►
From YouTube: Housing Opportunity Fund Meeting - 5/6/21
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
B
B
B
D
B
A
Hi
any
opposed
abstentions.
A
E
E
I
simply
want
to
step
in
and
let
everyone
know
that
in
the
past
month
that
hud
fho
has
referred
to
the
federal
omb
office,
the
obama-era
disparate
impact
and
firmly
furthering
their
housing
rules
for
review
and
potential
reinstatement.
E
And
so
we
are
continuing
to
see
a
fantastic
federal
support
for
the
type
of
initiatives
that
we
are
taking
locally
and
that
will
also
provide
some
information
and
guidelines
for
being
able
to
pursue
these
guidelines
and
facts
and
reviews
as
much
as
we
can.
E
And
so
I
let
kelly
know-
and
so
our
goal
over
the
month
of
may
is
to
truly
begin,
as
april
with
fair
housing
month
with
being
able
to
establish
and
create
these
frameworks
to
put
over
to
lay
over
the
programs
and
so,
for
example,
between
the
dpcc
and
the
hap,
with
the
racial
inequity
regarding
homeownership
and
the
investment
in
black
neighborhoods
and
to
a
view,
the
fair
housing
data
that
can
be
applied,
as
well
as
to
dig
into
the
data
regarding
the
other
protected
classes,
including
the
city-specific
protected
classes.
E
Because
so
city-specific
protected
classes
are
only
as
viable
as
our
enforcement
of
those
in
our
pursuit
of
the
equity,
that's
related
to
those
protected
classes,
and
additionally,
I
raised
that
we
can
look
at
the
rgp
program.
While
I
understand-
and
we
all
know,
that
it's
gap
funding,
we
can
begin
to
evaluate
and
create
the
concept
of
a
fair
housing
impact,
review
or
understanding
for
the
projects
that
are
currently
at
the
ura,
as
well
as
to
help
with
future
understanding
of
proposed
projects
for.
E
E
The
doj
has
filed
an
appeal
already
on
that
decision,
but
it
is
a
federal
judge
and
it
is
concerning,
and
so
simply
to
underscore
the
importance
that
we
all
know
of
this
work
here,
because
the
affordable
housing
crisis
is
only
going
to
worsen
before
it
gets
better
and
our
role
in
being
the
bulwark
that
we
have.
So
I
thank
you
all
and
I
can't
wait
to
get
started.
G
Okay
kelly,
I
just
want
to
note
for
the
record
that
we've
been
joined
by
adrian
walnaha
joanna
deming
and
dr
jamil
day.
C
A
Wonderful,
if
there's
no
further
public
comment,
I
will
move
on
to
a
presentation
from
hrna.
They
have
updated.
The
housing
needs
assessment.
H
Great,
this
is
phil
cash
from
hrna
advisors,
guys
making
sure
it's
like
a
appreciate
for
the
chance
to
everyone
to
get
to
talk
today.
What
we're
going
to
go!
What
I'm
going
to
go
through
at
a
high
level
is
really
what
our
scope
is
and
start
to
ask
you
all
some
questions
about
how
you
use
the
housing
in
these
assessment
previously
next
slide.
H
So,
as
I
said
on
field
cache,
I'm
a
partner
at
hrna
advisors,
hrna
is
a
real
estate
economic
development,
public
policy,
consulting
firm.
I
lead
our
housing
practice,
so
I
focus
on
affordable
housing
across
the
country,
working
with
matt,
bledsoe
and
bailey
mcconnell.
On
this
on
the
hr
side,
they
are
both
out
and
e
holdings.
We
partner
with
to
help
us
do
the
analysis
on
demographics
and
market
conditions,
excellent.
H
Excellent,
so
hra's
experience
we
hrn's,
affordable,
housing
practice
and
background
is
really
in
doing
market
plans
and
assessments,
so
helping
local
governments,
advocacy
organizations,
phone
topic
organizations
understand
what
market
conditions
are
what's
happening
in
the
market.
What
the
existing,
affordable
housing
programs
are
doing,
what
the
challenges
with
that
are
and
then
how
those
line
up.
So
how
do
your
housing
programs
actually
line
up
with
needs
in
the
market
and
then
developing
recommendations
on
how
to
address
it?
H
We
also
help
design
and
implement
any
of
the
recommendations
that
usually
come
out
of
a
housing
needs
assessment,
so
revolving
loan
funds
for
preservation,
inclusionary,
zoning
down
payment
assistance,
single
family,
rehab
programs,
almost
anything
you
might
actually
recommend
in
algebra.
We
also
designed
and
worked
on,
and
we've
done,
a
fair
amount
of
work
in
pittsburgh,
actually
working
with
the
ura
to
stand
up.
The
housing
opportunity
fund,
working
with
heinz
on
inclusive
economic
development
and
they're,
excited
to
continue
to
work
in
the
market
and
understand
it
better.
Next.
H
H
H
So
the
assessment
is
really
intended
to
build
on
previous
housing
needs
assessment
and
fair
amount
of
market.
Different
analysis
has
been
done
by
nonprofit
advocacy
groups.
It's
going
to
feed
into
the
forging
pittsburgh
overall
comprehensive
plan
and
we're
really
looking
at
what
are
the
demographic
turns?
What
where?
What
are
the
conditions,
the
housing
supply?
Where
are
the
challenges
with
the
housing?
Affordability?
H
What
are
the
where
our
housing
needs
so?
Where?
Who
is
the
market
not
serving?
Who
are
the
existing
housing
programs
not
serving
and
understand
market
characteristics?
There's
a
heavy
emphasis
on
displacement
and
displacement
risk,
that's
something
that
was
flagged
in
the
previous
housing
needs
assessment
and,
as
we
started
to
pull
information
on
the
market,
it
is
clearly
a
major
challenge
in
the
housing
market
and
has
come
up
in
every
conversation.
H
We've
had
we're
really
trying
to
make
this
sure
that,
as
we
build
this
housing
easement,
it
builds
on
what
are
the
employment
economic
trends,
so
not
just
a
snapshot
in
time
about
the
current
needs.
But
what
how
do
we
think
market
conditions
are
going
to
progress
going
forward
so
that
we're
not
constantly
trying
to
catch
up
with
a
goal?
That's
already,
it's
gotten
higher
or
more
difficult
making
sure
that,
when
we
think
lit
housing
that
we're
looking
at
more
than
just
actual
unit
counts
but
different
types
of
tenure,
but
in
location
and
different
benefits.
H
Recognizing
pittsburgh,
you
know,
has
housing
quality
issues
again,
making
sure
that
where
we
have,
where
folks
might
show
up
housed
and
being
able
to
afford
that
housing,
we're
also
understanding
where
there
are
quality
issues.
In
fact,
the
house
is
affordable,
but
it's
not
meeting
it's
not
actually
providing
appropriate
shelter
for
families
and
then
really
understanding,
disparity
and
racial
disparity.
H
On
this
we're
going
to
look
at
median
numbers
we're
going
to
look
at
averages,
but
we're
going
to
work
hard
to
disaggregate
and
make
sure
we
don't
lose
the
story
and
understand
the
full
nuance
of
what's
going
on
and
then,
as
was
just
being
discussed
before,
I
started
speaking
understanding.
