►
From YouTube: August 2023 Consortium of Cities Meeting
Description
Aug. 2, 2023 Consortium of Cities
Topic: Affordable Housing
B
A
Again,
for
our
recording,
my
name
is
Martha
lotion,
Boulder,
County,
Commissioner
and
we've
got
some
folks
in
the
room.
So
as
always,
we
do
introductions
and
we'll
maybe
do
on
the
line
first
and
then
we'll
do
in
person
as
far
as
introductions
go
so
your
name
and
then
your
title
and
certainly
give
us
a
relationship
to
which
town
or
city
that
you
represent,
so
that
we
know
who's
in
the
room,
who's
participating
in
the
conversation
and
then
we'll
go
through
what
our
agenda
is
and
give
anybody
an
opportunity.
A
If
there's
an
item
that
we
missed,
that
was
not
listed
on
the
agenda
based
on
time
this
evening,
we
will
make
sure
that
we
finish
right
before
8
30.
We
typically
take
a
break
so
just
anticipation.
If
anybody
has
other
things
they
need
to
address
in
the
middle,
we
will
have
a
little
break
so.
A
C
D
Hi
I'm
Ari
Harrison,
the
trustee
with
kind
of
Beary.
C
E
Hi
I'm
Sean
McCoy
city
councilman
at
large
town
of
Longmont
or
city
of
Longmont.
C
C
C
A
All
right,
thank
you.
Thank
you
all
for
joining
us
online
and
we'll
try
and
pay
attention.
So,
if
there's
other
folks
that
maybe
enter
in
during
the
meeting
will
give
them
a
chance
as
well
to
introduce
themselves
so
how
about
in
the
room
and
I'll
start,
maybe
to
my
right
here
in
introduction
thanks
I'm.
A
Being
here
and
participating
this
evening,
so
you
for
those
of
us
in
the
room,
the
agenda
was
neatly
and
organizedly
put
on
our
tables
here.
So
we
appreciate
that
and
I
want
to
say,
I
think
Erie,
maybe
you're
the
shout
out
for
the
furthest
distance
to
join
us
tonight
in
person.
So
thank
you
for
that.
A
So
here's
our
agenda,
we've
got
Regional
Housing
Partnership,
an
update
on
that
and
then
we're
going
to
hear
a
little
bit
around
proposition.
123
updates
in
that
direction.
As
always,
we'll
have
an
opportunity
for
questions
and
just
dialogue
for
those
of
you
on
the
chat.
A
Of
course,
please
do
use
that
to
connect
with
each
other
and
questions
that
you
might
have
as
well
and
we'll
try
and
keep
our
eye
on
anyone
that
puts
their
hand
up
either
in
a
true
motion,
if
you're
able
and
otherwise
with
that
little
button,
that
will
give
us
a
signal
as
well.
A
I'm
not
gonna
argue
with
that,
okay
good.
Well,
then,
without
any
indications
of
anybody
wanting
to
add
anything,
we
won't
add
more
to
that
agenda
and
we'll
do
our
best
to
get
through
it
and
we
will
have
an
opportunity
for
Community
announcements
and
and
if
we
don't
have
the
the
time
from
the
the
schedule.
Folks
in
the
chat
please
do
put
those
in
there
and
and
as
staff
will
update
with
any
websites
or
specific
dates
and
times
for
invitations
for
different
events.
A
So
we
appreciate
that
so
with
that,
let's
move
into
our
Regional
Housing
Partnership
we've
got
an
update
on
plan
implementation
and
really
the
question
was
around
the
goals
of
the
Regional
Housing
Partnership,
the
specific
items
that
are
on
there
were
kind
of
the
strategies
in
there,
so
Bill
Cole.
Thank
you
for
joining
us.
L
You're
very
welcome
so
I
I
want
to
give
a
little
bit
of
overview
on
the
the
Housing
Partnership,
because
I've
been
here
since
the
end
of
December
and
I,
find
it
helpful
to
kind
of
provide
some
context
about
what
the
Housing
partnership
does.
L
So.
The
Boulder
County
Housing
Regional,
the
Boulder
County
Regional
Housing
Partnership,
coordinates
the
preservation
and
development,
affordable
housing
with
municipalities
throughout
the
county,
and
we
do
that
by
sharing
of
information
and
best
practices
and
advocating
for
affordable
housing
projects
and
supporting
Municipal
programs,
including
home
ownership
and
home
home
Rehabilitation,
fostering
those
Partnerships
and
developing
affordable
housing
policies
to
be
used
by
the
county
and,
hopefully,
municipalities
within
the
county.
L
We
currently
have
two
committees,
the
executive
steering
committee,
which
is
comprised
of
staff
from
Boulder
County,
the
city
of
Boulder,
the
town
of
Erie,
the
city
of
Lafayette,
the
city
of
Longmont
and
the
City
of
Louisville,
and
that
is
expanding.
We're
trying
to
bring
more
people
in
to
so
more
voices
are
heard,
especially
from
the
small
jurisdictions,
because
we
want
to
hear
what's
happening
there
and
we
want
to
be
able
to
address
those
needs.
L
The
second
is
the
advisory
committee,
which
is
that
above
list
I
just
mentioned,
plus
any
and
all
other
municipalities
in
in
the
county
and
then
really
any
organization
that
works
on
affordable
housing
in
the
county.
Yesterday,
at
the
quarterly
meeting,
we
had
a
habitat
there
for
the
first
time
and
it
was
good
to
have
them
there
and
hear
from
them
as
well.
So
it's
just
really
bringing
everybody
together
that
we
can.
We
are
not
a
formal
body,
we're
not
a
council
or
a
board.
L
We
are
just
staff
in
the
different
municipalities
in
the
county.
Working
together,
we
do
have
some
County
funds.
Thank
you,
commissioner.
Luxemen
for
those
from
arpa
to
help
us
do
some
of
this
work
that
were
going
on,
but
we
don't
have
like
development
funds.
We
aren't
the
the
organization
itself
is
not
in
the
business
of
developing
housing,
we're
really
supporting
the
development
of
housing
in
other
places
that
are
doing
it.
That
makes
sense.
L
Staff
have
been
collaborating
in
this
way
since
2016.
and
I
said,
as
I
said,
we
support
the
development
and
advocate
for
affordable
housing
across
the
jurisdictions,
and
we
really
try
to
Leverage
The
expertise
and
use
that
across
the
jurisdictions
for
one-
and
one
instance,
is
that
is
instance
of
that
is
using
the
arpa
funds.
L
Boulder
County
has
a
really
good
program
around
home
ownership
and
Rental
compliance,
and
so
we're
providing
additional
funds
to
them
to
hire
more
staff
so
that
they
can
work
with
municipalities
that
don't
have
that
program
to
help
them
with
that,
and
that
will
hopefully
be
an
ongoing
program
into
the
future.
Another
one
that
we're
looking
at
is
city
house.
L
L
We're
looking
at
possibly
looking
at
mobile
home
park,
ordinances
and
and
Zoning
around
that
so
really
talking
about
you
know
both
affordable
housing,
deed,
restricted
and
naturally
occurring
in
affordable
housing
and
I
also
want
to
mention
and
plug
that
we
are
having
a
housing
Summit.
We
are
planning
that,
and
the
date
is
November
14th
it'll
be
starting
at
around
nine
o'clock
and
going
until
about
four
and
it's
going
to
be
at
the
boulder
JCC
and
I
just
want
to.
L
L
So
when
it
comes
to
this
question
on
the
agenda
about
what
strategies
are
you
implementing
talked
about
inclusionary
housing,
the
policies
really
talking
and
supporting
each
other
in
the
development?
One
of
the
things
we're
looking
at,
we
can
talk
about
this
more
with
prop
123
is
jurisdictions,
are
getting
doing
their
letters
of
commitment
opting
in
and
we
really
want
to
coordinate
across
jurisdictions.
So
we're
not
both
that
we're
not
stepping
on
each
other,
we're
not
overlapping,
so
that
we
can
really
maximize
the
dollars
that
come
into
the
county.
L
Other
organizations
in
the
county
have
done
this
with
other
funding
from
the
state
and
when
the
when
the
state
sees
how
well
we
coordinate
at
the
county
level,
they
respond
to
that
positively,
and
so
that
is
part
of
the
part
of
our
thinking
about
how
we're
going
to
deal
with
prop
123
is
really
work
together
across
the
jurisdictions
on
that
so
I
mentioned
inclusionary
housing
I
know
some
jurisdictions
have
fee
and
lose
for
developments.
L
I
know
that
a
lot
of
jurisdictions
are
working
on
adus
and
updating
that
and
they're
also
updating
housing
plans.
I
know
that
Lafayette
just
finished
updating
theirs
Longmont
is
working
on
theirs.
Lewisville
is
starting
to
work
on
theirs
as
well.
So
it's
really
updating
those
plans
as
well.
M
Did
you
want
to
wait
till
the
under
can
I
ask
a
question
on
that
statement?
Go
for
it.
Is
there
a
lot
of
commonality
and
strategies
they're
coming
up
with
across
these
towns
for
their
Adu
strategies.
L
Not
that
I
have
seen
I
mean
I,
know
that,
like
right
now,
Lafayette
is
looking
at
that
right
now,
adus
are
allowed
in
the
in
the
historical
downtown
area
and
they're
looking
at
expanding
that
across
the
jurisdiction,
the
Lewisville
as
part
of
the
Marshall
fire
conversations
that
have
been
talking
about
that
so
they're
looking
how
to
do
that,
as
well
as
a
result
of
the
Marshall
fires
and
I,
and
then
I
know
longmont's
revisiting
that
and-
and
you
all
know,
probably
know
this
better
than
I
do.
L
But
I
know
that
long
months
also
looking
at
that
as
they're
updating
their
plans
and
their
zoning,
but
I
don't
know
that
I
could
say
that
there's
commonality
at
this
point
I
mean
I,
don't
really
even
know
much
about
Boulder's
Adu,
but
I
know
they
have
a
pretty
robust
program.
So
I
haven't
done
that
kind
of
look.
L
M
L
Here,
yep
right
exactly
so,
as
you
know,
the
county-wide
goal
is
to
have
12
affordable
homes
by
2035,
which
would
be
approximately
18
000
units.
We
are
working
towards
that.
The
city
of
Boulder
is
at
8.3
percent
and
they
have
a
city
goal
of
15,
so
they're
being
assertive
with
that
longmont's
at
6.3
and
unincorporated
Boulder
County
is
at
2.8,
which
sounds
really
low
compared
to
the
other
guys,
but
all
of
those
numbers
are
up
from
the
time
that
that
commit
moves
made
in
2017
all
the
numbers
have
risen.
L
As
you
know,
there
are
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
things
that
have
occurred
and
are
occurring,
such
as
Willoughby
corner
and
Lafayette.
It's
400
additional
units
that
will
be
coming
online
bcha
has
added
19
99
new
units
since
2017.
D
Yeah
just
real
quickly,
I
mean
you
talked
about
unincorporated
Boulder,
County
and
I
wanted
to
kind
of
get
a
little
bit
more
clarity
in
terms
of
what
that
encompasses.
As
far
as
where
that
data
comes
from,
because
obviously
half
of
Erie
release
where
I'm
at
is
an
unincorporated
Boulder
County,
so
I
wanted
to
kind
of
get
a
little
perspective.
Is
that
do
you
have
data
from
Erie
in
regard
to
any
of
that
information?.
