Housing Opporunity Director Jocelyn Ayer, State Rep. Maria Horn (D-64), Connecticut Department of Housing Commissioner Seila Mosquera-Bruno, Cornwall First Selectman Gordon Ridgway, Cornwall Housing Corporation member Beth Frost, Capital for Change Director of Commercial Lending & Impact Carla Weil.

Alec Linden

CORNWALL — Legislators, officials and affordable housing advocates gathered despite the cold on the morning of Feb. 7 to celebrate the launch of a new program that will see the installation of ten new affordable homes across five towns in the Northwest Corner.

The project, coordinated by the Litchfield County Center for Housing Opportunity and called the Litchfield County Homeownership Program, will construct modular single-family homes at each site which will be affordable for families whose income is below the area median. The Feb. 7 groundbreaking ceremony was hosted at 349 Town St. in Cornwall, where trees have already been cleared in preparation for the new homes. According to LCCHO’s website, Cornwall’s median home price in 2024 was $1,1150,000. The other towns involved in the project — Washington, Salisbury, Norfolk and North Canaan — have similarly high housing prices.

LCCHO Director Jocelyn Ayer spoke to the precedent set by uniting disparate affordable housing developments across town lines: “I think this a great example of how to bring smaller scattered site projects in our region together as a broader project.”

Attendants warmed themselves with provided hot chocolate and cookies as Jocelyn Ayer, director of LCCHO, called the group to assemble. Shoes crunched on the frozen ground as the tree tops surrounding the cleared plot of land tossed in the strong gusts. Cornwall Selectman Rocco Botto assessed the conditions poetically: “The north wind doth blow,” he said, earning some chuckles from the crowd.

During her opening remarks, Ayer chose to look on the bright side before passing the mic on to the distinguished list of speakers: “At least we got some sunshine!”

The roster included representatives from the various organizations involved with the development and financing of the project, including Carla Weil of Capital for Change, Jennifer Kronholm Clark who chairs The Salisbury Affordable Housing Commission, and Beth Frost of the Cornwall Housing Corporation.

State Rep. Maria Horn, D-64, spoke first, appealing to the brutal weather as yet another reason to bring affordable homes to the region. “What better than a cold, windy day to remind you of the importance of having a warm home,” she said.

Cornwall First Selectman Gordon Ridgway took the stage next, emphasizing that Cornwall is “refreshed” by newcomers to town, and expressed the need to ensure those people can be welcomed by affordable living conditions. “The needs for housing here are just as much as anywhere else in the state,” he said.

Connecticut Department of Housing Commissioner Seila Mosquera-Bruno offered the final speech, echoing Ridgway’s sentiment that affordable housing development is a statewide priority: “We have a goal to keep everybody housed,” she said. She was happy to be at the event despite the weather, she said — “I always love coming to this part of the state!”

Each speaker then hefted a shovel and stuck it into the frozen ground to symbolize the real digging soon to come before attendants began to retreat to the warmth of their cars. “Thanks for freezing with us!” called out Ayer as the crowd dispersed.

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