Cornwall’s affordable housing challenge

CORNWALL — Targeted goals for implementing the town’s affordable housing plan and the obstacles that could lie ahead were discussed at a virtual “conversation” hosted by the Cornwall Library, drawing about 65 attendees on Saturday, May 7.

The hour-long event was moderated by documentary filmmaker Bill McClane and featured a discussion between longtime affordable housing advocate Maggie Cooley and urban planning and New York University policy professor Ingrid Gould Ellen. McClane also fielded questions from the public.

The talk focused on ways Cornwall can create affordable housing that supports a “gentle density increase” in town by amending zoning regulations, helping homeowners renovate homes to increase occupancy and assisting seniors with making their homes liveable to help them age in place.

“The easiest ones to achieve and the ones most palatable to anyone who is nervous about affordable housing are the ones that are quasi-invisible and involve changes within existing structures with no exterior alterations,” said Cooley, a West Cornwall attorney who heads up the Cornwall Affordable Housing Committee and has been part of the Cornwall Housing Corporation (CHC) since the 1990s.

Cornwall, like many other Northwest Corner towns, is required to abide by a 2017 state statute mandating an Affordable Housing Plan by July 2022. According to McClane, an initial $10,000 grant from the state funded the creation of Cornwall’s plan, which was backed by the Board of Selectmen and submitted to the state.

The long-term goal of the plan is not only to meet the housing needs of current and future residents, but also to attract and retain a diverse workforce within the community.

“It is now a regulatory document still in discussion among the selectmen and Planning and Zoning,” said McClane, who noted that the mandate had been on the books for years and sat mostly dormant until the past two years. “It became apparent that the state was getting more serious about it.”

Statistics support
the need

Housing advocates pointed out that a household that spends more than 30% of its monthly income on housing costs, which includes rent and/or mortgage, utilities and maintenance, is considered “housing-cost burdened.”

In Cornwall, as of last year, 35% of the population fit that category. On a related note, Connecticut is the third most costly state in the country in terms of home maintenance, which is estimated at a yearly expense of about $18,000, according to statistics from a May 24, 2021, Cornwall Housing Forum presentation.

The big picture across the country in the past five decades, Gould Ellen said, is that the slowdown in construction has resulted in higher demand and skyrocketing home and rental prices — if rental units can be found at all. Add to that, a global pandemic.  “COVID exacerbated everything and affordable disappeared.

“As a result, households are limiting spending, making it impossible to pay for down payments and any financial crisis,” Gould Ellen said, adding that in many areas, adult children continue to live in their parents’ homes. “All this is true in Cornwall, too.”

Another side effect is that as available homes are purchased, their values increase with subsequent ownerships, as the structures are renovated and expanded.

“These houses will never be affordable again. It makes them larger, and even more out of reach,” explained Gould Ellen.

65 more
units needed

According to Gould Ellen, there are 36 affordable housing units in town, representing about 3% of all housing stock. In order to meet the state’s benchmark that 10% of housing become affordable in every municipality, “Cornwall would need 65 more affordable units,” she said.

Affordable housing is defined as housing that costs less than 30% of the income of households earning 80% or less of the area’s median income. Under that formula, said Gould Ellen, for a three-person household, that is someone earning less than about $74,000. “An affordable rent for that household would be $1,800 or less.” For a two-person household, she said, the rent would be about $1,600 per month.

Cooley, who held positions on the Planning and Zoning Commission and was Cornwall’s land use clerk and also served as town probate judge for 20 years, responded that the rental rates quoted by Gould Ellen “are still astronomical for the people that we serve.”

She noted that the highest rental at the 18-unit Kugeman Village housing project is around $590 for a three-bedroom apartment, which is “extraordinary” by comparison. “That’s what’s manageable. The rentals that Ingrid quoted aren’t easy for anyone.”

On the other hand, the construction of additional multiple-unit affordable housing projects in Cornwall can be a challenge, as there is limited infrastructure to support such large-scale housing, said Cooley. “It’s a huge undertaking to do a large project like that, and it takes two to three years from start to renting — and that’s if you have a clear timeline without any interruptions,” like rising building costs. “It can take a long, long time.”

Suggested strategies 
and goals

In response to a question about what  the Cornwall Affordable Housing Plan recommends, Gould Ellen noted that there are various strategies and some numerical goals that will target and monitor progress.

These include the addition of 10 additional units of affordable housing in town and creation of  10 more units of rental housing in general. She noted that, at last count, there were only two rental homes on the market in Cornwall, and both were asking exorbitant rents. “It was something astronomical, like $7,000 a month.”

