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Third Quarter 1999
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Public and
Private Partnership
Lasting Impact
Building Families and Neighborhoods
Without the efforts of Tierra
del Sol Housing Corp. and local citizens, chances are good
that people in Anthony, N.M., a desert colonia 20 miles north
of El Paso, would live in substandard rental houses scattered
haphazardly along unlit dirt roads. They would probably have
no drainage, running water or sewers.
Now, through Tierra del Sol's leadership
and partnership with the community, sustained efforts spanning
nearly 20 years have translated into a sense of community,
where families own nice houses, know their neighbors and navigate
along paved streets with adequate infrastructure. They have
made their yards bloom by planting flowers, shrubs and trees
and erecting decorative fences. What's more, their mortgages
are affordable.
Since 1980, Tierra del Sol, with help
from banks and other agencies, has helped more than 300 families
build their own three- and four-bedroom homes in Anthony,
N.M., in a program that requires homeowners to perform 65
percent of the construction—their sweat equity. The
nonprofit organization also has built 24 rental houses for
rural farmworkers and many scattered-site homes. In total,
almost half of the 700 to 800 houses in Anthony have come
through Tierra del Sol programs.
Despite the improvements, the community
is still designated a colonia, a term often associated with
an unincorporated rural area with a limited tax base and little
or no infrastructure. Ironically, just across the border is
Anthony, Texas, an incorporated town with enough of a tax
base to provide residents and businesses with complete infrastructure
(see story entitled "The Two Anthonys").
In Anthony, N.M., Tierra del Sol's
"self-help" houses are stark contrasts to the types
of structures normally found in colonias, where most dwellings
are generally constructed piecemeal without electricity, plumbing
and other basic amenities. "Without Tierra del Sol, many
families would not have safe and secure housing," says
Dona Ana County (N.M.) Commissioner Eduardo Medina, whose
district includes Anthony.
Tierra del Sol began its presence in
Anthony, N.M., in the 1970s with a 109-unit subdivision completed
over five years. Since that time, the organization has provided
leadership in the creation of subdivisions ranging from 16
to 91 self-help houses.
In 1984, Tierra del Sol and the community
took the first step toward bringing in utilities by working
with a local legislator and leaders of the Anthony Water and
Sanitation District.
This year, Tierra del Sol will begin
another self-help subdivision with 60 houses in Anthony, N.M.
"The development of Anthony, N.M.,
has been a long effort by many people who have been persistent
and dedicated," says Rose Garcia, Tierra del Sol's executive
director. The organization's efforts have proved so successful
that other housing developers are coming to the community.
Piecing Together the Puzzle
During the past 25 years, Tierra
del Sol has built more than 1,200 affordable houses, not counting
over 600 units of multifamily and senior housing, for low-income
residents in New Mexico and Texas.
The Tierra Linda subdivision in Anthony,
N.M., is a prime example of how groups and the community can
unite to solve housing and infrastructure problems. Between
1992 and 1995, Tierra del Sol, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
Rural Development and the Housing Assistance Council (HAC)
offered financing and technical assistance to enable 85 of
the subdivision's families to build their own homes, which
they bought for an average of $40,000.
The subdivision's families, a third
of whom are farmworkers, earn between $9,000 and $12,000 a
year, which is at or below 50 percent of the area's median
income. Despite their low incomes, they still can own homes
because self-help reduces labor costs and thus makes mortgages
affordable. Rural Development provided $1.6 million in permanent
mortgages for 40 homes, most for 33 years with interest rates
ranging from 1 percent to 7.75 percent. As household income
increases, the subsidy is reduced, says Linda Ledesma, a manager
with Rural Development in Las Cruces, N.M.
For all the benefits, developments like
Tierra Linda require a partnership among many organizations.
For example, HAC, a national nonprofit intermediary that has
helped build affordable housing in rural America since 1971,
provides Tierra del Sol with critical predevelopment funding
and loans. "HAC has a long-standing relationship with
Tierra del Sol because we recognize the group's ability to
get quality houses built," says John Frisk, who directs
the HAC loan division.
In 1991, Las Cruces' First Federal Bank,
through the Federal Home Loan Bank's Affordable Housing Program,
provided $90,000 to Tierra Linda families to help with their
utility connection costs.
Giving Hammers to Homeowners
Tierra del Sol seeks to empower
low-income people through self-help strategies like sweat
equity construction. Through the self-help program, Tierra
del Sol organizes families into work groups to help build
their homes. Ledesma says that sweat equity translates into
more affordable loan payments, which allow people like Isabel
and Socorro Bueno to buy their own home in Anthony, N.M.
For six straight months, the Buenos
harvested chili peppers, onions and pecans in the fields all
day and then logged another 30-plus hours a week, including
Saturdays and Sundays, to build their home. This year, the
Buenos will celebrate the 15th anniversary of owning the four-bedroom
house they built through Tierra del Sol.