L
I,
do
not
we're
just
when
we
talk
about
unincorporated,
Boulder
County.
It's
everything
outside
the
municipal
Municipal
boundaries.
D
D
Yeah,
which
which
obviously
where
we
are
so,
but
obviously
we
straddle
two
different
counties,
so
I
just
wanted
to
clarify.
So
if
there's
any
data
that
we
need
to
do
we'll
try
to
figure
that
out.
If
you
need
that.
L
L
So
in
the
pipeline,
I
just
want
to
also
mention
this
I
mean
talking
about
progress,
as
I
mentioned,
we'll
be
Corner
in
Lafayette
is
adding
400
units.
The
city
of
Boulder
has
1464
units
in
the
pipeline,
and
the
city
of
Longmont
have
another
512
in
the
pipeline
and
that's
looking
out
several
years.
So
there's
a
lot
of
activity.
It's
gonna!
It
is
a
stretch
to
reach
that
that
12,
but
we're
doing
what
we
can
to
get
there
or.
L
Will
be
Corners
is
being
built
by
Boulder
County
Housing
Authority,
so
that
is
public,
the
other
ones
Boulder
and
Longmont
I
can't
answer
I'm,
not
sure
I.
Just
they
just
gave
me
the
numbers.
They
didn't
give
me
the
specifics
on
the
project.
M
L
So
there's
two
pieces
to
affordability.
The
first
piece
is-
and
this
is
a
HUD
standard-
is
that
no
more
than
30
percent
of
a
household
income
goes
towards
housing
costs,
so
that
includes
mortgage
and
rent
mortgage
or
rent
plus
utilities.
Things
like
that,
so
that
is
considered
affordable
if
it's
30
or
under
over
30
percent,
is
considered,
not
affordable,
and
then
you
also
have
the
other
Factory,
which
is
the
Amis.
The
area
median
incomes
and
those
are
also
defined
by
Hud.
L
Low
income
is
30
percent
or
extreme
I'm
not
going
to
get
it
right,
but
30
percent
very
extremely
low
income.
Fifty
percent
low
extreme.
L
M
I
would
imagine
that's
well,
they
do
it
for
the
county
when
they
look
at
the
AGI,
okay,
yeah
yeah,
there's.
A
E
So
I
I
got
a
report
back
from
Molly
O'donnell,
our
housing
division
director
and
she
went
through
and
and
answered
all
the
questions
that
were
given
by
Mark
and
some
of
the
the
things
that
really
jumped
out
at
me
was.
Is
that
we're
in
the
prog
we're
in
the
progress
being
made?
Where
is
progress
being
made,
and
we
have
2696
deed,
restricted,
affordable
units
in
Longmont?
E
As
of
the
end
of
2022
half
of
our
goal
of
having
5
400
units
by
2035.?
E
So
let's
just
one
factor
of
what
we're
achieving
here
in
in
Longmont,
but
we
we,
as
a
city
council,
took
over
the
Longmont
Housing
Authority
and
we
have
some
developments
that
are
private,
Public
Partnerships
that
are
in
the
mix
right
now
and
working
very
hard
towards
the
goal
of
of
that
12
that
Molly
that
we
talked
about
earlier
there.
So
just
wanted
to
add
that
to
your
conversation,.
L
A
So
if
there's
folks
that
brought
specific
presentations
and
or
just
responses
to
those
questions,
this
would
be
a
great
time
to
hear
from
jurisdiction
and
no
pressure
If.
You
do
not
have
information,
don't
get
online
and
start
trying
to
figure
it
out.
That's!
Okay!
That's
why
we're
here!
So
maybe
we'll
start
with
council
member
McCoy
just
because
you
had
started
already.
E
Let
me
just
get
it's
up
here.
I
was
just
gonna
forward
this
step,
Mark
real
quick
here,
so
maybe
he
could
pull
it
up
on
your
screen
there.
So.
C
D
All
right
there
we
go
that
that's
better,
so
the
question
in
regard
to
what
I'm
talking
about
is
specific
to.
We
all
know
that
property
values
have
gone
up
and
property
values
and
taxes
are
part
of
everyone's
mortgage
and
so
that,
even
though
I
may
have
a
fixed
mortgage
of
2.5
percent,
my
taxes
are
still
going
up.
So
is
the
cost
of
when
you're,
looking
at
affordability
of
that
30
percent,
are
you
taking
into
account
that
those
drastic
rises
in
taxes
that
make
up
that
mortgage
is
that?
Is
that
part
of
it.
D
Okay,
yeah
because
I
I
know
that
for
Erie,
what
we've
talked
about
in
in
our
meetings
have
been
well,
it's
great
that
maybe
somebody
might
be
able
to
get
into
a
home,
but
the
ability
to
keep
them
in
the
home
because
of
the
property
taxes
going
through
the
roof
and
and
I.
Think
there's
been
news
reports
out
there
that
they've
talked
about
you
know
other
counties
that
have
I,
think
75
or
so
people
who
have
tried
to
contest
their
property
values
have
lost.
D
And
then
you
hear
about
one
in
Castillo,
where
their
property
values
went
through
the
roof
50
in
one
year
and
then
when
they
went
to
go
and
protest
it
for
whatever
reason
that
particular
board.
They
dropped
it
back
from
from
the
stratosphere
down
and
have
it,
but
didn't
have
any
measurement
around
why
they
were
able
to
drop
that.
So
those
are
things
I
think
from
questions
from
people
that
might
come
into
play
somewhere
down.
The
road
is
a
lot
more
Clarity
around
that
those
sort
of
things
when
it
comes
to
property
taxes.
E
Okay,
it
was
just
interesting
before
that
I
was
approached
in
the
parking
lot
at
king
supers
today
by
somebody
collecting
signatures
to
lock
all
property
taxes
at
four
percent.
So
there
is
some
sort
of
group
out
there
trying
to
achieve
that.
So
that's
something
to
put
on
all
of
our
Radars,
but
you
can
I,
don't
know
if
Mark
is
able
to
pull
this
up.
E
But
it's
you
know
some
of
the
strategies
that
we
are
implementing
we're
going
after
that
12
inclusionary
housing,
ordinance
that
was
brought
out
brought
up
there.
We
have
a
a
fee
and
Lou
program.
E
E
Where's
the
progress
I
I
pointed
that
out
earlier,
as
we
look
at
where
the
barriers
being
encountered:
construction
defect,
laws
affecting
all
attached
for
sale
products,
and
that's
the
one
thing
that
is
really
frustrating
here,
because
we've
got
a
lot
of
people
that
would
like
to
get
into
the
home
ownership
possibility
and
and
that
construction
defects
issue
seems
to
just
keep
cropping
up.
E
Some
other
things
were
she's
was
it
Molly
went
through
and
wrote
up
all
kinds
of
stuff.
I
don't
want
to
get
too
redundant
here
if
people
want
to
if
Mark
wants
to
forward
this
she's
answered
all
these
questions,
which
in
quite
detail
that
would
probably
be
good
for
any
Community
to
kind
of
look
at
and
then
they'd
have
a
contact
person
with
the
city
of
Longmont
to
reach
out
and
ask
questions
of
so
I.
E
Don't
want
to
go
too
redundant
there,
but
you
can
see
those
there
and
they're
just
a
kind
of
a
answering
each
one
of
the
questions,
but
I
think
that,
obviously
you
know
we've
done
a
lot
of
that
work
for
our
community
and
I.
Don't
think
that
there's
any
exclusivity
that
couldn't
be
shared
with
other
communities
to
to
make
those
same
things
happen:
she's,
she's,
just
absolutely
brilliant.
E
When
it
comes
to
this
she
she
can
certainly
teach
a
master's
class
on
all
this
issue
around
affordable
housing.
She
just
seems
to
to
really
really
be
tuned
into
the
the
needs
and
the
and
all
the
little
nuances
of
it.
Just
remarkable.
Don't
try
to
steal
your
white
people.
She's
really
great.
A
A
J
B
A
A
N
N
N
But
I
think
we
have
some
bigger
projects
that
are
currently
just
about
to
break
free.
We've
prioritized
this
goal
through
adus
inclusionary.
Well,
there's
some
Council
priorities
right
now
that
are
also
looking
to
prioritize
this
goal
through
diversifying
home
ownership
types
and
increasing
the
number
of
units
in
the
city,
so
not
just
looking
at
the
permanently
affordable
side,
but
also
the
market
rate
side,
and
so
like.
N
We
mentioned
we're
looking
at
adus
Zoning
for
affordable
housing,
middle
income,
down
payment
programs,
occupancy
reform
and
also
making
some
adjustments
to
our
inclusionary
housing,
our
cash
and
loop
program
to
try
and
make
sure
that
we're
creating
sort
of
the
best
set
of
incentives
that
we
can.
N
Are
we
just
doing
bullet
number
one,
or
should
I
go
through
some
of
the
other
response?
Okay,
I
would
go
through
all
of
them.
We're
also
really
excited
about
we're
forming
a
technical
reap,
a
regional
technical
assistance
program
along
with
the
county,
so
this
program
will
provide
compliance
services
for
any
participating
community
in
the
county
and
their
respective
housing
initiatives.
N
B
N
N
We
all
we
have
in
our
community
a
large
number
of
projects
that
are
shovel
ready.
We
have
1500
units
in
the
pipeline,
but
funding
is
really
you
know
the
always
the
issue
so
funding,
along
with
ongoing
challenges
related
to
community
opposition,
to
affordable
housing
in
people's
backyards
or
neighborhoods
in
some
of
our
Council
work.
The
limitations
around
housing
density
that
are
part
of
our
Boulder
Valley
comprehensive
plan
have
also
come
up
recently
and
yeah.
That's
my
shortened
version
thanks.
M
Got
one:
okay:
where
are
you
what
with
the
ones
that
are
in
the
pipeline?
Now?
Where
are
you
building?
What's
where,
like
I,
don't
think
a
book
Boulder
is
having
many
more
buildable
places.
N
B
A
B
G
So
I
was
really
excited
about
tonight's
meeting,
because
the
town
of
lions
has
made
some
incredible
strides.
Just
in
the
past,
cheers
I
checked
my
files
to
look
for
a
PowerPoint
presentation,
and
it
was
exactly
two
years
ago
today.
I
think
that
I
gave
my
first
presentation
to
the
Consortium.
G
G
Our
Planning
Commission
is
studying
our
current
short-term
rental
and
long-term
rental
ordinances
so
that
we
can
broaden
affordability.
G
We
keep
a
pretty
tight
rain
on
short-term
rentals
because
we
want
to
be
able
to
keep
people
in
town
and
not
have
you
know
not
become
a
tourist
town,
that's
full
of
short-term
rentals,
so
we're
looking
at
a
lot
of
zoning
regulations,
and
a
lot
of
this
is
new
for
the
tone
of
lions.
This
is
nothing
folks
previous
boards
have
wanted
to
consider
so
we're
looking
at
buy
right,
detached
adus,
expanding
the
zoning
districts
for
adus
and
so
about.
G
Two-Thirds
of
our
town
is
governed
by
HOAs,
and
so
it's
tough
and
I
I'm
hearing
rumors
that
there
may
be
something
in
the
legislature
that
loosens
what
HOAs
can
rule
on.
So
hopefully
we
can
get
some
movement
there,
so
we're
looking
at
decreasing
minimum
lot
sizes
parking
requirements
and
then
altering
our
watershare
acquisition
fee
structure.