The plan also calls for an additional 10 units of senior housing. Currently, the only age-designated housing development in Cornwall is Bonney Brook, a 10-unit federal Department of  Housing and Urban Development (HUD) senior affordable housing complex on Kent Road, which has an average waiting list of about two years.

Five buckets on the list

Gould Ellen said the Cornwall Housing Corporation’s bucket list has five main components: to build dedicated, affordable housing that supports gentle density increase. This goal may involve amending zoning regulations to allow for accessory apartments or Accessory Dwelling Units on existing single-family lots, which can be in separate buildings on the property like barns, garages or pool houses.

Other goals include helping seniors age in place in their homes, connecting residents with available affordable housing units and educating residents about the Affordable Housing Plan and its incentives.

“One of the other ideas kicking around is the creation of a revolving loan fund in the town,” to help seniors make adjustments to their homes and to assist with down payments, said Gould Ellen. “Modest reforms to the town zoning regulations could end up producing a fair amount of affordable rental housing.”

Community values

matter, too

McClane asked the panel what conversation they would have with homeowners who support affordable housing but are concerned that the addition of such housing will negatively impact property values.

Gould Ellen pointed to Bonney Brook and Kugeman Village as examples of good neighbors. “Housing developments like these don’t have to undermine your property values and you don’t have to worry about that.”

Cooley said proponents of affordable housing have been “singing the song for decades about how creating affordable housing has the opposite effect on overall property values.”

The reality, she said, is that when a community has ample affordable housing, there is also an array of residents who wouldn’t be there otherwise.

“Besides strictly property values, it’s good to also think about community values. You have to consider the value of these people and the functions they perform in the town,” said Cooley, who noted that almost every business in town has a “Help Wanted” sign on its window.

“These are people who used to live down the road; some are gone forever.”

Gould Ellen agreed. “You need housing that is affordable to a range of incomes in order to have a diversity of workers in your community.

“If you don’t do that you are going to have people suffering unsustainable commutes, which is not only a burden on the individual, but also environmentally costly for the rest of us.”

Latest News

Community welcomes new health center

Foundation for Community Health Director Nancy Heaton cheers alongside the team that made Community Health and Wellness Center's new North Canaan facility a reality. CHWC's CEO Joanne Borduas (far left) thanked all the partners who contributed to creating a comprehensive health center in the Northwest Corner.

Riley Klein

NORTH CANAAN — The long-awaited opening of Community Health and Wellness Center’s (CHWC) facility on East Main Street has arrived.

After more than a decade of planning and collaboration with community partners, CHWC’s North Canaan goals have become reality. The ribbon cutting ceremony on Friday, May 10, ushered in a new era of healthcare for the Northwest Corner.

Keep ReadingShow less
Afghan artists find new homes in Connecticut
Alibaba Awrang, left, with family and friends at the opening of his show at The Good Gallery in Kent on Saturday, May 4.
Alexander Wilburn

The Good Gallery, located next to The Kent Art Association on South Main Street, is known for its custom framing, thanks to proprietor Tim Good. As of May, the gallery section has greatly expanded beyond the framing shop, adding more space and easier navigation for viewing larger exhibitions of work. On Saturday, May 4, Good premiered the opening of “Through the Ashes and Smoke,” featuring the work of two Afghan artists and masters of their crafts, calligrapher Alibaba Awrang and ceramicist Matin Malikzada.

This is a particularly prestigious pairing considering the international acclaim their work has received, but it also highlights current international affairs — both Awrang and Malikzada are now recently based in Connecticut as refugees from Afghanistan. As Good explained, Matin has been assisted through the New Milford Refugee Resettlement (NMRR), and Alibaba through the Washington Refugee Resettlement Project. NMRR started in 2016 as a community-led non-profit supported by private donations from area residents that assist refugees and asylum-seeking families with aid with rent and household needs.

Keep ReadingShow less
Students share work at Troutbeck Symposium

Students presented to packed crowds at Troutbeck.

Natalia Zukerman

The third annual Troutbeck Symposium began this year on Wednesday, May 1 with a historical marker dedication ceremony to commemorate the Amenia Conferences of 1916 and 1933, two pivotal gatherings leading up to the Civil Rights movement.

Those early meetings were hosted by the NAACP under W.E.B. Du Bois’s leadership and with the support of hosts Joel and Amy Spingarn, who bought the Troutbeck estate in the early 1900s.

Keep ReadingShow less