"We had pit latrines [at our farm
rental house], but now we have indoor bathrooms in our own
home," says Isabel Bueno, who lived and worked on a farm
for 35 years until injuring his knee. "We had to haul
our water from a pump outside the house. We are very fortunate
to be living in our own house."
The Buenos say they recognize a stable
home environment improved the opportunities for their children,
five of whom attended college and now work in professional
jobs. "We wouldn't be able to afford to rent a place
as nice as this house," Isabel Bueno says. "And
we know all of our neighbors because we worked side by side
with them when we built our house."
Fast Facts
The Tierra Linda subdivision
in Anthony, N.M., about 20 miles north of El Paso,
consists of 85 units of affordable housing built
with self-help construction methods. Homeowners
are required to perform at least 65 percent of
the work. The average sale price for each house
is $40,000. The project started in 1992 and concluded
in 1995. The nonprofit Tierra del Sol Housing
Corp. served as the developer, supervised construction
and provided homeowner education.
Site development loan from
Housing Assistance Council (for one year at 6.5
percent interest with option to renew)—$540,000
Section 502 permanent loan
from U.S. Department of Agriculture's Rural Development
for 40 single-family units (33-year mortgages
ranging from 1 percent to 7.75 percent interest,
based on income)—$1.6 million
Las Cruces' First Federal
Bank, through the Federal Home Loan Bank's Affordable
Housing Program, provided funds to assist homeowners
in utility connections costs.
For more information:
Tierra del Sol Housing
Corp.
(505) 541-0477
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The Two Anthonys
Living Side by Side
Anthony, N.M., isn't the only community
benefiting from the sustained work of the Tierra del Sol Housing
Corp. So is Anthony, Texas, located just across the border
about 20 miles north of El Paso.
Residents in Anthony, N.M., are getting
affordable housing, and Anthony, Texas, is getting a workforce
made stable by that housing. In an area where the demand for
a steady labor supply is exploding, businesses in Anthony,
Texas, with its limited number of affordable houses, are enjoying
an influx of workers from Anthony, N.M.
According to local officials, roughly
25 percent of the residents of Anthony, N.M., work across
the border in El Paso or the other Anthony's cannery, manufacturing
facilities, state prison, water park and other businesses.
Officials in Anthony, Texas, say they will continue aggressively
recruiting businesses.
And therein lies the paradoxical but
symbiotic relationship between the two Anthonys, where the
border between the two states represents more than just a
line on a map. The majority of the area's people live in Anthony,
N.M. (pop. 7,000 and growing), because property taxes are
about a third of those in the Texas Anthony (pop. 3,300),
according to county officials.
The residents of Anthony, N.M., want
the area to stay unincorporated because of the lower property
tax rates. But being unincorporated also means the community
can provide nowhere near as much as the Anthony in Texas.
Despite the numerous improvements in housing and infrastructure
spearheaded by Tierra del Sol, Anthony, N.M., is still designated
a colonia.
While most roads are paved, many have
little or no lighting. Protection is provided by a volunteer
fire department and an already-stretched county sheriff's
department. School classrooms are bursting at the seams. In
fact, County Commissioner Eduardo Medina, whose district covers
Anthony, N.M., says providing safe, sanitary housing in the
area is a constant struggle, one that he doesn't see ending
anytime soon.
Meanwhile, the town of Anthony, Texas,
is incorporated and has enough of a tax base to provide residents
and businesses with water, sewer, paved and lighted streets
with curbs, and full-time police and firefighters—amenities
people living in a town expect.
The town's housing plan includes restrictions
governing the minimum square footage on new housing and designated
areas for manufactured housing. By contrast, Anthony, N.M.,
which relies on the county for services, became a rural zoning
district as recently as 1997. In addition to gaining more
local control over zoning, residents hope the zoning efforts
will attract business development similar to that forming
the economic base Anthony, Texas, has enjoyed.
But Rose Garcia, executive director
of Tierra del Sol, says tremendous housing demands exist on
both sides of the border. In the El Paso area alone, at least
30,000 additional units of affordable housing are needed.
Garcia says her organization strives to balance the distribution
of scarce housing resources with serving local jurisdictions.
The organization's target market for the homes in Anthony,
N.M., is the people who work on the farms in that area, although
Tierra del Sol does not turn away people who, for example,
live in Anthony, N.M., but work in the other Anthony or even
El Paso.
To help alleviate the housing crunch
on the Texas side, Tierra del Sol will soon start a new self-help
housing development in the Westway colonia (pop. 300), three
miles east of Anthony, Texas. Westway got water only two years
ago, and Tierra del Sol is helping colonia leaders design
a sewer system. Once the Westway development is completed,
Anthony, Texas, will benefit from another source of stable
workers.