So
right
now,
if
you
want
to
build
a
market
rate
house
and
lions,
you
have
to
put
up
seventy
thousand
dollars
for
watershare.
It's
a
Longmont.
G
If
you
want
to
build
an
affordable
unit,
it's
about
fourteen
thousand
dollars
and
that's
Lake
Macintosh
versus
Colorado
Big
Thompson
Water
shares
so
we're
taking
a
look
at.
Are
there
different
kinds
of
housing
types,
Beyond
market
rate
and
affordable?
And
how
can
we
incentivize
those
by
reducing
water
share
fees.
B
G
So
we've
made
some
progress.
This
is
what
I'm
so
excited
to
show
you
guys
what
you're
seeing
is
our
Summit,
affordable
housing?
Now
the
town
of
Lyons
has
about
950
rooftops
before
this.
This
adds
46
units
and
it's
for
60
to
80.
Ami
people
have
just
started.
Moving
in
one
of
the
residents
came
and
knocked
on
my
door
in
tears
because
he
was
about
to
be
homeless
and
he
got
into
one
of
these
beautiful
homes.
G
They're
three
bedroom,
two
bath
with
a
garage
single
family
homes
and
three
bedroom,
two
bath
multi-family
homes,
which
you
can
see
on
the
bottom.
There
are
just
under
construction
now
they
should
all
be
finished
within
the
next
couple
months
and
everybody
should
be
all
moved
in.
In
order
to
make
this
happen,
it
took
three
boards
and
three
Mayors
and
the
town
waved
every
single
fee.
We
could
possibly
wave.
We
gave
them
discounted
water
shares
and
we
contributed
at
least
150
000
in
arpa
funds.
To
make
this
happen.
G
This
is
adjacent
to
the
neighborhood
that
is
most
resistant
to
affordable
housing,
so
the
homes
that
go
for
over
a
million
dollars-
and
they
have
the
best
views
in
town
I-
would
love
anybody
who
wants
to
come
up
and
take
a
look
at
them.
Would
love
to
show
you
around
they're
absolutely
gorgeous,
but
what
we
learned
in
this
process
was
that
what
we
really
need
now
are
one
bedroom
units.
G
G
Many
people
just
moved
away
and
gave
up,
but
what
this
developer,
which
is
Summit
Housing
agreed
to
do,
was
give
first
priority
and
first
right
of
refusal
to
people
who
were
displaced
during
the
flood.
The
first
day
that
applications
opened.
We
had
80
applications
for
these
46
units,
so
the
first
priority
is
folks
who
were
displaced
during
the
flood.
The
second
priority
is
people
who
already
live
or
work
in
lions,
and
then
the
third
priority
is
everybody
else,
and
some
so
Alliance
doesn't
have
a
Housing
Authority.
G
Obviously
we
have
a
two
million
dollar
general
fund,
so
Summit
development
is
working
with
their
property
management
company
to
make
all
this
happen,
so
I
I
consider
this
a
huge
win,
and
the
other
thing
I
wanted
to
talk
about
was
this
public-private
partnership
for
one
small
project.
So
what
you're
seeing
here
I
took
this
picture
today?
This
is
317
Evan
street
right
in
downtown
Lyons.
G
It's
two
single
family
lots,
so
the
Zone
single
family.
It
began
its
life
as
two
different
homes,
and
then
it
was
joined
at
one
point
to
make
an
assisted
living
facility
that
went
out
of
business
and
then
the
owners
just
started,
putting
up
walls
randomly
and
making
Apartments.
There
were
apartments
in
here
that
had
no
windows,
no
means
of
egress,
it
was
extremely
unsafe,
and
so
the
owners
decided
to
sell
it
because
they
couldn't
redevelop
it.
G
Luckily,
what
we
got
was
a
resident
who
said
I
want
to
make
affordable
housing
here,
so
he
and
his
partner
purchased
this
they're,
creating
small,
a
affordable,
housing
and
I
say
that,
because
it
is
guaranteed
for
10
years.
So
it's
not
a
perpetuity,
affordable
housing,
but
they
agreed
to
not
raise
the
rent.
The
units
go
for
under
a
thousand
dollars
a
month,
so
they're
in
the
process.
G
Right
now
of
mitigating
all
the
asbestos
they're
going
to
clear
the
lot
and
then
what
you
see
here
are
the
models
of
the
modular
housing
that
they're
going
to
put
up
there.
So
nine
apartments
in
total
they're
not
displacing
any
residents
they're
actually
paying
for
people
to
live
in
apartments
in
Longmont
until
this
is
done
in
two
months.
G
So
what
the
town
did
to
help
this
along
was.
We
gave
them
the
discounted
water
shares
and
we
did
some
creative
pudr
rezoning
so
that
this
there's
a
PUD
over
this,
and
it
can
now
be
denser
and
multi-family.
G
So
when
it
comes
to
the
barriers,
our
current,
our
zoning
codes
were
in
our
own
way.
R1
predominates
in
the
town
in
places
that
aren't
HOAs.
So
we're
looking
at
that,
you
know,
residents
don't
want
densification.
People
are
always
going
to
complain
and
we're
focusing
a
lot
on
rental
housing.
We
want
to
look
at
where
we
can
do
deed,
restricted,
affordable
housing,
but
Lions
really
is
constrained
when
it
comes
to
buildings,
so
we're
starting
to
look
out
east.
G
We
registered
for
the
Dola
technical
assistance
for
prep
123
and
we're
waiting
for
that
prior
to
applying
I'm
super
proud
about
this.
We
have
a
town
staff
of
a
total
of
18
people,
including
the
folks
who
take
care
of
our
parks.
So
it's
been
a
huge
lift
to
get
this
accomplished
and
we're
really
looking
forward
to
doing
more
as
soon
as
we
can.
A
D
I
just
had
one
and
I
put
it
in
the
chat,
but
it
was
really
to
the
mayor:
hey
number
one
great
job
on
on
trying
to
do
that
with
the
staff
you
have
and
with
the
with
the
neighbors
and
the
residents
that
are
in
their
million
dollar
homes.
My
question
was
more
about
the
Ami
for
those
who
qualify
for
those
homes.
Can
you
put
it?
D
Do
you
have
information
in
terms
of
what
that
salary
range
is
for
people
so
that
they
can
wrap
their
heads
around
it,
because
in
Erie
we've
had
that
conversation
as
the
mayor
and
MJ
know
all
too
well
that
disconnect
between
what
they
think
affordable
housing
is
historically
for
them
versus
really
what
we're
talking
about
when
it
comes
to
the
salaries
of
those
individuals
or
families
that
might
be
taking
up
residence
in
those
housing.
Yeah.
G
G
Shock,
you
know
I
I,
for
a
little
bit
of
history.
In
2015
there
was
a
ballot
measure
in
the
town
of
lions
to
build
affordable
housing
on
some
of
our
park
and
open
space
property.
We
have
a
lot
of
it
and
we
just
wanted
five
acres
so
anytime,
there's
a
zoning
change
in
parks
and
open
space.
It
goes
to
a
vote
of
the
town
and
the
town
voted
it
down,
and
most
of
the
opponents
came
from
the
neighborhood
where
the
affordable
housing
now
stands.
M
One
more:
how
was
your
experience
with
Summit?
Were
they
good
people
to
work
with
on
the
construction
side.
G
A
I
I,
if
you
want
to
send
your
slides
over
to
Mark
as
well,
just
to
get
this
sent
out
for
folks
I.
Think
that's
great
and
I'll
just
share
we're
talking
right
now
with
town
of
lines,
Boulder
County
in
regards
to
our
intergovernmental
agreement
and
really
looking
at
some
of
those
pieces
that
the
mayor
was
talking
about
in
regards
to
the
town
planning
area.
Somebody
else
mentioned
that
too,
in
their
their
conversation.
So
thanks
for
all
the
work
and.
A
D
H
Well,
you
overstate
my
qualifications
as
expert
and
I
just
want
to
do
a
shout
out
to
Longmont,
because
Molly
has
been
amazing
as
I've
been
new
in
this
job.
She
has
just
been
so
incredibly
helpful,
not
just
Molly,
but
your
whole
staff
up.
There
have
been
very
helpful
in
me
getting
a
lay
of
the
land
here
in
Colorado
I'm
a
recently
thank.
H
So
erie's
been
pretty
busy
I've
been
in
town
since
April
and
since
then
we
wrapped
up.
We
did
a
housing
needs
assessment
which
we
completed
in
February
and
are
using
that
to
move
forward.
H
It
was
the
Dola
Innovative
housing
planning
grant
that
we
received,
and
so
we
were
able
to
do
that
out
of
that
work
we
just
last
week
thank
you,
trustees,
past
Fast,
Track,
permitting
for
the
town
of
Erie
that
provides
for
a
25
density
bonus
for
housing
developments
that
come
in
with
more
than
12
percent
of
the
housing
units
as
affordable.
H
H
That
is
less
than
80
percent
of
the
Boulder
County
Ami
Erie
is
in
both
Weld
County
and
Boulder
County,
so
I've
been
trying
to
navigate
those
nuances,
but
we
did
identify
Boulder
County
as
the
number
that
we
would
be
using
for
our
affordable
housing
numbers,
largely
because
we're
in
that
Regional
conversation
about
the
city
of
Boulder
staff,
providing
administrative
support
to
help
us
do
compliance
on
that.
So
that's
pretty
exciting.
My
marching
orders
are
now
to
get
an
inclusionary
housing
ordinance
in
the
works.
H
The
city's
been
the
town's
been
working
on
it
for
a
couple
of
years,
so
we
have
a
good
draft
but
moving
it
Forward
into
being
adopted
by
the
Community
is
high
on
my
priority
list.
We
are
also
working
on.
We
have
a
Metro
District
or
a
special
district
policy
that
says,
if
you
want
a
Metro
special
district,
that
you
have
to
provide
some
level
of
affordability,
so
we're
trying
to
figure
out
how
to
make
that
work
with
the
developers
or
who
are
obligated
to
do
that
and
that's
been
an
interesting
process.
H
We
are
also
the
community
I
allocated
a
I
think
most
of
their
arpa
funds.
In
support
of
affordable
housing,
so
we
are,
we've
purchased
a
2.3
acre
parcel
of
land
in
the
downtown
area
of
the
Erie
did
an
RFQ
for
a
developer
and
are
starting
to
move
forward
looking
to
build
probably
about
35
town
homes
on
this
two-acre
site.
That
would
be
affordable
for
sale
units
and
we
are
in
conversations
with
some
other
affordable
housing
developers
with
some
other
properties
near
the
downtown
and
moving
forward
on
that.
H
One
of
the
interesting
things
is
trying
to
figure
out
what
the
state
really
means
when
they're
you're
counting
units
and
that's
been
I-
think
a
very
interesting
exercise
for
me
and
my
colleagues
and
then
to
figure
out
what
compliance
will
look
like
to
hit
the
three
percent
a
year
just
for
measure
the
tool
that
we
used
from
the
state.
Their
Baseline
calculator
identifies
164,
affordable
units
that
exist
in
Erie
right
now,
I
know
only
12
of
them
are
12
units
of
senior
housing
that
we
have.
H
The
other
is
naturally
occurring
using
the
the
census
data,
and
so
it's
it's.
It's
a
learning
process
on
how
we're
going
to
come
up
with
that
three
percent
and
how
we
identify
which
those
are
and
how
they
are
included,
as
we
move
forward
to
access
the
new
resources
that
are
becoming
available
through
proposition
123..