How
covet
has
exacerbated
this
in
the
near
term
and
how
that's
likely
to
play
out,
or
at
least
starting
to
project,
how
that's
going
to
play
out
those
are
parts
of
the
2021
update,
but
really
intended
to
build
on
the
previous
announcement
back
in
2016.
H
H
Slide
so
there's
really
six
major
tasks.
Here
we
have
a
project
kickoff
which
we're
passing
we're
starting
into
we're
into
the
work.
As
you
see
in
normal
budget,
the
sixth
phase.
This
is
how
this
presents
it
as
if
it's
an
extremely
linear
process,
we
will
move
it
through
it
relatively
linearly,
but
the
reality
is
that,
as
you
know,
review
existing
market
programs
and
get
into
understanding
the
housing
stock.
H
You
know
a
lot
of
what
we're
doing
is
about
data
analysis,
but
the
data
can
miss
the
nuance
of
what's
happening
in
the
market,
and
so
we
always
want
to
make
sure
we're
doing
the
analysis,
we're
presenting
it
back
and
making
sure
that
it
actually
aligns
with
what
people
are
experiencing
and
seeing
on
the
ground
and
there's
an
accurate.
H
You
know
we
haven't
missed
the
story
by
only
looking
at
statistics
next
slide,
so
the
first
phase
of
the
reviewing
housing
problems
we're
in
the
collection
reviewing
of
the
existing
housing
plans,
existing
neighborhood
plans,
but
also
an
inventory
of
all
the
existing
housing
programs.
So
those
are
both
the
housing
programs
run
by
the
ura
through
the
hof
and
otherwise
those
housing
programs
controlled
by
the
city,
those
housing
programs
controlled
by
the
housing
authority
and
again
back
to
the
covered
point.
H
H
Being
served
at
different
income
levels,
what
volume
households
are
being
served
at
and
how
those
are
running,
so
we
can
start
to
see
where
the
efforts
you
know
where
the
focus
of
energy
is
at
and
start
and,
as
we
start
to
have,
information
on
market
need
start
to
compare.
How
does
what's
being
done
compared
to
where
the
need
is
both
in
scale
and
whether
some
issues
are
being
addressed
or
not
addressed.
H
What
comes
out
of
this
is
really
a
summary
of
the
housing
initiatives
report,
which
is
an
overall
view
of
like
this
is
what
we
saw
on
the
market.
This
is
what
we
see
in
the
housing
program.
We
always
want
to
put
one
of
these
together
and
share
out,
because
there
is
usually
a
housing
program
or
two
that
we've
missed,
because
it's
run
by
through
a
united
way
or
through
a
non-profit
and
we're
not
covering
it.
It's
an
important
program
to
cover,
or
you
know
we
think,
we've
gone
through
everything.
H
We
think
we
understand
the
programs,
but
in
fact
the
program
runs
differently
than
we
understand.
So
as
we're
doing
with
everything.
We're
trying
to
show
show
our
work
and
show
it
early
so
that
you,
those
who
are
out
in
the
community
doing
this
work,
can
correct
and
add
and
make
sure
we
have
a
accurate
understanding
of
everything
next
slide.
H
Please
then
demographics,
forecasting
and
economic
data-
this
is
about
understanding
who
lives
in
pittsburgh
now
and
disaggregating
that
who's
coming
to
pittsburgh
and
who's
leaving
pittsburgh
and
how
job
creation
economic
trends
are
likely
to
drive
that
and
push
it
forward.
This
is
a
really.
This
is
a
who.
This
is
focused
on
the
people
side,
similar
approach
to
the
program
review,
we're
gonna
have
it.
You
know.
There's
interim
memo
comes
out
here.
It's
like
these
are
the
population
trends.
H
Since
this
data,
often
trails
and
not
everybody's
full
participation,
we're
really
going
to
see
with
the
2020
census.
Previous
senses
have
been
a
little
bit
better,
so
we
always
want
to
make
sure
we're
understanding
that
and
getting
a
full
picture
next
slide
housing
stock,
so
demographic
demographics
is
the
people
side.
This
is
more
the
bricks
and
sticks
side
of
it.
This
is
really
about
understanding.
H
What's
the
existing
housing
stock
in
pittsburgh,
where
is
it
located?
How
does
it
vary
by
size
and
condition
and
level
of
affordability?
What's
affordably
affordable,
because
the
market's
not
that
strong,
what's
affordable,
because
there's
affordability,
restrictions
where
there's
affordability,
restrictions?
What
income
levels
is
that
actually
serving?
When
do
those
affordability
restrictions
actually
expire,
how
those
owned
and
administered
and
then
where's
the
gap
between
what
households
need
and
what
the
house,
what
housing
is
actually
available
in
terms
of
affordability,
but
also
in
household
size?
So
there's
really
understanding
the
gap.
H
It
size,
there's
a
gap
at
affordability
and
there's
a
gap
not
so
much
a
gap,
but
a
concentration.
Where
is
the
housing
located
and
how
does
that
line
up
with
various
measures
for
opportunity?
This
is
a
thing,
will
come,
will
measure
in
a
couple
different
ways
and
come
back
and
talk
to
access
to
employment,
centers,
transit,
a
minute
parks
and
recreation,
school
quality
and
other
other
aspects.
Next,
next
slide.
H
And
then
market
analysis
this
is
really
building
on
the
stock
piece
of
more
what's
being
built
where,
by
whom
and
for
whom.
So
where
is
new
construction
or
significant
rehabilitation
happening?
Is
that
going
to
market
rate?
What
does
market
rate
mean
in
this
competition?
This
context,
who
is,
is
that's
affordable?
What
does
affordable
mean
in
this
context?
H
What
degree
this
is
rental,
which
is
for
sale
and,
frankly,
who's
ultimately
doing
the
building
and
who's,
ultimately
to
the
degree
we
can
see
it
owning
the
asset.
So
are
these?
You
know
our
developments
tend
to
get
built
by
a
merchant
builder
and
then
flipped
over
to
private
equity
after
three
three
to
seven
years,
which
is
not
an
uncommon
business
model
but
ultimately
who's
ending
up
with
with
control
and
then
again
this
ends
with
a
market
analysis
report
and
we
put
out
the
projects
we
see
and
there's.
H
This
is
another
place
where
you
think
you
know
every
deal
in
a
market
and
you
put
out
the
list
and
show
your
analysis
and
people
show
you.
You
know
mark
deals
that
you
didn't.
You
didn't
find
in
your
interviews.
You
didn't
find
your
conversation,
so
we'll
again
go
through
the
process
of
making
sure
we're
sharing
what
we're,
seeing
and
adding
and
refining.
H
As
imagine
some
folks
on
this
call
point
out,
you've
missed
you've
missed
this
deal
or
you
didn't
understand
this
deal
or
that
deal
is
different
than
you
think
it
is,
and
then
the
last
step
is
really
where
next
slide
please.
H
Thank
you.
The
last
step
is
really
where
we
start
to
pull
this
together
of
given
the
population
households
in
need
and
given
what's
happening
with
the
housing
market.
So
what
the
market's
actually
building,
where
things
are
headed,
where,
where
are
there
existing
gaps
and
where
those
get
how
those
gaps
likely
to
change
over
time,
new
gas
that
may
emerge.