Despite the differences between the
two Anthonys, Art Franco, four-term mayor of Anthony, Texas,
says he takes a team approach when he promotes both communities,
which are linked in the minds of many local residents. "We
work together on various events and projects," Franco
says. "We really don't see the boundaries between the
two towns."
Green Equity Housing
Building for a Future
Financial institutions in Austin are
banking on a program that provides low-income families with
affordable houses, helps at-risk students get diplomas and
protects the planet's natural resources.
Give the 64 members of Austin's American
Institute for Learning (AIL) enough steel, straw waste and
plastic soda bottles and they will build some of the city's
sturdiest, most energy-efficient houses. Through an innovative
program, called YouthBuild, that takes a holistic approach
to making at-risk people self-sufficient, the members will
build at least 20 of these environmentally friendly houses
this year. Since 1996, 56 units have been completed under
this program, using environmentally sound materials and building
techniques.
"This is an excellent opportunity
to provide financial and technical assistance to a program
that is definitely benefiting families and at-risk youth in
our market," says Linda Walker, vice president of Guaranty
Federal Bank, one of several financial institutions providing
mortgage loans for the homes.
Preparing Young People for Life
The agency is dedicated to giving high
school dropouts and other underserved youth aged 17 to 25
educational and job training opportunities. AIL provides its
members an opportunity to earn high school diplomas or GEDs
while preparing for employment, advanced training or higher
education. For a minimal living stipend, health insurance
and other benefits, the members/builders attend general studies,
construction and leadership classes and perform community
service. Upon graduation from the 12-month program, each member
receives a $4,700 college scholarship from AmeriCorps.p
The houses, which take four to six months
to complete, sell for about $64,000 to families with incomes
at or below 50 percent of Austin's median income. Guaranty
Federal originates mortgage loans to qualified borrowers and,
through the Federal Home Loan Bank's Affordable Housing Program,
provides $3,200 toward the down payment and closing costs,
as well as $1,600 to defray a portion of the slightly higher
costs of green construction. Customers at other mortgage companies
can get down payment assistance from the Texas Department
of Housing and Community Affairs (TDHCA) and the city of Austin.
Going "Green"
Not only do families get affordable
homes, they also pay less for utilities because of the environmental
"green" materials and building techniques. Utility
bills for the program's pilot three-bedroom house were as
much as 40 percent lower than for neighboring houses built
at the same time.
During construction, members use 19
recycled or engineered products rather than traditional materials.
For example, steel studs—not wooden ones—produced
from recycled materials are used in interior and exterior
walls. The members also use a new product, made from straw
waste, for non-load-bearing interior walls. The building material
was developed through a cooperative effort with ranchers in
the Texas Panhandle, who sell straw waste from their wheat
fields as a cash crop. The straw is compressed between drywall
paper as an alternative to traditional stick-framed walls.
The installation process reduces labor costs by combining
the framing and drywalling steps.
Also, instead of composition or wood
shingles, the houses have recycled metal roofs—more
expensive to install but lasting a lifetime. What's more,
plastic soda bottles that would have packed landfills are
collected weekly in Austin's recycling program, shredded and
reprocessed into tough carpeting for the houses.
In addition to the Federal Home Loan
Bank, funding for the YouthBuild program comes from foundations
and corporations, AmeriCorps, TDHCA, the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development and the city of Austin.
AIL provides leadership and administers
funding from TDHCA for building programs similar to YouthBuild
in Brownsville, Levelland, Oltan, New Waverly, San Antonio
and Harlingen under the Texas YouthWorks program. Program
leaders say their comprehensive approach brings the goals
of affordable housing, education for at-risk people and environmentally
sensitive construction methods under one roof—a roof
that, like the metal one, can last a lifetime.
For more information, contact the American
Institute for Learning, (512) 472-3395.
Commentary
Improving Rural Housing
A Conversation with Moises Loza, Executive
Director, Housing Assistance Council
The Housing Assistance
Council (HAC), a national nonprofit organization,
has been helping local organizations build affordable
housing in rural America since 1971. Perspectives
asked Moises Loza to discuss rural housing needs
as well as resources HAC provides to rural housing
development partners. |
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Based on HAC's research, what is the state
of rural housing in Texas, New Mexico and Louisiana?
The most serious rural housing problems
in these three states are housing affordability and the special
needs of three significant areas: colonias, Indian Country
and the Lower Mississippi Delta region.
Housing affordability—the gap
between income and housing cost—is a notable and growing
problem in both rural and urban areas throughout the United
States. Rural Texas, New Mexico and Louisiana are no exception.
HAC's analysis of census data has found that more than one-fifth
of rural households in each of these states pay more than
30 percent of their income for housing. Rural homes are also
disproportionately likely to suffer quality problems such
as incomplete plumbing. This is most evident in New Mexico,
where rural areas contain only 28 percent of all housing units
but 85 percent of the homes that lack complete plumbing. In
Louisiana and Texas, rural homes are about twice as likely
as urban units to lack complete plumbing.