H
H
It's
a
Regional
Housing
we're
a
regional
labor,
Supply,
we're
a
regional
we're,
a
regional
housing
market
and
clearly
you
know
the
city
of
Boulder
and
Longmont
have
really
taken
the
leadership
role
over
the
many
years
in
terms
of
doing
something
active
to
to
get
this
affordable,
housing
built
and
it's
time
for
these
smaller
communities
to
start
playing
ball
and
to
to
learn
from
the
many
experiences
that
the
other
communities
have
had.
H
But
I'm
pretty
excited
to
be
in
that
place
and,
like
I,
said,
learning
the
ropes
out
here,
but
pretty
excited
and
and
pretty
optimistic.
The
12
goal.
I.
Think
people
ask
me
about
that
and
I
frequently
say
it's
aspirational.
It'll
be
a
while
before
Yuri
hits
that,
but
we
have
to
start
somewhere,
and
so
that's
where
we
are.
H
Was
just
going
to
ask
my
trustees
and
mayor
if
I
missed
anything.
F
No,
you
didn't
MJ.
Thank
you.
You
did
an
excellent
job,
as
always.
I
I
also
appreciate
that
they're
examples.
Thank
you,
mayor,
Rogan,
for
sharing
what
you've
done.
In
Lions,
we
talked
to
our
residents
and
their
their
folks
who
live
in
million
dollar
homes
and
and
are
against
the
idea
of
having
affordable
housing
in
their
area,
without
necessarily
understanding
what
demographic
we're
referring
to
we're,
not
we're
talking
out
about
working
class
people
who
have
a
place
in
our
community
but
are
commuting
into
it,
and
so
I
really
appreciate
that
there
are.
F
There
are
numerous
examples
of
of
this
construct
working
successfully
around
the
region
and
I
also
appreciate
that
there
are
various
types
of
housing
that
we're
able
to
make
affordable
at
various
levels
in
various
types,
both
rental
and
and
for
sale
properties.
So
sharing
information
in
this
way
is
really
going
to
be
useful
for
us
to
provide
comparison
for
residents
who
question
the
viability
of
these
efforts.
To
be
able
to
say
look,
lions
is
a
great
town.
F
D
What
are
the
impacts
and
then
to
the
mayor's
point
of
you
know
when
we,
when
we
talk
about
who
this
is
for,
unlike
up
there
in
Lions,
our
Ami
salary,
wise,
I,
believe
and
correct
me
if
I'm
wrong
again
MJ
on
this
is
around
95
to
140
000
a
year.
D
So
that's
the
salary
level
that
we're
talking
about
down
here
in
Erie,
when
the
average
price
of
a
home
in
Erie
is
also
870
thousand
dollars,
so
I
think
there's
a
lot
to
overcome
with
that
and
to
educate.
D
H
O
Yes,
thank
you,
commissioner,
so
a
couple
things
that
staff
had
provided
me
to
share
with
the
Consortium
as
far
as
affordable
housing,
we're
at
the
city
recently
adopted
the
economic
development
and
housing
strategy
plan.
So
as
part
of
that
we're
reevaluating
our
affordable
housing.
D
O
Looking
at
an
inclusionary
housing
ordinance,
so
those
are
going
hand
in
hand
we're
looking
at
that
adus.
We
are
looking
at
expanding
that
to
the
entire
Community
right
now,
it's
just
an
old
town,
but
in
the
next
month
we'll
be
having
that
come
for
Council
to
look
at
expanding
our
Adu
requirements,
and
so
what
that
would
look
like
and
how
that
could
impact
affordability.
So
that's
coming
forward.
O
We
have
just
finished
our
multimodal
transportation
plan,
which
we
will
then
be
looking
at
what
corridors
and
what
areas
that
we
could
then
put
some
affordable
housing
on
Transportation
corridors.
So
that's
that's
something
that
we're
doing.
We
are
currently
rewriting
our
land
use
code
to
ensure
that
areas
served
by
transit,
thoughtfully,
designed
and
include
mixed
use
and
higher
density
housing.
O
And
then
we
are
looking
at
a
mobile
home
ordinance
zoning
District.
Just
because
I
know
we
have
the
largest
number
of
mobile
homes,
I
think
in
the
county.
So
we're
looking
to
protect
that
and
then
obviously
I
know
it's
been
mentioned
before,
but
we
just
did
the
groundbreaking
for
Willoughby
corner.
So
we're
really
excited
about
that.
Thank
you
to
the
county
for
your
partnership.
I
know
it
was
a
lot
to
get
us
there,
but
we're
really
excited
that
that's
moving
forward.
O
Unfortunately,
I
was
not
able
to
attend
the
groundbreaking,
but
I
know
it
was
very
well
attended
and
our
residents
are
really
excited
about
that
piece
of
it.
So
that's
kind
of
what's
going
on
in
Lafayette.
G
Yeah,
so
what
great
work
and
I'm
curious
about
the
mobile
home
piece?
We
have
one
remaining
mobile
home
park
in
lions
and
it's
currently
for
sale
and
it's
currently
zoned
just
three
single
family
lots.
So
it's
a
legacy
use.
G
O
Yes,
some
of
the
initial
ideas
that
they
were
looking
at
is
requiring
the
landowner
to
once
they
decided.
They
would
sell
that
to
offer
the
opportunity
for
the
residents
to
look
at
forming
a
body
to
go
ahead
and
purchase
those
the
mobile
home.
O
That's
something
that's
actually
being
done
at
one
of
our
smaller
mobile
home
parks
right
now
and
they're,
working
in
conjunction
I
believe
with
the
I
think
it's
a
national
agency
and
I
can
get
more
details
on
that,
but
they
are
working
to
try
and
secure
and
maintain
that
as
a
mobile
home
park.
So
what
was
nice
is
the
owner
actually
went
to
the
city
came
to
the
city.
O
The
city
helped
facilitate
some
of
the
conversations
with
the
other
owners
and
they're
in
process
of
trying
to
raise
funds
to
purchase
that
mobile
home
park.
So
there's
that
part
of
it
there's
also
what
we
would
have
it
as
a
mobile
home
park.
Zoning
District
what
we
would
do
in
case
any
res
if
they
wanted
to
change
that
designation.
What
that
process
would
look
like.
So
it's
more
of
a
regulation
piece
and
then
also
working
with
the
owners.
O
Should
they
ever
decide
to
go
ahead
and
sell
their
land
so,
but
I
can
get
more
information
and
send
that
to
you,
I
think
you're
in
a
different
situation,
if
the
mobile
home
Park's
already
up
for
sale
because
I
know
that's
already
a
kind
of
you're
reacting
to
what
may
have
already
occurred,
where
we're
trying
to
prevent
that
from
happening.
So,
but
I
can
certainly
get
information
for
you.
O
J
Hey
everyone
so
again:
I'm
Rachel,
King
and
I'm.
The
deputy
director
for
economic
vitality
and
development
with
City
and
County
of
Broomfield
and
I
am
happy
to
run
through
a
couple
of
our
recent
updates
for
housing.
I.
Don't
have
full
notes,
ready,
I,
wasn't
aware
that
I
was
attending
tonight's
meeting
until
a
few
hours
ago,
so
I
apologize,
but
I'll
try
to
be
as
thorough
as
possible.
J
J
We
were
trying
to
encourage
more
of
a
balanced
approach
with
our
developers
to
provide
on-site
units
and
cash
in
more
of
a
50
50
split.
Our
first
iteration
really
ended
up
with
developers
providing
the
cash
and
loo
pretty
much
nine
times
out
of
ten.
No
questions
asked
just
because
it
was
so
affordable
for
them
to
do
so.
So
we've
balanced
that
out
now
a
little
bit
and
we're
starting
to
see
the
fruits
of
that
labor
come
in
with
some
of
our
new
proposals,
which
is
exciting.
J
We
also
finished
a
housing
needs
update
this
spring
that
we're
getting
ready
to
publish
the
final
study
on
soon
and
not
surprisingly,
it
still
shows
us
that
we
have
a
housing
needs
Gap,
but
in
a
couple
different
ways,
and
so
with
our
efforts
moving
forward.
We're
trying
to
address
that
really
well,
subsidy
and
affordability,
but
also
it
shows
a
pretty
significant
Gap
in
our
market
rate
units.
Obviously
we're
not
going
to
be
investing
a
lot
of
resources
to
address
that
Gap.
J
It
just
gives
us
a
lot
of
good
data
to
work
on
other
programming
to
support
folks
to
move
up
in
the
housing
continuum
this
year,
in
anticipation
of
the
tax
or
property
tax
increases
that
we'll
see
next
year,
we
established
and
set
up
the
structure
for
a
partial
property
tax
refund
program.
J
Ours
in
particular
focuses
on
seniors
at
certain
Ami
levels:
Folks
at
a
certain
disability
level,
I
think
it's
80,
disability
and
then
veterans
with
disability.
So
we
had
success
with
the
program
marketing
it
getting
it
off
the
ground
kind
of
working
out
the
Kinks
and
the
bugs,
so
to
speak,
so
that
we
can
get
that
running
full
full
steam
ahead
next
spring.
So
we
had
a
good
trial
run
with
it.
J
This
year
we
had
some
folks
still
sign
up
and
then
next
year,
of
course,
we
expect
to
max
out
the
program
and
the
funding
that
we
have
available
for
that
we
are
also
bringing
to
our
Council
next
Tuesday.
Actually,
our
proposal
for
the
proposition
123
commitment.
J
We
had
a
very
helpful
and
just
kind
of
open
and
honest
conversation
with
Dola
that
Broomfield
is
really
going
to
struggle
and
in
fact
it
might
be
darn
near
impossible
or
are
truly
impossible
for
us
to
meet
the
goal
for
the
three
and
ultimately
nine
percent
over
three
years.
They
said
we
hear
you,
but
do
it
anyway.
We
don't
there's
really,
no
reason
why
you
shouldn't
there's
no
penalty,
you
just
won't
get
funding
for
that
following
year,
but
we're
not
going
to
take
money
back
if
awarded
during
those
three
years.
J
So,
there's
really
no
reason
not
to
opt
in
so
we'll
have
a
measure
going
through
Council
this
coming
Tuesday
to
determine
if
we're
going
to
opt
in
there
again
as
a
result
of
that,
housing
needs
update,
we're
looking
at
some
program
expansions.
J
So
we
are
hopefully
later.
This
fall,
bringing
forward
to
council
a
program
to
address
down
payment
assistance
for
folks
and
we're
really
hoping
that
you
know
part
of
the
reason
why
we're
seeing
that
large
gap
in
stock
for
the
market
rate
units
on
the
rental
side
is
because
we're
having
so
many
folks
get
stuck
at
that
point
in
their
lives
where
they
might
be
ready
to
purchase
their
first
home.
J
They
just
don't
have
the
capital
to
do
so,
so
we're
trying
to
introduce
a
down
payment
assistance
program
or
working
out
those
details
and
we'll
be
proposing
that
to
council
again,
hopefully
later
this
year,
and
then
we're
also
trying
to
focus
on
some
assistance
to
help
our
Rising
older
adult
population
and
just
acknowledging
that
that
population
percentage
in
Broomfield
is
increasing
and
costs
are
increasing
dramatically
and
they
they
can't
keep
up
with
housing
costs
and
proportion.
J
So
we're
kind
of
racking
our
brains
with
the
limited
resources
that
we
have
and
given
that
true
rental
assistance
is
just
so
costly
household
of
households,
we're
trying
to
come
up
with
some
more
Creative
Solutions
that
we
can
help
that
population
stay
in
place,
stay
in
Broomfield
and
not
become
at
risk
for
homelessness
truly.