H
If
a
number
appears
to
be
solved
is
that
because
we've
actually
displaced
or
forced
people
out
of
the
community,
and
they
just
don't
show
up
in
our
data
anymore
and
coming
out
of
this
making
sure
we
put
together
a
series
of
recommended
initiatives
and
strategies
and
those
initiative
strategies
we
take.
We
really
look
at
three
different
sets
of
solutions.
We
want
to
recommend
a
comprehensive
approach,
so
those
are
land
use.
H
H
Then
subsidy,
which
obviously
hof
understands
where
you
can
use
close
the
gap
between
what
household
can
afford
and
what
it
costs
to
build
or
maintain
housing
and
then
tenants
rights.
How
do
I
make
sure
there's
appropriate
balance
between
the
rights
of
a
tenant
and
the
rights
of
a
landlord
and
going
back
to
the
eviction
moratorium
comment
made
at
the
beginning
of
this?
You
know.
H
We
really
think
that
you
can't
have
a
healthy
housing
market
without
a
strategy
that
includes
land,
use,
subsidy
and
tenants
rights,
because
you
need
all
of
those
factors
to
be
balanced
in
order
in
order
to
really
meet
the
needs
of
all
your
residents.
So
what
we'll
do
is
we'll
lay
out
those
different
tools
that
we
recommend
examples
of
them
and
that'll
lead
to
a
matrix
of
and
start
to
lay
out
really
the
strategies
that
would
go
forward
for
overall
housing.
H
So
it
won't
be
a
detailed
housing
plan
of
detailed
exactly
what
strategy
or
capital
expenditures,
but
it
will
lay
out
given
these
need.
This
is
the
market
conditions
are,
and
these
are
the
kinds
of
tools.
These
are
the
tools
you
need
to
design
and
put
in
place
to
help
address
that
I
went
through
that
extremely
quickly
and
I
apologize
for
that.
I'm
happy
to
answer
questions
but
wanted
to
just
give
this.
Overall.
H
All
this
comes
together
and
goes
into
a
final
report
that
then
feeds
into
the
overall
company
overall
plan
we're
going
to
try
to
make
that
report
really
the
two
parts,
like
both
a
very
technical
piece
and
make
sure
we
show
all
of
our
analysis,
so
anybody
can
replicate
how
what
we
did
and
frankly
cut
the
data
in
other
ways
or
monitor
or
change
over
time,
but
also-
and
this
is
always
hard
on-
you
know-
housing
space,
making-
sure
it's
clear
and
accessible
so
really
thinking
about
almost
in
two
ways,
so
that
folks
can
unders.
H
It's
very
clear
like
these
are
the
key
challenges,
and
this
is
why
it's
this
is
what's
happening
here
is
a
map,
here's
the
maps
and
graphs
that
show
that,
but
then
make
sure
that
you
all
you
know
everyone
can
see
like
this
is
how
we
did
our
affordable
housing
census.
So
this
is
all
the
units
that
went
into
that
and
this,
if
you
needed
to
update
or
monitor
it
over
time,
you
can't
and
that
that's
where
we
expect
to
end
up
next
slide.
H
H
This
is
a
planning
activity,
but
a
planning
activity
is
only
a
really
useful
activity
if
it
supports
actual
policy
making
and
actual
decisions
and
actions.
So
we
would
love
to
hear
from
you
all.
Some
of
you
is
like
how
was
the
2016
housing
needs
assessment
used,
or
did
you
use
it
and
where
was
it
useful,
which
things
would
you
like
us?
You
know
make
sure
we
replicate
an
update
in
2021
and
then,
where
you
know
what
what
else
do
you
want
to
see
from
the
21
audio
client,
but
really
I'm
we're
asking
you
like
how?
H
How
is
this
housing?
How
do
you
think
you're
going
to
use
this
data
or
how
do
you
want
to
use
it
so
that
we're
having
that
top
of
mind
whenever
we're
throughout
the
whole
process
of
doing
the
work?
I
will
stop
talking
at
you,
and
hopefully
you
will
have
some
questions
and
thoughts.
Also
have
me
talk
about
any
part
of
the
scope.
C
A
C
C
Almost
all
of
that
was
was
in
rental,
but
there
were
also
it
was
also
a
lack
of
affordable
home
ownership
opportunities
for
for
families.
You
know
how
has
that
changed
since
the
assessment
was
done
in
2016?
C
We
we've
have
a
you
know.
I
think
we're
all
aware
of
now.
Some
of
the
consequences
of
some
of
this
lack
of
affordability
is
displacement
of
a
large
proportion
of
the
black
population
in
pittsburgh
in
the
past
four
or
five
years,
six
years.
Where
did
that
happen,
and-
and
why
did
that
happen-
is
that
was
that
folks,
like
the
the
penn
plaza
being
demolished
and
moved
out
of
this?
You
know
that
the
unit
simply
went
away.
C
You
know:
are
those
publicly
owned
units
like
housing
authority
units?
You
know
what
are
the
impacts
of
some
of
the
policies
that
the
city's
had
for
the
previous
couple
of
decades,
been
on
on
the
population
trends
that
we're
seeing,
but
also
was
there
voluntary.
You
know,
folks
that
decided
hey.
I
can
get
it.
I
own.
C
C
H
F
All
right
ready,
so
my
first
thing
is:
will
the
2020
census
be
able
to
be
integrated
so
will
we
be
able
to
kind
of
wait
on
some
pieces
until
that
comes
out
and
just
sidebar
that
will
we
be
able
to
measure
obviously
we'll
be
able
to
measure
whether
there's
less
affordable
units
or
more?
So
we
want
to
see
what
impact
you
know.
Hofs
made
and
other
initiatives
on
closing
that
gap
and
maybe
what's
exacerbated
the
issue.
F
You
know
we
added
all
these
units,
but
we
lost
these
units
and
then
my
last
question
was
about
multi-family
units
and
if
we
were
to
kind
of
quantify
the
number
of
multi-family
units
that
are
kind
of
coming
onto
the
market
and
that
our
potential
for
being
preserved,
as
naturally
for
occurring,
affordable
housing,
so
just
kind
of
quantifying
those
multi-family
properties,
especially
ones
that
are
more
affordable
to
be
acquired
and
potentially.
H
Muted,
myself,
sorry
so
the
question
on
the
2020
census.
We
are
starting
with
2019
census
data.
We
are
looking
to
be
able
to
pull
in
and
update,
where
appropriate,
be
direct,
we're
a
little
nervous
about
the
2020
census
data
and
so
we're
not
waiting
for
it.
But
we
are
going
to
look
at
it
and
if
it's
different
pull
it
in.
H
H
I
also
hear
you
saying
understanding,
what's
going
on
with
your
noah
and
what
that
property
is
and
whether
there's
a
preservation
like
whether
it
makes
sense
for
there
to
be
a
preservation
fund
or
a
preservation
play
to
both
improve,
protect,
improve
and
protect
quality
and
also
prevent
you
know
limit
market
pressure.
Is
that
am
I
hearing
that
right.
I
Good
good
morning,
I
have
another
question:
will
this
report
also
highlight
the
role
of
short-term
rentals
like
airbnb,
and
the
impact
that
that
plays
on
the
market
as
it
relates
to
affordable
housing,
home
ownership
opportunities,
as
well
as
affordable,
rentals.
