#146 Summer 2006

All Out for Affordability

Irvine, a city of 180,000 in conservative Orange County, California, plans to make 10 percent of its housing stock permanently affordable. The city set a goal of putting nearly 10,000 […]

Irvine, a city of 180,000 in conservative Orange County, California, plans to make 10 percent of its housing stock permanently affordable. The city set a goal of putting nearly 10,000 units in a community land trust by 2025. Currently Irvine has 4,400 affordable units from inclusionary zoning and HUD-assisted projects; the city hopes to include these units in the land trust. Housing in the land trust would be affordable to people earning less than 120 percent of the median household income, which was over $72,000 in 2000. Funding for the land trust will come in part from the redevelopment of a former military base as a public park.

OTHER ARTICLES IN THIS ISSUE

  • The Politics of Poverty

    July 23, 2006

    Can John Edwards make fighting poverty a winning platform?

  • Planning Beyond the Project

    July 23, 2006

    Neighborhood planning allows CDCs to move beyond housing development and become community catalysts.

  • A Little Too Blunt?

    July 23, 2006

    Alphonso Jackson, HUD’s tough-talking chief, might have spoken a little too bluntly in Dallas in April. Speaking before a gathering of business leaders, Jackson said that he had denied a […]