J
So
those
are
some
of
the
program
expansions
that
we
have
we're,
also
continuing
with
some
developments
and
partnership
with
a
lot
of
Community,
Partners
and
affordable
Developers.
Again
we
we
have
limited
resources
in
Broomfield,
so
we
can't
offer
a
lot
of
Gap
financing
to
folks.
We
don't
get
a
lot
of
grant
funding
to
be
able
to
do
that.
So
oftentimes
we'll
come
to
the
table
with
fee
waivers
or
fee
reductions
and
we'll
do
everything
we
can
to
support
that
application
if
they're
applying
for
Live
tech
funding
with
chaffa.
J
J
It's
just
funding
availability
for
programming
number
one,
but
also
just
the
availability
availability
of
funds
across
the
state
is
really
Limited
and
the
chaffa
applications
are
incredibly
competitive.
So
we're
not
getting
a
lot
of
traction
there
for
development.
J
I
think
those
are
all
the
highlights.
I
had
I
know,
council,
member
schaff
is
on
the
line,
but
he's
a
Transit,
so
I'm
happy
to
hear
his
thoughts
if
he
happens
to
be
in
an
area
where
he
can
chat,
but
otherwise
I'm
happy
to
take
any
questions.
A
N
You
mentioned
sort
of
reassessing
your
cash
and
loan
numbers
to
increase
or
to
try
and
get
more
developers
to
build
on-site.
Affordable
units
are.
How
is
that
program
working
right
now
like
what
is?
Is
your
cash
and
lieu
tied
to
to
like?
Is
it
a
per
unit
amount?
And
if
so,
what
did
you
change
it
from
and
two.
J
Yes
great
question,
and
that
was
actually
the
focus
of
our
analysis.
When
we
were
preparing
to
update
the
ordinance
we
actually
commissioned
a
small
study
focused
purely
on
the
cash
and
luffies,
to
really
calibrate
them
appropriately
with
the
market
conditions
and
just
make
sure
that
we
were
setting
them
at
a
rate
that
made
sense
for.
J
J
We
felt
in
our
analysis
that
the
first
approach
was
a
little
bit
too
aggressive
at
this
time,
so
we
opted
with
the
second
approach,
so
we
calibrated
the
amount
to
to
more
closely
represent
The
Gap
that
we're
seeing
in
that
market
rate
unit
versus
the
affordable
unit.
Our
cash
and
low
fees
previously
were
so
low
that
the
jump
from
the
old
number
to
the
new
number
would
have
been
more
than
sticker
for
shock
for
a
developer.
J
We
think
it
would
have
effectively
ceased
a
lot
of
development
activity
in
Broomfield
altogether,
so
we
actually
implemented
a
three-year
phased
approach.
To
impose
that
new
fee,
the
old
fee,
I,
would
say,
give
or
take
25
000
to
30,
000
or
so
per
unit
on
the
rental
side,
and
we
are
gradually
ramping
that
up
closer
to
120.,
5
000
per
unit
plus
so
we're
getting
there
at
the
end
of
the
three
years.
J
We'll
also
add
an
annual
adjustment
for
the
cpiu
index
to
make
sure
they're
keeping
on
Pace
with
market
conditions,
and
it
was
just
more
of
a
we
thought,
Fair
approach
to
SATA
developers.
J
J
We
just
wouldn't
get
the
units,
so
we
were
getting
very
small
pieces
of
cash
and
loo
here
and
there.
The
proposals
that
we're
seeing
now
come
from
developers
are
often
a
hybrid
approach
truthfully
because
they
want
to
try
to
buy
down
their
cash
and
legal
obligation.
So
they're,
providing
you
know,
half
of
the
units
on
site
at
certain
Ami,
so
they're
providing
a
mix
of
Amis
as
an
alternate
satisfaction.
N
I
was
also
wondering
about
the
down
payment
assistance
program
that
you're
looking
at
and
if.
At
this
point,
you
plan
to
have
deed
restrictions
associated
with
that
or,
if
that's
more
of
like
a
one-time
assistance
just
to
get
people
into
the
position
of
ownership.
J
The
way
that
we
we're
truthfully
still
researching
all
the
different
angles
that
we
can
approach
it
out,
but
initially
we're
thinking
that
the
program
would
be
focused
on
supporting
the
homeowner.
Just
with
that
first
step
being
able
to
get
into
the
unit.
We
do
think
that
what
might
naturally
occur
is
that
the
these
folks
would
be
applying
for
the
units
that
are
restricted
through
our
inclusionary
housing
program.
J
So
we
do
have
some
stock
coming
online
from
that
program
for
the
for
sale,
product
again,
I
think,
as
some
others
have
mentioned,
an
arm
is
called
Broomfield
is
the
same.
Our
market
rate
you
know
for
a
a
for
sale
unit,
is
likely
going
to
be
out
of
reach
for
someone
at
80
90,
even
100
Ami
on
their
own,
unless
they
come
in
with
a
significant
down
payment,
which
is
very
difficult
to
do
so.
J
In
my
prior
role
with
another
city
and
county,
we
operated
a
dumping,
an
assistance
program
through
a
community
partner,
and
with
that,
it's
it's
really
through
a
deferred,
low
interest,
repayable
loan
and
essentially
works
as
a
soft.
Second
on
the
house.
N
Thank
you
for
that
yeah
and
Boulder.
We're
facing
the
same
problem
of
getting
people
into
market
rate
ownership
units
is
just
such
a
difficult
issue
to
find
answers
for
so
I
was
just
curious.
N
Thank
you
for
that
and
then
my
last
question
was,
if
you
could
provide
a
link
to
your
housing
assessment,
needs
assessment
that
you
did
maybe
in
a
follow-up
email.
That
I
would
be
just
really
interested
in
seeing
what
you
guys
found
there.
B
D
D
D
If
you
have
any
data
on
that,
because
I
think
in
Dr
Cog
we
talked
about
the
fact
that
we
I
think
we
had
a
presentation
a
number
of
months
ago,
where
we
talked
about
how
the
fact
that,
what's
really
growing
in
our
population
is
the
Aging
population
for
people
that
look
like
me,
50
and
over
and
and
really
the
population
for
the
younger
is
not
is,
is
either
staying
consistently
low
or
flatlining,
because
they're
not
having
children
or
most
likely
may
not
be
having
children
so
I
think
that's
something
for
all
of
our
communities.
D
To
kind
of
think
about.
Is
that
full
Circle
approach
of
a?
How
do
you
get
somebody
into
a
home,
that's
affordable
and
B
on
the
outside?
For
those,
maybe
who
are
older,
who
want
to
downsize
to
another
home,
if
that's
even
possible,
making
that
home
available
for
a
family
or
somebody
else
that
can
come
in
there
and
then
take
over
for
something?
That's
smaller,
just
kind
of
a
holistic
approach.
But
you
have
percentages
in
terms
of
what
you're
seeing
in
Broomfield.
J
J
So
we
I,
don't
have
the
numbers
right
in
front
of
me,
so
I'm
happy
to
send
those
out.
I
I
want
to
say.
J
I
want
to
say
we
were
getting
closer
to
15
of
the
population
being
older
adults,
and
it
was
about
I,
think
of
maybe
a
five
percent,
ten
percent
Delta
over
the
past
five
years.
So
I'm,
don't
quote
me
on
that
I
again,
I!
Don't
have
it
right
in
front
of
me
for
tonight,
but
I'm
happy
to
send
that
out
with
the
materials,
but
it's
exactly
what
you
referenced
and
that's
the
Trend
we're
seeing
and
that's
the
concern
that
we
have
is
ultimately
a
lot
of
our
programming
right
now.
J
Our
limited
resources
we're
just
focused
on
with
the
housing
climate.
The
way
it
is
just
prevention
right,
making
sure
that
people
don't
become
at
risk
of
homelessness,
making
sure
that
people
can
stay
making
sure
that
there
are
downsizing
opportunities
for
families
where
that's
appropriate
and
upsizing
opportunities
for
other
families.
J
So
prevention
is
in
housing.
Stability
is,
is
our
Focus
area
with
those
limited
resources
and
so
with
the
senior
rental
assistance,
because,
like
I
said
earlier,
we
we
offered
up
this
partial
property
tax
relief
program
for
senior
homeowners,
but
for
the
rental
population.
J
Rent
assistance
is
just
so
so
expensive
cost
per
household
that
we
we
don't
have
any
funding
direct
funding
available
for
that
right
now.
So
what
are
some
of
the
other
ways
that
we
can
really
address
that
that
issue
of
prevention?
J
Home
share,
for
example,
has
been
a
popular
model
in
some
of
the
other
larger
jurisdictions?
Denver
Aurora.
J
J
D
Yeah
and
I
think
maybe
one
subject
of
that-
that
probably
needs
to
be
looked
at
and
communicated
is
what
population
we're
talking
about?
I
think
for
for
how
much
everything
is
increased
in
the
Front
Range
people
who
may
be
in
a
home
or
what
have
you
or
maybe
one
paycheck
away,
or
one
job
loss
away
from
being
homeless
and
I.
D
We
can't
make
those
payments
so
I
think
that
that
has
to
be
for
sort
of
I
guess
the
it
needs
to
be
talked
about
more
so
that
people
hear
because
I,
don't
I,
think
people
are
just
putting
in
the
back
of
their
mind.
But
if
we
don't
talk
about
it,
we
don't
have
to
start
having
those
conversations
that
it
could
be
that
without
alarming
them,
but
is
hey.
J
We
we
fully
agree
and
that's
why,
right
now
again,
with
the
limited
resources
that
we
have,
that
were
were
putting
almost
all
of
our
eggs
into
the
housing
stability
priority
that
ultimately
we're
just
trying
to
help
everybody
weather
the
storm
right
now
as
much
as
possible
until
we
get
to
a
better
environment.
K
Let's
see
Harrison
Mark
Rosen
here,
Boulder
can
I,
do
have
some
numbers
from
the
state
demography
office,
in
the
growth
of
the
older
adult
population
in
Boulder,
County,
and
actually
this
is
growth
in
the
80
plus
population,
just
over
11
000
members
of
the
80
plus
population,
in
Boulder
County
in
2021,
and
by
2050.
K
That
number
will
grow
to
38
000,
so
significant
growth
in
the
numbers
and,
in
addition
to
the
housing,
need
home-based
care,
community-based
services,
we're
going
to
see
dramatic
increases
in
the
needs
for
Need
for
those
kinds
of
services
to
go
along
with
the
growth
in
the
population.
So
there's
a
lot
to
that
to
that,
in
addition
to
the
housing
side
right.
D
And
obviously
the
the
the
the
nut
the
crack
is,
if
you're
having
deep
you
know
low
growth
in
terms
of
population
at
the
younger
group,
you
don't
have
it
the
taxing
population
to
be
able
to
pay
for
those
services,
or
you
have
to
tax
more
or
come
up
with
something
more
creative
to
try
to
help
fund
those
kind
of
things
that
we're
talking
about-
and
you
know
my
my
folks
are
in
their
80s
they're
lucky,
but
but
I
can
see
it
being
a
problem
for
all
of
our
a
lot
of
our
parents
with
that,
and
especially
in
the
Front
Range,
my
wife
and
I
have
this
conversation
is
like
well,
if
you
want
to
downsize
what
are
you
downsides
too,
because
those
homes
are
not
that
dramatically
cheaper
for
a
two
or
three
bedroom
than
what
you're
currently
in
now
and
so
I
think,
that's
the
the
big
challenge
that
also
we
have
to
overcome.