H
We
have
not
flagged
that
as
a
focus
area,
but
we
have
done
that
analysis
in
other
markets
and
we
can't
we
can't
there's
good,
there's
some
there's
some
data
sources
out
there,
where
we
can
actually
get
there's
some
data
sources
that
are
actually
really
designed
to
help
people
who
want
to
start
their
own
short-term
rental
business.
That
give
you
good
data
on
where
the
units
are
at,
how
many
there
are
and
what
they're
renting
for,
and
we
can
get
a
size
on
that.
I
guess
you
know.
H
I
know
you
asked
the
question
for
a
reason
and
other
places
where
we've.
So
we
did
this
some
analysis
on
this
in
new
orleans,
where
it
was
a
major
problem
in
the
treme
neighborhood
are
there
you
know?
Well
I'm
sure
I'll
see.
This
is
something
you're
gonna
do.
But
do
you
already
have
a
feel
that,
like
there
are
certain
neighborhoods
or
certain
places
in
the
city
where
this
is
becoming.
I
An
issue
I'm
not
quite
certain
as
far
as
the
neighborhood
that
it
might
be
an
issue
in,
however
I've
I
have
heard
from
some
real
estate
agents
who
are
trying
to
help
60
to
80
ami
residents
purchase
homes
in
the
city,
the
challenge
they
run
into
because
of
the
lack
of
availability
due
to
investors,
purchasing
homes
just
for
airbnb.
I
So
you
know
just
looking
at
that,
like
the
market
that
may
be
open
for
that
are
being
purchased
right
now
for
invest
investment
opportunities
versus
low
to
moderate
income,
homeownership
opportunities,
as
well
as
rental.
H
So
I'm
going
to
dig
on
this
for
a
minute
because
we're
I
want
us
to
do
more.
It
might
be
helpful
this
course
to
talk
about.
If
there's
real
estate
agents,
you
think,
are
good
to
talk
to
because
one
of
the
things
we
try
to
understand
in
our
market.
So
we
do
work
in
detroit
and
one
of
the
challenges
there
is
because
a
lot
of
the
neighborhoods
are
depressed
in
value
mortgage
financing.
H
Either
you
can't
get
mortgage
financing
if
you're
a
low
or
moderate
income
household,
or
you
can't
win
a
bid
because
the
guy
you
know
whoever
you're
bidding
against
you
know
it's
got
cash
and
that's.
We
can
pull
honda
data
and
look
at
home.
Mortgage
disclosure
activated
and
they'll
give
us
somewhat
of
a
picture
of
what's
going
on,
but
we
may
need.
We
may
just
need
to
have
more
qualitative
discussions,
because
it's
sometimes
hard
to
parse
out
how
that's
playing
out
in
a
neighborhood
by
neighborhood
got
it,
but
that's
helpful
to
understand.
A
I
know
you
mentioned
this,
but
I
just
kind
of
want
to
just
say
that
it's
I'm
especially
interested
in
housing,
stock,
question
research
about
the
the
quality
of
housing
stock
and
perhaps
to
that
point
to
build
off
of
what
knowledge
was
saying.
Is
you
know,
they're
who
can
afford
to
rehab
in
these
communities
where
we
are
trying
to
avoid
displacement?
A
And
it's
oftentimes,
not
the
residents,
especially
given
the
structure
of
rehab
loans.
So
if
we
can
get
a
good,
a
good
read
on
the
need
and
where
that
need
is
when
we
can
develop
some
some
better
programming
around
around
that
to
support
homeowners
and
prevent
displacement
so
that
we
can
help
people
to
stay
in
their
neighborhoods
and
then
a
second
semi-related
point
is
affordability.
A
So
while
we
our
focus
and
our
target
is
on
helping
low
and
moderate
income
folks,
there
are
a
lot
of
people,
I'm
just
curious
about
affordability,
more
broadly,
who
is
spending
more
than
30
of
their
income
on
housing
needs,
and
if
we
can
just
broaden
the
scope
or
make
sure
that
it's
included.
Even
though
it's
not
necessarily
the
focus,
that
would
be
something
that
I'd
be
interested
in,
especially
given
our
wage
disparities
that
we
know.
A
We
have,
especially
by
race
here
in
the
city,
that
that
would
be
something
that
I'd
be
interested
in.
Seeing
as
well.
H
So
two
parts
that
I'm
hearing
there
is
one
who's
able
to
reinvest
in
their
properties,
both
who's
able
to
access
financing
and
who's
able
just
has
cash.
We're
gonna,
we're
gonna,
look
at
two
data
sources
on
that
one
will
be
the
home
mortgage
disclosure
act.
It'll
tell
us
where,
where
are
my
rehab
loans
happening
and
the
other
will
be
building
permit
data
because
not
everybody
uses
a
loan.
Sometimes
people
use
cash
and
that'll
give
us
a
feel
for
both
the
scale
and
the
and
the
location
of
it.
H
It
won't
be
perfect
because,
frankly,
not
everyone
gets
their
permits,
but
it
gives
us
a
good.
It
usually
gives
us
a
good
indicator
and
we
do
see
you
know
massive
amounts
of
disparity
in
most
cities
and
I
think
there's
a
comment
mark
made
comments.
I
think
there's
a
very
important
comment
for
us
to
validate
earlier
about
where
homeowners
choose
to
sell
and
value.
You
know,
get
the
value
and
leave,
and
you
know
what
that
means
and
where
people
are
forced
out
one
of
the
things
we
run
into.
H
I
think
your
kelly,
your
question,
will
get
asked
a
little
bit
is
when
you're
selling,
if
you're,
able
to
improve
your
property
before
you
sell
it,
you
get
the
full
value.
If
you're
not
able
to
access
the
financing
to
improve
your
property,
you
actually
don't
get,
you
might
sell
and
move
away,
but
you
don't
get
nearly
as
much
of
the
premium
on
the
appreciation,
and
so
we'll
try
to
understand,
understand,
understand
that
anything
to
be
able
to
give
you.
A
So
so
I
think
that's
a
part
of
it,
but
not
the
entire
thing,
because
what
I'm
also
looking
at
is
where
there
is
or
want
to
look
at
is
where
there
are
properties
that
should
be
fixed
or
could
be
fixed,
but
maybe
there's
not
the
rehab
loans
or
the
permits
being
pulled,
because
either
you
can
do
it
cash
or
you're.
Just
waiting
like
oh
well.
A
I
know
that
this
community
may
be
next
and
I'm
just
gonna
wait
and
buy
it
and
rehab
it
later
and
that's
a
lot
of
what
I've
been
seeing
as
well
in
areas
where
I
you
know
I'll.
Just
randomly
look
on
airbnb,
I'm
like
where
could
what's
happening
to
knowledge's
point
is
sometimes
people
will
buy
rehab
and
then
sit
on
it
as
an
airbnb,
while
waiting
for
the
neighborhood
to
really
explode.
But
I'm
thinking,
if
we
could
target,
say
hey.
We
know
that
this
area
has
a
lot
of
low
to
moderate
income.
A
Folks
who
live
here
and
a
lot
of
housing
stock
that
also
needs
to
be
repaired.
So
is
there
a
program
that
we
could
create
to
help
them
stay
here
and
take
advantage
of
ownership
opportunities
and
potentially
rehab
their
communities
and
live
in
their
homes
versus
just
looking
at
actually
doing
the
flipping
or
rehabbing,
as
it
is
being
processed
kind
of
like
getting
in
front
of
it
a
little
bit?