D
So
thank
you,
I
think!
That's
just
those
demographics
need
to
be,
and
those
numbers
really
need
to
be
published
and
and
communicated
a
lot
more.
E
To
to
piggyback,
along
with
What
trustee,
Harris
was
talking
about
the
the
other
side
of
the
coin.
Is
this
we're
noticing
that
that
a
lot
of
the
newer
developments
might
be
perfect
for
seniors?
But
none
of
them
have
anything
like
that.
Seniors
need
like
many
elevators
or
dumb
waiters,
to
carry
things
to
the
next
floor.
E
You
know
they
can
get
up
the
stairs
slowly,
but
it's
be
nice
to
get
the
groceries
up
out
of
the
out
of
the
garage
and
they
could
live
in
a
multi-story
unit
and
other
things
like
that.
But
they
can't
do
that.
If
there
isn't
some
sort
of
thing
there
I
mean
we
all
can
put
in
one
of
those
stair
ailments,
but
that's
not
really
what
I
think
what
needs
to
happen.
E
I
think
there
needs
to
be
many
elevators
or
dumb
waders
that
allow
people
to
get
some
of
the
heavier
items
up
to
the
next
levels
and
that
and
that
way
we
do
have
multi-generational
folks
living
in
in
some
of
these
new
developments
that
are
not
just
specifically
senior
developments
or
anything
like
that,
because
I
think
that
builds
a
community.
E
When
you
have
older
members
with
younger
members
and
then
they
have
those
relationships
and
they
they
see
that
you
know
that
people
they're,
you
know
young
people,
children
see
people
their
grandparents
age.
You
know
interacting
in
the
community
and
I
think
it's
healthy
and
so
I
I
I
think
those
are
some
of
the
things
that
we
need
to
start
addressing
in
some
of
our
building
codes.
As
we
look
at
some
of
these
projects,.
N
I'm
gonna
put
my
architect
hat
on
for
just
a
second
typically,
the
international
building
code
would
require
any
multi-story
multi-unit
building
to
have
an
elevator
and
for
Ebony
non-ground
floor
unit
to
be
elevator
served.
E
A
A
A
I
This
is
Sandy
Hammerly
I,
just
I,
don't
want
to
take
up
a
lot
of
time.
Needless
to
say,
you
know:
superior's
been
dealing
with
a
few
other
things,
but
I
did
want
to
let
the
group
know
that
we
have
received
a
dollar
grant
to
get
a
consulting
firm
to
to
work
on
an
affordable
housing
strategic
plan
for
Superior
the
we
are
hoping
to
kick
that
off.
We've
hired
the
consultant
hope
to
kick
it
off
in
September
and
then
the
other
piece
that
I
just
kind
of
wanted
to
add.
I
I
We
have
limited
space,
but
we
we
we
were
encouraged
because
we
had
a
developer,
come
in
talk
to
us
about
a
concept
plan
within
the
last
month
and
a
half
and
they
did
embrace
the
15
percent
of
the
the
80
Ami
units
which,
if,
if
they
move
forward
with
a
formal
plan
that
could
add
anywhere
from
30
to
45
units
in
the
town
of
superior,
which
is
encouraging
for
us.
The
other
piece
that
you
know
I
was
really
encouraged
by
some
of
the
things
that
Lions
is
doing.
I
I
We
only
had
two
carryover
from
our
last
Board
of
Trustees
and
if
we
could
get
more
sort
of
imprint,
shared
examples
of
great
things
like
lionstick,
because
I'm
just
sitting
there
going
I
love
the
the
plan
of
the
lot
317,
Evans
and
and
what
you
had
accomplished
there.
And
you
know
we
do
have
some
Lots
in
particularly
original
town,
which
you
know
we
lost
so
much
of
where
we
have
developers
or
owners.
That
might
might
be
amenable
to
something
like
that.
I
If
we
knew
more
about
how
you
accomplished
that
and
I
actually
am
like
okay,
we
got
to
talk
to
Lions
about
this
because
I
know
there's
a
particular
owner
who
you
know
this
might
be
a
possibility
for
his
lots,
and
so
you
know
we
are
committed
to
move
forward.
We
just
might
not
be
moving
forward
as
fast
as
others.
I
You
know,
because
I
I
will
be
honest.
Our
our
board
is
very,
very
focused
right
now
on
getting
the
10
of
our
community
who
lost
their
homes
back
in
their
homes,
but
I
loved.
What
I
heard
from
lions
and
I
think
there's
some
great
examples.
There.
G
C
I
was
just
going
to
do.
Netherland
and
I
can
be
really
quick
here,
so
Netherlands,
primarily
focusing
on
its
housing
needs
assessment.
We
too
are
contract
with
Bohannon
Houston,
reaching
kind
of
the
final
stage.
We
did
a
really
robust
public
engagement
strategy
and
had
the
most
the
highest
number
of
survey
respondents
than
we
ever
have,
and
that's
250,
which
doesn't
sound
incredible,
but
it
is
for
Netherland
when
our
our
highest
before
that
was
a
hundred
so
tons
of
great
feedback.
C
Some
preliminary
review
of
how
we
could
change
code
is
really
focused
around
increased
density
fee
reductions,
where
we
can
a
lot
of
similar
things
to
Lions
administrative
variances,
most
of
the
infill.
If
we
were
going
to
do
infills
on
non-conforming
lots
and
so
to
tie
someone
up
through
the
board
of
zoning
adjustment,
if
it's
just
slightly
smaller
than
lot
size
seems
like
a
lot
of
it
seems
like
a
big
barrier.
C
So
that's
a
staff
recommendation
I'm
also
going
to
work
on
a
rate
study
for
our
water
and
sewer
rates
for
for
also
our
plant
investment
fees
with
an
affordability
component.
We've
never
really
looked
at
those
from
a
for
an
affordability
side,
Board
of
Trustees
just
finalize
their
annexation
ordinance.
So
obviously,
in
addition
to
infill
seeing
if
there
are
Parcels
on
the
outskirts
of
town,
what
it
does,
it
allows
us
to
start
to
evaluate
applications.
C
However,
it
did
just
pass
an
ordinance
that
if
it's
over
10
acres,
it
requires
an
election
or
if
the
zoning
is
going
to
be
different
than
what
the
neighboring
Parcels
are,
would
also
trigger
an
automatic
election,
and
then
we
actually
have
seen
a
huge
uptick
in
our
short-term
rentals
back
in
2019
we
had
implemented
some.
What
we
thought
were
strict
requirements
for
short-term
rental
saw
a
huge
decrease
from
104
to
about
30,
but
we're
back
up
to
almost
70,
because
people
have
found
loopholes
and
so
really
looking
at.
C
A
Okay,
I
think
what
I
want
to
do
is
just
just
really
briefly:
Bill
shared
about
from
the
county
side
about
what
we're
working
on
on
the
goals,
but
I
did
want
to
share
with
this
group
and
just
a
two
by
two
weight
of
two
pieces:
one,
the
Regional,
Housing
Partnership,
was
formed
initially
through
conversations
at
the
Consortium
of
cities
years
ago,
and
so
I
think
it's
really
important
and
really
appreciate
our
housing
and
Human
Services,
the
folks
for
prepping
some
information
and
just
being
here,
I'm,
very
interested
in
hearing
from
you
Bill
capacity,
the
Regional
Housing
Partnership
has
right
now
to
potentially
I
heard.
A
A
few
asks
of
data
and
information
from
members
of
the
Consortium,
and
so
I
want
to
ask
you
first,
of
course,
it's
completely
on
the
spot
and
recorded.
But
what
capacity
might
your
group
have
to
bring?
Some
of
this
data
that
I
felt
like
I
heard
would
be
really
helpful
for
folks
making
decisions
around
housing.
L
That
is
a
very
good
question,
and
that
is
something
that
we've
been
talking
about
and
struggling
with
since
I
came
on
board
is
that
you
know
where's
the
data
I
know
that
back
in
2017-18-19
before
the
pandemic,
there
was
some
work
done
on
data
across
the
county
and
that
kind
of
tailed
off
and
something
that
I
need
to
get
back
to
and
refocus
on.
I
mean
Boulder
and
Longmont
have
really
good
data
about
their
restricted
properties
and
and
Boulder.
L
County
has
I,
think
28
deed,
restricted
properties
that
we're
aware
of
in
unincorporated,
Boulder
County,
but
there's
a
lot
of
natural
affording
naturally
occurring
and
affordable
housing
and
much
of
that's
in
the
mobile
home
parks.
And
that's
really.
We
want
to
also
get
data
of
more
data.
We
are
getting
more
data
on
the
mobile
home
parks,
so
that
is
something
that
I
need
to
focus
on.
L
We
need
to
focus
on
the
capacity
I
mean
we
need
to
work
with
I.T
folks,
but
we
really
haven't
started
working
on
that
as
of
yet,
but
there
is
a
huge
need,
but
to
have
better
data
for
sure.
A
And
some
of
it
to
me
what
I
heard
was
just
information
about
some
of
these
questions
and
some
of
the
topics
people
were
sharing
about.
For
example,
Adu
processes
are
around
all
of
our
jurisdictions.
Where
are
people
at
with
those
data
for
sure
and
just
being
able
to
compare
like
where
our
folks-
and
maybe
it's
a
you
know,
convening
similar
to
what
we
do
with
our
transportation?
A
A
So
we've
got
a
majority
of
folks
thanks
everybody
for
participating
and,
and
so
I
think
what
I'm
happy
to
help
kind
of
Be
The
Funnel
of
if
that's
okay,
Mark
I'm
looking
at
stuff,
is
that
okay
to,
if
folks,
have
specific
needs,
based
on
the
conversation
that
we
heard
tonight
of
information
that
you
would
like
to
hear
about
from
a
regional
perspective,
so
that
we
can
then
go
back
to
Regional,
Housing
Partnership
and
ask
and
I'll
be
cognizant
of
the
capacity
and
I
also
am
cognizant
of
the
need
and
our
role
as
the
county
as
a
larger
institution
with
more
staff
to
how
can
we
provide
information?
N
Well
and
I
think
that
one
of
the
things
that
this
conversation
has
brought
up
for
me
both
this
time
and
we've
we've
had
it
before,
is
like
that
we
don't
all
have
the
same
like
different
things,
are
easier,
more
difficult
for
different
communities.
You
know,
land
values
in
Boulder
are
extremely
high,
but
we
also
have
more
staff
capacity.
You
know
like
just
how
can
we
all
share
in
a
way
that
allows
us
to
do
the
thing
that
we
can
do
best
and
sort
of
help
our
communities
the
most,
but
also
help
each
other?
N
A
Thank
you.
That
was
one
question
and
then
the
second
question
I
had
that
I
heard
I
was
trying
to
listen
for
some
themes
around
and
will
then
move
us
really
I
think
into.
If
folks
are,
okay,
I
feel
like
we
might
want
to
skip
number
three,
because
a
lot
of
folks
talked
about
prop
123
in
certain
ways
and
just
move
us
into
the
state
legislation
so
and
and
what
I
want
to
share
from
the
county
side
is.