So
we
can
support
that.
So
it's
not
wow.
A
I
stayed
here
for
you
know,
however
many
years
and
now
when
I
go
to
buy,
I
have
to
spend
200
or
get
all
these
loans
in
order
to
buy
a
property.
That's
been
rehabbed
that
I've
been
staring
at
falling
apart
for
years
and
years
and
years.
So
if
we
can
find
those
opportunities
in
advance,
that's
something
that
I
would
really
be
excited
about.
F
D
Your
comment
earlier,
your
reference
earlier
to
seattle
really
made
me
start
to
think
about
affordability.
More
broadly,
while
our
focus
as
a
the
housing
opportunity
fund
is
primarily
on
low
mod
income
individuals
and
though
we
have
a
little
bit
of
flexibility
in
that
for
sale
space.
D
I'm
I'm
curious
as
to
whether
and
to
what
extent
the
city
has
this
sort
of
missing
middle
problem.
Do
we
have?
Are
we
losing
the
ability
for
more
average
income
or-
or
you
know,
people
100
percent
of
median
to
actually
afford
homes
here?
Are
we
are
we
seeing
in
the
housing
market,
the
income
and
wealth
disparities
that
other
places
are,
are
seeing
a
little
bit
outside
of
what
our
focus
would
be
as
a
committee?
But
it's
definitely
an
interest.
H
D
H
Rates,
dropping
and
dropping
because
folks
are
moving
folks
are
passing
away
or
whatever
you
know,
that
cycle
is
coming.
Usually
those
are
longer
10-year
households
and
they're,
just
not
being
a
lot
of
stock
or
new
entry
options
for
other
low
and
moderate
income,
households
and
so
we'll.
We
will
look
at
that
and
try
to
understand
what's
happening
there.
I
don't
want
to
pre-judge
the
data,
but
that
is
the
trend
like
every
city.
H
I've
looked
at
in
america
has
seen
a
sharp
drop
in
that
group
since
foreclosure
crisis
and
almost
no
recovery
which
doesn't
make
it
something
we
should
not
try
to
push
back
against,
but
I
will
be
shocked
if
I
don't
see
that
at
a
significant
scale,
when
we
look
closely
at
pittsburgh.
J
Phillip,
this
is
diamante,
I
guess
the
one
thing
that
I
would
want
to
see
to
mark's
earlier
point
is
the
last
time
we
got
this
data
it
created
the
housing
opportunity
fund.
I
would
really
like
to
understand
how
we
can
position
the
housing
opportunity
fund
advisory
board
to
sort
of
I
think
they've
been
at
we've
been
asking
for
this
for
a
while
to
be
more
strategic
and
to
be
less
reactive
in
doing
just-in-time
approvals
for
deals
as
they
emerge.
Is
there
a
way
to
take
this
data
and
then
help
us
to
rethink
more
holistically?
J
You
know
how
do
we
better
inform
you
know
policy
and
positioning
and
are
the
programs
that
we
created
three
years
ago
addressing
where
we
are
given
the
new
data?
That's
that's!
Coming
out,
you
know
I'd
love
to
see
us
think
more
in
five
and
ten
year
blocks.
J
I
know,
there's
only
eight
years
left
on
the
housing
opportunity
fund
draw
down
from
the
real
estate
transfer
tax,
but
I'd
really
like
to
maximize
those
eight
years
and
be
thoughtful
about
how
we
really
reduce
how
we
really
increase
the
the
sustainability
of
naturally
occurring
affordable
housing.
I
think
that
we
also
need
to
be
thinking
about
blight
remediation.
J
As
a
part
of
this,
we
are
losing
critical
assets
that
if
there
were
some
sort
of
intervention,
some
of
these
issues
that
we
see
might
not
be
as
pervasive,
particularly
in
the
neighborhoods
that
we
know
need
the
most
intervention.
So
I
really
want
to
figure
out
how
do
we
use
the
data
to
make
better
decisions
and
to
shape
programming?
That's
really
going
to
have
the
the
impact
that
will
say
that
this
endeavor
of
you
know
investing
120
million
dollars
into
affordable
housing
moves
the
data
needle.
H
That's
clear:
I
think
the
housing
needs
assessment
will
set
up
the
foundation,
for
I
think
we'll
need
to
do
a
little
building
on
it
to
actually
get
into
like
those
five
and
ten
year
blocks.
But
this
should
give
you
hey.
This
is
like
okay,
we're
talking
about
noaa,
we're
talking
about
really
we're
talking
about
buildings
that
are
10
to
40
units
and
we're
built
in
the
50s
and
like
here's,
the
basic
profile.
H
So
if
we
were
going
to
do
a
noaa
play,
you
need
a
program
that
goes
after
these
kinds
of
buildings
and
you
know,
and
probably
won't
be
one
type
of
building,
but
a
couple
different
types
of
buildings
that
do
that.
I
think
that'll
make
it.
Hopefully
you
know,
I
know
the
hof
has
a
it's
a
hard
job,
because
you
have
funding,
but
there's
a
lot
more
need
than
funding.
But
hopefully
we
can
give
you
some.
H
If
there
are
people
you
think
you're
speaking
to
if
there
are
reports
that
reports
or
news
articles
that
you
think
we
should,
we
think
we're
scouring
everything,
but
we're
happy
to
get
the
same
article,
the
same
report
multiple
times
or
there
are
issues
that
come
up
that
you
just
want
us
to
make
sure
keeping
in
mind.
I
certainly
appreciate
getting
it
and,
as
we
have
you
know
as
we
we
broke
this
into
segments.
H
As
I
said
before,
because
we
know
we
got
to
share
those
out
and
we
got
to
get
feedback,
make
sure
we're
getting
the
full
story
and
sometimes
we're
going
to
tell
you
we
don't
have
like.
We
think
that's
a
real
thing,
but
we
don't
have
data
that
lets
us
see
it,
but
we,
you
know,
we
don't
want
to
ignore
those
things
or
pretend
they're.
Not
there.
B
B
B
Okay
yeah,
so
I'm
always
thinking
of
as
our
looking
at
our
affordable
housing
crisis
and
how
many
units
we
need
how
we
can
attack
this
issue
at
scale.
So
we'll
will
your
recommendations.
Our
findings
look
at
ways
to
say
if
we
pair
this
solution,
along
with
other
things
that
we're
doing,
we
can
move
the
needle
in
a
much
more
comprehensive
way.
Do
you
guys
look
at
things
along
that?
You
know,
along
that
nature,.
H
Yes,
so
yes,
but
I
want
to
acknowledge
the
limitations
on
it,
we
we
look
at
both.
We
try
to
look
at
comprehensively,
so
you
know
you
can't
solve
this.
I
pick
on
dc
because
I
live
in
dc,
like
you
can't
solve
this
with
just
subsidy.
We
do
over
100
million
dollars
in
local
money
annually
and
it's
still
we're
still.
Things
are
still
getting
worse,
but
we
don't
do
the
things
we
should
do
on
tenants,
rights
or
land
use,
so
we're
going
to
try
to
talk
about
this
is
where
the
subsidy
piece
fits
in.
H
H
Our
my
experience-
and
I
expect
this
to
be
true
in
pittsburgh-
is
the
scale
of
the
problem
is
an
order
of
magnitude,
if
not
more
larger,
than
the
scale
of
the
solutions
that
are
currently
on
the
table
in
most
places,
and
so
I
don't
mean
that
to
be
depressing,
because
I
think
there's
a
lot
more.