A
A
We
are
looking
at
for
those
of
you
who
aren't
aware
the
alternative
sentencing
facility
tax
that
does
exist
currently
about
asking
voters
to
use
a
portion
of
that
funding
for
housing,
and
so,
when
I'm
in
this
conversations,
this
is
really
helpful
for
me,
because
what
I
continually
am
hearing
is,
we
don't
have
the
funding
and
we
need
to
be
able
to
leverage
funding
and
where
are
the
opportunities
with
funding
and
so
be
really
interested
in
just
feedback
from
this
group
who
is
sharing
concerns
about
how
to
get
to
affordable
housing.
A
I
heard
some
questions
around
how
to
get
to
denser
housing
Etc
and
what
funding
might
be
able
to
do
and
help.
So,
if
there's
anybody
that
has
a
quick
reaction
great
and
if
not,
if
you
want
to
email
me,
and
we
can
have
a
conversation
and
move
into
item
four
as
well.
A
I'll
put
my
email
in
the
in
the
in
the
chat
so
just
by
ways
kind
of
a
heads
up
on
some
of
the
pieces
that
we're
talking
about,
because
we
we
believe
based
on
what
we've
heard
from
residents,
what
the
polling
has
showed
that
housing
is
critical
and
y'all
have
given
some
really
specific
pieces
about
how
housing
funding
is
still
a
priority
and
a
need.
So
thank
you.
A
So,
let's
move
we're
going
to
just
skip
our
break
I
hate
to
do
that,
but
we
are
going
to
be
out
of
here
by
8
30,
so
we've
just
ran
ran
right
through
it.
So
number
four
was
2024
State
legislation
and
also
we
will
be
participating
in
the
County
Commissioners,
acting
together,
ccat
retreat
tomorrow
on
Friday,
and
so,
if
there's
legislative
ideas
that
folks
are
having,
please
feel
free
to
reach
out
to
me
in
the
next
couple
days
as
well,
I'm
happy
to
carry
that
water.
A
K
No,
the
thought
was
really
just
to
perhaps
have
a
brainstorm
conversation
about
anything
that
your
communities
are
thinking
about
in
respect
to
State
legislation
in
this
space
it
was
a
major
priority
of
the
administration
and
ran
into
some
typical
and
some
atypical
challenges
in
the
general
assembly
and
we'll
we,
we
know
some
proposals
will
be
back
next
year
and
a
thought
was
to
try
to
just
surface
some
ideas
that
this
group
may
want
to
proactively
advocate
for,
or
perhaps
there
are
some
strategies
that
the
communities
in
the
Consortium
would
not
support,
and
maybe
there's
a
way
for
for
that
information
to
inform
conversations
that
are
happening
now.
K
For
example,
we
know
that
the
Colorado
Municipal
league
is
going
to
propose
its
own
package
of
affordable
housing
or
housing
legislation
and
rather
than
just
be
reactive
to
what
comes
from
in
essence,
the
administration.
So
perhaps
there
are
opportunities
for
any
municipalities
to
contribute
to
that
process.
That
CML
is
running
and
get
some
of
your
ideas
included
there.
So
that
was
really
just
yet
the
thought-
and
this
could
be
done.
K
All
of
these
conversations
are
happening
and
will
be
happening
from
for
many
months
moving
forward.
So
we
don't
necessarily
need
to
take
a
lot
of
time
on
it.
This
evening
we
could.
K
P
E
Okay,
thank
you.
As
a
home
rule,
City
Longmont
is
really
going
to
be
concerned
about
how
the
governor
kind
of
approached
this
SB
23
dash
at
213,
I,
think
I
think
we're
going
to
be
working
closely
with
CML
and
we
encourage
other
communities
to
as
well.
I.
E
Just
think
that
that
that's
really
the
the
way
to
go
about
this
I
understand
that
there
are
probably
some
communities,
maybe
some
mountain
towns
and
and
ski
areas
that
have
some
real
problems
with
this
and
have
for
literally
decades
and
probably
haven't
done
enough
about
fixing
those
problems.
But
you
know
I
feel
like
Longmont
and
I.
E
Look
around
it
because
I'm,
a
teacher
in
Louisville
and
and
Lafayette
that
they're
doing
their
part
and
they're
doing
the
best
they
can
to
to
address
affordable
and
attainable
housing
and
Workforce
housing
and
I.
Think
the
big
issue
is
around
that
defects
issue,
so
that
people
can
start
establishing
home
ownership,
and
so
when
I
was
on
Council
the
first
time
we
had
a
I
had
a
council
that
the
second
half
of
my
term
that
was
actively
you
know,
trying
to
reduce
the
number
of
inspectors.
E
Well,
that
goes
to
you
know
why
we,
you
know,
can't
you
know,
make
sure
everything
is,
is,
is
working
right
and
why
defects
are
such
a
big
deal
if
you're
actively
trying
to
reduce
government
oversight,
and
so
that's
that's
a
problem,
and
we
we
I
thank
God,
have
gotten
past
that.
E
But
it's
it's
still
an
issue
with
just
you
know
the
ability
to
hire
quality
employees
and
and
retain
them
in
in
every
Community,
as
we
all
know,
but
that's
something
I
think
that
we
really
need
to
leave
for
CML
to
help
or
bring
the
best
aspects
of
of
this.
Of
these,
all
these
ideas
around
affordable
and
attainable
housing
and
together
and
and
put
them
into
one
nice
neat
piece
of
legislation
for
them
to
kind
of
follow,
along
with.
D
Thank
you,
I
Echo.
What
Michelle
has
said,
I
think
the
other
things
that
are
there.
Okay
number
one
at
the
very
beginning,
where
and
I
think
this
is
where
CML
Dr
Cog,
maybe
even
the
mayor's
conference.
What
have
you
can
have
more
of
an
input
in
is
a
we
have
to
develop
trust
again,
that's
the
first
thing
that
has
to
happen.
D
We
have
to
have
a
common
set
goal,
Baseline
of
of
what
the
problem
is
and
that
we
all
agree
on
and
then
and
understand
that
each
Community
has
different
demographics,
different
people
and
different
solutions
to
reflect
their
own
Community
from
and
so
from
a
so
from
a
local
control
perspective
identify
that
hey.
D
There
are
communities
that
have
the
ability
to
say,
bring
on
an
affordable
housing
manager
or
might
be
able
to
have
a
contract
with
the
consultant,
but
there
are
other
communities
that
don't
and
so
I
think
what
we
need
to
do
is
we
need
to
ensure
that
they're
not
left
out
of
the
equation,
because
that's
just
a
weak
link
and
you're
never
going
to
have
a
strong
chain
for
everything,
you're
going
to
have,
there's
going
to
be
a
break,
and
so
and
it's
just
going
to
fall
apart
and
so
I
think
we
need
to
work
on
communication.
D
D
So
if
CML
can
work
with
that
and
Dr
Cog
and
others,
and
even
with
our
own
communities,
our
own
city
councils
and
trustees
and
so
Board
of
Trustees,
et
cetera,
whatever
voice
we
can
do,
we
need
to
have
that
discussion
first
and
then
second
come
around
and
share
around
a
really
strategically
about
how
we
can
give
the
ability
share
the
information
okay
number,
one
that
is
common
for
every
community-
that
we
can
come
around
and
agree
on
as
well
and
say:
okay,
these
are
the
big
things
that
we
need
to
work
on
the
how
to
do.
D
D
G
Thank
you,
I
wholeheartedly
agree
with
trustee
Harrison
and
you
know
I
think
Mark,
I
I
think
the
last
time
I
saw
you
was
actually
at
the
bananas
testimony
day
down
at
the
state
house.
G
So
you
know
there
are
about
165
statutory
towns
in
the
state
and
we
and
I
think
we're
we're
left
out
of
the
equation
a
lot.
So
we,
as
trustee
Harrison,
was
saying
there
are
a
lot
of
towns
without
the
funding.
We
can't
take
an
unfunded
mandate.
It's
it's
impossible.
We
would
have
to
take
money
from
Capital
Improvement
projects,
it's
just
it's
untenable
and
I.
Think
preempting
local
control
is
going
to
be
a
no-go
entirely.
G
I
hope
that
we
can
and
I
just
was
extremely
nervous
when
sb213
was
coming
along,
and
one
reason
was
that
what
it
was
looking
like
was
Lions
would
be
the
only
municipality
in
the
area
to
retain
single-family
zoning
and,
if
that
were
to
be
the
case,
what
would
happen
to
our
housing
costs
and
property
values
so
I
there's
an
interconnectedness
that
I
think
people
really
need
to
pay
attention
to
when
we're
crafting
this
new
legislation
and
and
I
hope
to
hear
from
CML
very
soon
about
what
towns
like
ours
can
input
into
the
process.
L
Hi
this
is
Bill
just
I
had,
and
one
of
the
bullets
is
what
worries
you
about
some
of
the
state
legislation
and
we
spend
a
lot
of
time
on
213
at
the
county
level.
Looking
at
this
and
I
just
wanted
to
share
some
of
my
particular
concerns
from
my
point
of
view.
L
First
of
all,
there
were
not
enough
affordability
requirements.
They
really
didn't
adjust,
affordability,
their
their
approach
was
build
more
housing
and
it
will
happen,
but
they
also
set
up
front
that
the
Gap
in
Colorado
are
the
need.
The
housing
need
was
65
000
to
90
000
units
in
the
state
just
to
meet
the
current
need,
and
until
you
fill
that
need,
there
is
no
place
for
affordability
without
some
requirements
and
I
think
that's
really
important
to
think
about,
and
then
the
other
thing
was.
L
It
really
focuses
on
infill,
which
it
makes
a
lot
of
sense.
But
if
you
look
at
what
happened
in
Portland
Oregon,
they
did
the
same
thing
and
all
the
property
values
just
went
through
the
Hub
roof
and
they
really
weren't
able
to
do
affordable
housing
because
the
property
then
cost
so
much.
So
it's
just
some
concerns
that
I
have
about
what
they
had
in
213.
N
B
A
You
and
I'll
I'll
just
share
on
as
one
person
on
our
board
I
was
in
support
of
pieces
of
213
in
the
in
the
sense.
I
really
do
believe
that
we're
in
a
housing
crisis
I
have
just
coming
from
24
years
in
the
real
estate
industry
on
all
levels
of
of
that
work,
we've
been
in
a
crisis
for
a
while,
we
saw
it
coming.
We
saw
property
values,
Rising
et
cetera,
et
cetera
and
I.
A
Don't
believe
that
local
governments
have
been
able
to
yet
demonstrate
the
political
will
to
respond
to
a
housing
crisis,
and
so
I
get
all
of
the
reasons
why
folks
didn't
and
I
hear
the
local
control
and
I
hear
them
and
I
also
feel
like
we
need
to
so
I
think
the
the
follow-up
conversation
I
would
love
to
have
with
folks
is
what
do
we
do
and
I
love
that
piece,
and
maybe
it
was
trustee
Harrison
and
like
what?
A
A
Etc
and
I
really
would
love
to
see
us
come
together
and
with
Solutions,
and
even
if
it's
just
a
couple
pieces
of
whether
it's
rezoning
or
it's
Adu
or
you
know,
whatever
the
ones
that
we
can
agree
on,
because
I
do
believe
that
this
group
is
specifically
also
agrees,
that
we
have
a
crisis
and
that
we
need
accomplish
some
solutions
that
we
haven't
tried
before
I'm.
Personally,
not
I,
don't
go
straight
towards
down
payment
assistance.