That
can
be
done.
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
increase
in
impact,
but
also
you
know
if
we're
talking
about
a
20,
000
unit
gap
and
we
look
at
what
that's
going
forward
and
it's
growing.
H
I
think
a
lot
of
places
there's
a
question
about
whether
we
can
even
keep
up
with
the
pace
that
things
are
growing
at
much
less
make
positive
progress,
and
so
we
are
going
to
try
to
put
that
truth
out
and
talk
about
it,
not
in
a
way
to
be
depressing,
but
put
that
true.
Well,
if
that's
where
that's
the
truth,
we
find
we're
going
to
try
to
say
it
be
clear
about
it.
H
B
Correct
and
I
was
thinking
solutions
beyond
subsidy,
so
you
know
financial
institutions
etc.
So
I
was
thinking
beyond
you
know
the
public
sources,
so
we.
H
Will
look
at
funding
sources
beyond
public
sources?
I
think
the
where
are
housing
plans
where
I
think
that
the
set
of
solutions
we
won't
look
at
that,
I
do
think
are
really
important.
I
want
to
we'll
acknowledge.
Is
we
won't
look
at
the
income?
H
So
there's
like
affordability
about
the
price
of
housing,
but
there's
also
about
what
households
and
household
income
and
there's
a
lot
of
important
work
on
franklin,
minimum
wage
and
employment
opportunity
and
wealth
creation
that
I
we
don't
ever
want
to
be
dismissive
of,
but
we
the
work,
we're
more
on
the
cost
side
on
the
housing
cost
side
focus
for
this
and
just
acknowledge
it
like
that
is.
H
We
will
look
at
all
kinds
of
different
funding
sources
so
as
well
as
tenants
rights
and
subsidy,
but
we
generally
don't
get
into
into
the
income
side,
but
we'll
acknowledge
its
importance.
H
H
Great
happy
for
everyone
to
have
that,
if
I'm
ever
not
responsive,
it's
because
I've
missed
an
email
and
just
email
me
again,
and
you
know,
if
you
need
to
use
caps,
you
won't
hurt
my
feelings.
I
apologize
when
I
don't
respond
quickly,
but
definitely
want
to
talk
to
everybody
next
slide.
I
don't
think
we're
going
to
need
to
go
through
this,
but
I
want
to
just
state
it.
I
think
it'll
be
something
we
get
into
next.
H
Affordable
housing
just
and
you
all
have
gotten
out
of
this
in
your
questions
is
a
really
broad
term.
That
means
a
bunch
of
different
things
and
we're
going
to
try
to
acknowledge
the
different
issues
within
that,
and
you
all
have
talked
about
that
in
your
questions,
but
I
just
want
to
you
know
we
have
it
in
here.
H
You
know
you're
a
much
more
sophisticated
group
than
some
of
the
groups,
we're
talking
about
housing
issues
and
we
often
use
this
to
make
just
make
sure
that
when
people
say
affordable,
housing,
we're
all
talking
about
specific
public
talent,
public
policy
problems
same
problems,
and
so
these
are
not
all
but
some
of
the
related
problems
that
would
come
up
with
affordable
housing.
H
Well,
I
actually
think
you
guys
have
largely
already
asked
this,
but
I
don't
visually
answer
largely
already
answered
this,
but
there
are
particular
affordability
challenges
that
you
think
pittsburgh
is
facing.
I'd
be
curious.
You
know
to
hear
that
now,
but
I
also
think
I've
heard
like
pretty
clearly
some
of
the
gentrification
displacement
issues
and
some
of
the
long-term
rental
affordability
and
some
of
the
homeownership
points
there
might
be
others.
C
Access
to
opportunity
is
a
huge
issue.
We
don't
see
that
much
in
pittsburgh.
We
see
low
income,
housing,
tax
credits
typically
are
in
low
and
mod
income
neighborhoods.
You
know
we
don't
talk
very
much
about
those
with
family.
You
know
family-sized
product,
you
know
we
will
see
sort
of
one-bedroom
units
that
get
developed
in
in
higher
opportunity
neighborhoods
where,
but
we
don't
see
a
lot
of
multi-bedroom
units
that
get
developed
there.
C
So
I
think
that
that
access
to
opportunity
is
is
an
important
piece
of
affordability,
because
you
know
you
need
to.
You
should
be
able
to
walk
to
get
to
the
grocery
store,
to
be
able
to
get
to
high
quality
schools-
and
that's
not
always
the
case
with
the
types
of
units
that
we
develop
and
where
we
develop
them
in.
H
D
Well,
on
that
same
point
about
access,
I
think
transit
tends
to
be
a
public
transit
tends
to
be
a
bigger
issue
in
illinois,
neighborhoods
and
if
there's
gonna
see
that
called
out.
Okay.
H
H
Walking
in
pittsburgh
is
different,
more
difficult
to
map
than
most
places.
Normally
we
can
do
a
quarter
acre
circle
or
a
half
acre
circle.
I'm
sorry
half
mile
circle,
but
the
the
terrain
in
pittsburgh
makes
that
a
little
more
complicated.
H
To
the
degree
there
is
already
a
good
data
set
on
publicly
owned
land.
I
think
we
can
thread
that
in
our
my
experience
is
that
the
data
sets
on
publicly
owned
land
aren't
very
good,
in
fact,
because
they're
usually
owned
by
a
bunch
of
different
public
entities
and
like
getting
clear
on
where
the
land
is
and
what
land
is
really
surplus
and
lands.
What
land
is
actually
being
used
is
challenging,
but
I
think
we're
happy
to
take
a
look
at
like
what
what
the
data.
H
And
what
we
can,
what
we
can
at
least
what
we
can
start
to
say
about
that,
because
it
certainly
is
important.
J
We've
started
working
on
some
of
this
so
happy
to
share
anything
that
might
be
useful,
but
that
may
be
helpful
yeah
to
kind
of
look
at
what's
owned
publicly.
C
There's
some
decent
data
too.
I
think
that's
mapped
out
with
the
western
pa
data
center.
You
know,
they've
got
in,
it
tends
to
be
ura
owned
or
three
taxing
body-owned
properties
so
and
then
there's
a
little
bit
of
city-owned
stuff,
but
I
think
there's
decent
data
on
that
it'll
get
you
90
of
the
way.
There
question.
G
H
B
Do
you
guys
consider
opportunities
to
partner
with
other
large
land
owners
that
that
are,
you
know
focused
on
these
kinds
of
issues
such
as
religious
institutions
and
or
universities.
H
H
H
H
H
A
My
internet
dropped
out
for
a
minute,
so
I
don't
have
anything
yeah.
I
just
feared
for
a
minute,
so
I'm
back
in.
If
nobody
has
any
other
comments,
I
guess
we
can
move
on
to
the
voting
items
of
the.
G
Agenda
all
right
good
morning.
Everyone
first
item
for
voting
are
three
contracts
for
roofathon.
Roofton
is
underway,
continue
through
the
end
of
june,
we're
replacing
roofs
and
other
critical
repairs
for
25
load
and
moderate
income
households.
G
The
contractors
we're
partnering
with
this
year
are
ones.
We've
worked
with
in
the
past,
through
housing
up
the
homeowner
assistance
program,
concrete
rose
is
a
minority
and
women-owned
company
of
the
homeowners
that
we
are
assisting
with
this
initiative.
48
are
black
40
white
40
of
households
are
also
at
or
below
30
ami
44
of
the
households
are
30
to
50
ami
and
the
rest
are
50
to
80
of
the
25
households.
G
76
76
are
female
head
of
households,
and
so
this
year's
rupathon
is
being
funded
through
a
mix
of
half
2019
and
off
2020..
The
homeowners
were
selected
from
the
current
waiting
list,
who
identified
as
having
a
roof
issue,
so
we're
asking
for
audition
to
enter
into
contracts
with
these
three
contractors.
For.
D
B
Have
a
question
sure
I
have
a
question
so
jeremy,
I
know
in
the
past
I
think
last
year
we
couldn't
do
as
many
roofs
because
we
didn't
you
know,
have
enough
contractors.
Do
you
guys
still
need
more
contractors.
G
So
likely
we
are
watching
stimulus
funding,
and
so,
if
it
does
look
like,
we
will
be
able
to
use
some
stimulus
funding
to
ramp
up
this
program.
We
will
need
contractors
and
we
will
likely
do
an
rfp
as
of
right
now
we're
okay.
But
if
we
do
get
more
funding
we
will
need
more
contractors
and
likely
contractors
that
are
lead.
G
If
derek,
if
we
do
do
an
rfp
for
contractors,
it'll
come
through
the
advisory
board.
C
So,
with
you
know,
three-quarters
of
a
million
or
so
that
we're
putting
out
here
or
800
000,
whatever
that
adds
up
to
how
many
roofs
will
get
done.
G
G
A
A
There
are
no
further
questions,
I
guess,
since
we
already
voted
on
this,
we
could
just
begin
discussing
the
broader
hap
program
agenda
item.
G
Next,
okay,
so
we
also
have
a
few
increases
to
current
hap
contracts.
Hilltop
alliance
is
getting
increased
from
unallocated
funds
out
of
2020.
They
spent
down
or
committed
all
of
their
existing
funding,
and
this
will
allow
them
to
assist
for
additional
projects.
G
Opdc
is
getting
an
increase
of
200
000
out
of
half
of
2019,
because
again
they've
spent
down
or
committed
their
2018
allocation.
Similarly,
this
will
allow
them
to
assist
at
least
five
more
projects.
G
Rebuilding
together.
Pittsburgh
is
an
increase
of
two
hundred
thousand
out
of
half
2021
because
they
spent
down
all
previous
2018
2019
and
2020
contracts.
This
will
allow
them
to
assist
at
least
five
more
projects
and
concrete
rows
and
spambar
are
getting.
Contract
increases
to
continue
assisting
our
hap
plus
homeowners.
Those
are
homeowners,
50
to
80
percent,
ai
they've
spent
down
their
existing
contracts,
and
this
will
allow
them
to
complete
at
least
another
21
projects.
D
I
have
a
question:
are
these
contracts
expected
just
to
address
folks
still
on
the
waiting
list
or
is,
or
is
this
going
to
allow
opening
of
new
applications.
I
G
I
G
I
So
we
need
to
make
a
motion
I'll
make
a
motion
to
increase
the
half
contracts
by
the
following
following
listen:
hilltop
alliance,
50,
000,
oakland
planning
development
corporation
by
200,
000,
rebuilding
together
pittsburgh
by
200
000,
concrete
roads
by
300
000
span
bar
construction
by
350
thousand
ought
to
be
to
be
sourced
by
different
half
years.
I
don't
know
if
that's
a
good,
I
don't
know
if
I
need
to
resave
that,
but
I
was
just
trying
to
make
the
motion
to
move
forward.
It
works.
Okay,
cool.
E
A
Any
opposed
any
abstentions:
okay,
great
next,
we'll
move
on
to
the
housing
stabilization
program
and
again
with
con
contract
increases.
A
Thank
you
so
good
that
we
have
good
demand
and
people
lined
up
to
meet
demand.
I
think,
is
the
bright
side
of
increasing
these
contracts.
G
Absolutely
the
ywca
is
getting
200
000
increase
out
of
hoff
2018
and
a
little
bit
of
pittsburgh
foundation
funding
to
allow
them
to
administer
a
rental,
the
rental
assistance
program
hsp
for
residents
who
are
getting
legal
assistance
so
later
I'll
announce
that
we
are
going
to
launch
the
legal
assistance
programs
out
of
hof
on
monday.
The
ywca
is
the
partner
organization
that
will
issue
rental
assistance
for
people
who
are
concurrently
seeking
legal
assistance
so
that
we
can
streamline
the
process
for
those
residents.
G
I
D
C
A
We
have
increased
these
contracts
next
to
some
advisory
board
administrative
items,
the
first
one
would
be
committee
updates,
but
so
far
we've
only
created
one
committee
that
was
unable
to
meet
in
the
month
of
april
and
there's
a
doodle
out,
which
I
think
everybody
should
have
seen
to
go
ahead
and
schedule
that
special
session.
A
Contracting
guidelines
so
that
we
can
move
towards
this
scoring
system
that
we
had
talked
about
before,
and
so
if
everybody
can
fill
that
out,
we
can
report
out
on
how
that
special
session
went
in
our
june
meeting.
Well
like
it's
may
already,
and
I
don't
know
if
anybody
else
has
any
other
administrative
items
or
things
they
want
to
share
about
committees
or
anything
of
that
nature.
A
Opportunity,
no
okay
back
to
programmatic
expenditures
and.
G
G
I
guess
this
is
awkward
because
jessica
usually
went
through
these
so
kelly.
If
you
would
like
staff
to
we
can
otherwise.
You
know
it's
up
to
you
how
you
want
this
to
go.
Oh.
A
Please,
by
all
means
you
or
someone
from
your
from
your
team,
whoever's
comfortable.
G
Sure
down
payment,
closing
costs
is
continuing
to
try
to
keep
up
with
the
demand
of
home
buyers,
still
seeing
a
very,
very
active
market
right
now,
but
still
averaging
about
10
closings
a
month
here.
G
Next
homeowner
assistance
program
where
we
talked
about
you
know
most
of
the
funding
is
committed,
but
you
know
in
the
last
couple
of
months
we've
really
seen
construction
really
pick
up.
So
you
know
we're
in
a
really
good
place
right
now
with
construction
projects,
almost
all
of
them
being
active
right
now
so
doing
good.
There.
G
Not
much
nothing
really
new
here,
other
than
to
tell
you
that
going
forward.
The
team
is
going
to
work
on
modifying
the
visualization
here
to
be
more
clear
on
kind
of
how
many
units
are
attributed
to
each
of
these
dots.
So
it
doesn't
look
like
one
dot
is
one
project,
but
one
dot
could
be
100
units,
so
staff
are
going
to
work
on
the
visual
visualization
for
the
next
meeting.
K
Hi
good
morning,
everyone,
so
we
wanted
to
start
the
discussion
on
the
hof
2022
annual
allocation
plan,
so
starting
this
month
and
moving
forward
until
december,
we'll
just
be
providing
an
update
on
where
we
are
at
with
the
2022
annual
allocation
plan.