A
Just
because
again,
I
have
an
industry
background,
and
that's
not
that's
inventory
is
the
issue
in
my
mind,
but
that's
just
me
as
one
person
so
just
appreciate
the
conversation
and
the
interest
of
getting
moving
us
forward
with
all
of
these
different
organizations
and
if
we
could
come
up
with
a
regional.
A
On
how
we're
going
to
help
form
some
of
these
bills
and
get
legislators
to
support
I
think
could
be
really
effective
versus
waiting
for
folks
to
come
to
us
and
see
here's
what
we're
going
to
do
and
do
you
agree,
I
think
this
is
the
time
for
us
to
be
more
involved
in
that
creation.
So
I
just
really
appreciate
everybody's
involvement
and
interest.
B
J
Thanks
I
will
add
that
while
I
was
on
kind
of
a
response
team,
if
you
will
for
broomfield's
213
analysis
during
session
you'll
I
am
positive.
J
That
Broomfield
will
want
to
be
involved
in
those
discussions
and
would
be
happy
to
brainstorm
further
for
what
the
next
iteration
looks
like
for
the
2024
season
in
Danae
Brouillard,
who
I
think
is
the
more
typical
attendee
of
this
meeting
for
Brimfield
has
continued
to
work
on
it
and
I'm
sure
she
has
some
more
fleshed
out
ideas
than
what
I
can
speak
to
tonight,
but
just
wanted
to
add
in
that
Brimfield
would
more
than
be
more
than
willing
to
be
at
the
table.
For
that.
A
D
Yeah,
just
one
quick
question,
and
that
was
maybe
for
another
time,
but
is
what
does
everybody
feel
about
again?
The
Gallagher
amendment
being
repealed,
no
real
solution
or
replacement
for
that
come
into
play
to
deal
with
property
values
and
then
what
the
governor
has
proposed?
Has
anybody
had
any
conversation
about
that
side
of
it
in
regard
to
the
impact
of
that
on
affordable
housing.
D
B
A
You
it's
going
in
the
notes.
I
can
see
from
here
all
right.
Thanks
everybody
for
the
the
conversation,
it's
critical
for
our
communities,
so
council,
member,
first
of
all,
I,
have
to
apologize
because
you
text
me
yesterday
to
have
a
quick
conversation
before
this
meeting
and
I
did
not
get
back
to
you.
But
we
have
a
few
minutes
here
for
just
an
update.
N
Yeah
so
Taylor
and
I
have
gone
to
a
number
of
councils
now
Boulder
Longmont,
Lewisville
and
Lafayette,
and
we
have
heard
support
from
those
councils
to
sort
of
move
forward
with
the
next
steps
of
forming
a
working
group
and
scoping
and
engagement
and
starting
to
look
at
bringing
in
data
analysis
so
that
we
can
start
that
process.
Moving
forward.
All
of
those
groups
supported
taking
a
sort
of
longer
look
and
having
a
moving
towards
the
goal
of
implementation
in
January
1st
2025.
N
P
Hi
hi
everyone,
Taylor
I'm,
an
assistant
city
council,
city
of
Boulder.
We
are
well
underway
with
convening
those
scoping
teams
just
scheduled
to
kickoff
meetings
for
both
so
to
remind
folks
next.
Steps
in
this
process
include
developing
scopes
of
work
for
an
economic
analysis
and
also
in
community
engagement
models
that
could
be
implemented
in
respective
communities
and
sort
of
generate
Apples
to
Apples
data.
P
So
those
scoping
teams
include
representatives
from
staff
representatives
from
the
four
communities
city
of
Boulder,
Lafayette,
Louisville
Longmont,
as
well
as
members
of
Chambers
of
Commerce
I've
talked
to
Boulder
chamber
Longmont
chamber
and
the
Latino
chamber
about
their
participation
in
those
teams,
as
well
as
representatives
from
effa
a
king,
supers
labor
union,
my
computer
died.
So
I
don't
have
my
notes
in
front
of
me:
a
faith-based
community,
New,
Era,
Colorado
and
and
a
couple
others,
but
I
I
do
believe
that
these
are
teams
that
are
well
represented.
P
These
are
people
that
are
coming
in
able
to
bring
a
lot
of
different
perspectives
to
the
table.
We
are
just
talking
about
scoping
the
work.
Of
course.
Implementation
will
be
another
thing,
but
I'm
excited
to
to
get
that
work
underneath
us.
N
And
I
had
one
I
forgot
to
mention
that
we
still
have
our
meeting
with
Erie
city
Board
of
Trustees
coming
up,
which
we're
looking
forward
to.
E
Thank
you.
We,
a
couple
of
things,
have
happened
on
this.
Obviously
Taylor
and
and
Lauren
have
come
to
our
Council
and
I,
went
to
this
last
chamber
after
hours
meeting
and
spoke
with
just
general
members
and
asked
their
opinion
on
this.
E
Of
course,
the
the
Longmont
Chamber
of
Commerce,
the
executive
Council
has
is,
is
discussing
it
and
thinking
about
you
know
what
this
looks
like
and
then
we
have
a
couple
of
City
interns
that
are
collecting
data
on
the
specific
question,
with
the
guidance
of
Sandy
Cedar,
our
assistant
city
manager,
so
we're
we're
trying
to
get
some
data
to
to
from
our
small
business
owners
and
and
regular
sized
business
owners
and
about
what
this
you
know,
what
their
thoughts
are
on
this.
E
So
we're
we're
trying
to
you
know,
get
some
feedback
from
them.
P
Test:
okay,
sorry,
representative,
McCoy
I
missed
the
orientation
on
how
this
the
technology
Works
I,
appreciate
you
bringing
that
up.
Yeah,
so
I
forgot
to
mention
that
Longmont
and
Boulder
both
have
intern
a
set
of
interns
that
are
working
on
different
aspects
of
this
too.
So
we're
also
bringing
youth
voices
in
early
on
the
process,
but
Longmont
has
been
a
fantastic
partner.
I've
had
early
conversations,
also
with
CU
Boulder
about
sort
of
the
economic
analysis
side
of
things.
B
A
Someone
be
that
person
today,
so
just
as
a
just
by
way
of
update,
and
so
this
is
and
again
council
member
of
Wilcrest
reached
out
to
me,
I
just
hadn't
gotten
a
chance
to
have
a
conversation.
The
County
Commissioners
are
are
interested
in
moving
this
forward
for
January,
2024
and
so
I'm.
Just
gonna
share
some
of
that
conversation
and
reasoning,
and
also
that
was
an
update
to
know
that
there's
four
different
councils
that
are
really
looking
at
25,
which
is
fine
and
it's
a
good
update.
A
What
we
have
been
talking
about
is
it
seems
like
and
again
I
haven't
been
part
of
these
conversations
when
they
were
going
on
in
2019,
but
I
know
that
there
were
some
conversations
that
were
had
already
previously
there
I've
heard
from
folks
who
are
looking
at
you
know
what
might
legislatively.
Might
there
be
a
fix
to
the
current
legislation
that
would
provide
some
kind
of
off-ramp?
A
That
would
address
some
of
the
concerns
that
that
small
businesses
have
in
regards
to
tipping
and
or
certain
ages,
and
what
we've
been
also
discussing
is
we
have
communities
in
crisis
in
a
lot
of
different
ways,
not
just
about
recovering
from
covid
and
not
just
about
inflation,
not
just
about
property.
A
Tax
potential
rise,
not
there's
a
whole
list
of
area
of
different
issues
that
folks
are
are
facing,
including
the
cost
of
housing
and
being
able
to
live
and
work
in
your
own
community,
and
so
whatever
amount
of
Engagement
that
we
do
whatever
amount
of
Outreach
or
education
that
we
do
statutorily.
There's
a
very
minimal
requirement.
A
A
Will
we
be
in
a
better
place
from
the
amount
of
residents
that
are
affected
right
now
by
not
having
livable
wage
than
we
would
be
a
year
from
now
and
I
say
a
year
from
now?
Knowing
that
it's
basically
a
December
but
there's
this
whole
timeline
and
and
all
the
different
pieces
that
have
to
happen
before
January
1
change
could
be
so
I'm
just
going
to
share
that
conversation,
but
that
was
where
we
came
together
thinking.
A
Actually,
we
probably
could
go
through
the
same
process
right
now
in
the
next
four
months
or
so
and
be
able
to
make
a
a
potentially
life
transformative
change
for
a
wage.
A
For
somebody,
knowing
that
we
get
to
create
that
policy
and
there's
different
ways
statutorily,
we
don't
have
to
go
up
to
the
full
cap
every
year
we
could
do
there's
so
many
different
variations
and
we're
we
aren't
going
to
have
time
to
have
a
full-on
conversation
and
councilman
folkerts
is
leading
that
work,
and
commissioner
Levy
in
the
Boulder
County
Commissioner's
Office
is,
is
now
the
lead
as
of
of
the
beginning
of
this
year
on
this
on
this
work
so,
but
just
want
to
share
an
update
in
regards
to
the
conversation
that
Commissioners
are
having
and
the
concern
that
as
a
board
as
a
collective,
which
I
think
we
all
knew.
A
This
was
going
to
happen
at
some
point.
All
the
boards
are
gonna
have
to
make
their
decisions
together
about
whether
time
frame
and
what
y'all
want
to
do
et
cetera.
A
The
the
constant
that
I
am
hearing
is
that
folks
want
to
do
a
regional
approach
and
so
I
think
that's
still
part
of
the
conversation,
so
I
just
wanted
to
give
that
update
and
I
just
appreciate
the
work
that
y'all
are
doing
and
the
planning,
certainly
from
all
the
staff
that
are
trying
to
figure
out
in
the
interns
that
are
trying
to
figure
out,
but
I
want
to
be
really
careful
about.
What
are
we
asking
folks
like,
or
are
the
questions
that
we're
asking
people
in
this
different
types
of
Outreach?
A
Really
what's
going
to
inform
our
decision
as
decision
makers,
and
if
not,
do
we
need
to
really
look
at
what
those
questions
are?
Is
it
about
a
number?
Is
it
about
how
comfortable
you
are
as
a
business
owner,
because
people
are
going
to
get
hurt,
people
will
be
hurt
in
this
process.
People
are
going
to
be
hurt
right
now,
because
they
don't
have
a
level
wage.
A
Small
businesses
may
have
to
close
at
some
point
depending
on
there
is
going
to
be
enough,
and
that
is
a
tough
job
of
us
as
elected
officials,
because
none
of
us
I
don't
believe
any
of
us
want
to
see
our
small
businesses
hurt
and
I
believe
that
we
don't
want
to
see
our
residents
hurt
by
not
being
able
to
live
and
work
on
one
salary
or
one
job
in
our
own
communities.
K
Just
say
it
for
everyone:
you
will
start
to
see
information
from
the
county
coming
out
to
the
community
the
week
of
August
14th,
so
we'll
have
more
information
to
share
then
through
a
press
release
and
then
subsequent
Communications
out
to
the
community.
So
we're
still
a
couple
weeks
away
from
making
an
announcement,
but
it
will
happen
soon.
A
Well,
I
appreciate
everybody's
work.
I
would
suggest
using
those
emails
to
share
on
different
events.
I
will
share
that
I
will
be
visiting
town
of
lions,
so
we'll
send
that
information
out
for
folks
if
anybody
else
wants
to
join
us
for
one
of
the
live
music
and
now
looks
like
a
tour
of
summit's
development.
So
thank
you.
Everybody
councilmember,
McCoy,.
E
Boulder
County
fair
parade
on
Saturday.