So
next
month
we're
looking
or
actually
later
this
month,
we're
looking
to
issue
an
rfp
on
community
outreach
and
to
hire
firms
to
do
the
community
outreach
to
get
feedback,
starting
in
june
and
july,
we're
looking
to
collect
the
feedback.
K
We
want
to
make
sure
we
have
enough
time
to
allocate
to
get
to
solicit
the
feedback,
to
make
sure
that
we
have
enough
time
to
analyze.
It
well
ahead
of
the
december
city
council
final
approval,
but
this
is
the
timeline
that
we
are
proposing
again.
We
want
to
have
these
discussions
early
and
a
well
ahead
of
time
so
that
we
do
allocate
enough
enough
time
just
because
it
seems
like
we're
always
kind
of
rushing
through
this
process.
G
Want
to
build
on
on
that
vatina
just
a
little
bit,
because
it's
been
such
a
wild
year
for
funding
and
just
want
to
let
the
advisory
board
know
you
know
we
do
have
our
eyes
on
the
american
rescue
plan
and
whatever
might
come
out
of
infrastructure
bill.
But
you
know,
as
that,
could
you
know,
play
an
impact
in
the
the
allocation
funding,
depending
on
what
funding
we
have
for
housing
projects.
A
C
Slides
was
there
maybe.
C
It
but
we,
I
know
it's
not
on
the
agenda,
but
I
thought
I
saw
something
about
appraisal
contracts
in
one
of
the
attachments,
or
is
that
am
I
getting
something
mixed
up
here.
E
C
Maybe
maybe
I
pulled
something
up,
but
I
thought
it
was
something
that.
G
No
you're
right
mark
it
didn't
make
it
on
the
actual
slide
deck
that
that's
on
me.
So
if
I
can
kelly,
add
a
walk-on
item
to
the
agenda.
G
All
right,
so
it
is
relationship
in
relation
to
the
appraisal,
packets
that
the
board
did
receive,
that
is,
to
increase
existing
contracts
with
our
two
appraisers,
who
do
appraisals
for
all
of
the
hap
projects,
they've
just
kind
of
spent
down
their
contracts.
We
just
need
to
increase
it
to
keep
the
appraisals
going.
G
C
I
understand
it's
just
you
know,
that's
a
different
discussion.
I
guess
about
program
design
and
how
we're
doing
this
stuff.
G
So
the
coding
items
is
a
30
000
increase
for
john
dew
dash
and
a
30
000
increase
for
bodner
real
estate
services.
C
A
G
G
A
So
so
I'm
not
even
thinking
necessarily
in
terms
of
on
the
resell,
I'm
just
thinking
if
we
invest,
say
50
000
into
my
house,
and
now
it's
worth
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
more.
That
has
an
effect
on
my
surrounding
market
and
just
thinking
if
we're
checking
that
even
for
just
going
back
with
like
zillow
or
redfin
or
something
that's
not
really,
you
know
to
just
to
kind
of
keep
an
eye
on
what
our
activities
may
or
may
not
be
doing
to
shift
an
individual
market
or
support
it.
A
A
It
was
a
huge
deal
and
then
now
we
know
where
we
are
like
15
years
later,
but
you
know
just
kind
of
think
keeping
an
eye
on
on
that
sort
of
thing
and
wondering
if
that's
something
we
would
be
able
to
track
or
interested
in
tracking.
G
So
if
it's
something
the
advisor
board
wants
us
to
track,
we
can
certainly
look
into
it,
but
we
would
just
need
to
be
very
clear
what
we're
tracking,
because,
if
we're,
if
you
want
to
know
the
appraisal,
comparing
that
to
something
on
zillow
or
even
the
county
real
estate
is
not
going
to
be
comparable,
we
could
do
comparisons
on
assessments,
but
just
knowing
there
is
often
a
big
difference
between
assessment
and
appraisal.
A
Yeah,
so
I'm
not
sure
exactly
how
how
we
would
do
that,
it's
just
something
that
I
would
be
interested
in
us
looking
at.
We
can
figure
that
out
later,
I
was
just
curious
as
to
whether
or
not
that
was
something
we're
currently
reviewing.
A
G
No
problem:
the
voting
item
is
thirty
thousand
dollar
increase
for
john
do
dash
and
a
thirty
thousand
dollar
increase
for
bogner
real
estate.
A
Any
opposed
any
abstentions:
okay,
we've
got
a
motion
to
add
sixty
thousand
dollars
to
those
two
vendors
for
appraisals
for
the
hat
program,
thanks
for
catching
that
mark.
G
G
Touch
on
the
announcements
I
was
trying
to
do
within
my
screen
froze
so
the
legal
assistance
programs
very
excited
to
announce
that
those
will
be
operational.
Monday
may
10th.
The
ura
will
send
out
a
press
release
and
we
will
distribute
flyers
to
the
advisory
board,
so
you
can
help
spread
the
word.
G
We
have
five
great
providers
with
us.
We
have
coordinated
entry
set
up
and
we
have
pretty
good
system
of
tracking
data
and
trends
within
this
program
to
be
able
to
report
back
out
on
how
the
program
is
doing
so.
As
a
reminder,
we
have
five
different
legal
services
available
for
tenants.
We
have
mediation,
limited
legal
consultation
and
full
representation
for
homeowners.
We
have
tango
title
and
foreclosure
prevention
services.
G
So
please
spread
the
word
because
we
have
been
closed,
new
applications
for
the
past
eight
or
nine
months.
We
will
only
be
able
to
accept
and
fund
about
60
applications,
65
applications,
so
we
will
accept
applications
through
june
24th,
but
we
will
not
accept
any
applications
prior
to
may
24th.
G
The
applications
will
be
available
on
our
website.
Starting
may
24th.
G
And
then
we
also
wanted
to
announce
that
we
did
execute
a
contract
with
binom's
marketing
and
communication
as
the
marketing
firm
to
produce
2020
annual
report
and
can
already
tell
you
that
by
just
the
first
design
concepts
they
are
looking.
Quite
wonderful,
so
pretty
excited
to
see
how
this
is
going
to
turn
out
and
then,
of
course,
the
next
advisory
board
will
be
thursday
june
3rd.
G
G
G
I
just
want
to
again
show
housing
resources,
e-wrap
is
still
accepting
applications
and
then,
of
course,
now
we
can
show
that
another
housing
resource
the
legal
assistance
programs
will
be
available
and
again
we'll
send
the
flyer
out
to
the
advisory
board,
which
will
have
all
of
the
contact
information.
How
someone
can
get
a
referral.
G
And
lastly,
we
would
very
much
be
remiss
if
we
didn't
take
this
opportunity,
even
though
jessica's
not
on
to
really
help
celebrate
and
congratulate
jessica
on
20
amazing
years
of
public
service
to
the
ura.
G
A
Yeah
snow
will
certainly
miss
jessica
and
her
contributions.
She
was,
you
know,
wonderful
to
work
with
in
a
lot
of
different
capacities,
and
you
know
at
phfa,
I'm
sure
she'll
be
continuing
the
good
fight
and
we
wish
her
certainly
wish
her
well
in
harrisburg,
and
if
there
are
no
further
comments
or
questions,
we
can
entertain
a
motion
to
adjourn.
F
A
Right,
I
don't
think
we
need
to
a
and
a
on
this.
So
thanks,
everybody
and
we'll
see
you
in
a
little
under
a
month.