Affordability and quality are problems
in the special-needs areas as well, complicated by infrastructure
issues and other factors unique to each area. For example,
research—including studies by HAC and the Dallas Fed—describes
the colonias as lacking basic amenities such as water and
sewage systems, decent housing, paved roads and standard mortgage
financing. These small unincorporated communities along the
U.S.-Mexican border in Texas and New Mexico (as well as Arizona
and California) are occupied by mostly Hispanic residents,
many of whom have very low incomes. By one calculation, the
average annual income for colonia households in Texas is less
than $7,000. Nevertheless, many families in the colonias own
their homes, although their ownership relies on a contract
for deed system, which allows the seller to retain title until
the debt is fully paid and to repossess the property for even
a single missed payment.
Special needs are also evident for Native
Americans, who make up 9 percent of New Mexico's population.
More than half New Mexico's Native American rural residents
have below-poverty incomes, and 34 percent—one of every
three—of their homes lack complete plumbing, according
to HAC's census data analysis. The ownership structure of
reservation land makes standard housing finance difficult,
although for different reasons than in colonias: most Native
American land is held in trust, so it cannot be transferred
to non-Indian ownership. Lenders are understandably reluctant
to provide mortgages for property on which they cannot foreclose.
Like Indian Country, the Lower Mississippi
Delta region is historically disadvantaged. Poverty rates
in the Delta, which includes a large part of Louisiana, have
exceeded the national rate for decades and are almost unbelievably
high for some of the population. Sixty-five percent of African-American
children under 5 years old living in nonmetropolitan parts
of the Delta are poor. Like colonias residents and Native
Americans, rural Delta residents live in inadequate housing
far too often and cannot obtain enough mortgage credit.
What resources can HAC provide to help bank
and nonprofit partnerships develop affordable housing in rural
areas?
In its 29th year in the affordable rural
housing business, HAC has a great deal to offer, including
special initiatives targeted to the colonias, Indian Country
and the Lower Mississippi Delta.
One HAC resource is loans. Since its
creation the organization has been making low-cost, short-term
seed loans to local affordable rural housing developers for
predevelopment costs such as site acquisition and environmental
testing. More products have been added over time, including
letters of credit and compensating deposits to provide security
for local lenders. More recently HAC has begun offering construction
loans, as well as loans to local or regional entities for
relending to individuals. Where a commercial lender and HAC
are using the same property as collateral, HAC may take a
second position to enhance the lender's security.
HAC's technical assistance (TA) may
be less visible, but it is extremely useful. Staff can do
everything from listing potential funding sources in a brief
phone call, to helping a local organization put together funding
applications, to negotiating ways for banks, nonprofits and
other players to work together. The costs of HAC's TA are
covered by the organization's funding sources. Assistance
is not restricted to any specific set of recipients among
the many who strive to meet rural low-income housing needs.
Much of HAC's TA is provided through
its four regional offices, whose staffs are particularly knowledgeable
about their areas' needs and resources.
HAC also provides periodic regional
training sessions and sponsors a national conference every
few years. Several training sessions will be scheduled in
the colonias region during the next two years. The next conference
is being planned for late 2000.
HAC provides additional resources in
the form of research and publications. Other information services
include the HAC News, which is issued every two weeks, free
of charge, and provides news about funding, programs, research
findings and the like. Rural Voices is a quarterly magazine,
also free, with longer articles on rural housing and development
topics. HAC's Rural Resource Center provides an extensive
library of published materials. The organization's web site
helps make all this information more widely available.
What strategies can be used to increase
affordable housing in rural communities?
Successful strategies begin in the communities.
Local residents know their needs and how to meet them. Others,
such as HAC, can help build local capacity to develop housing
and can provide the funding, but success is always driven
by local organizations.
Years ago, fewer nonlocal entities were
involved. Rural housing development relied heavily on a single
funding source: the Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) of
the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), which offered programs
now administered by the USDA's Rural Housing Service (RHS)
and Rural Development. While these programs are still essential,
their funding has been greatly reduced, and, at the same time,
new sources have appeared.
In 1999, therefore, the most important
strategies are partnerships, community involvement and technical
assistance, so that all parties can work together productively.
One constant across all efforts remains the need for housing
subsidy. Affordable housing is possible when assistance or
strategies are present to close the gap between the cost of
decent housing and the ability to pay for it.
Can you provide some examples?
One excellent model is the Tierra Linda
subdivision developed by Tierra del Sol Housing Corp. and
Housing and Economic Rural Opportunity (see cover story).
HAC is proud to have worked with Tierra del Sol since the
mid-1970s. In 1991 a HAC loan matched Affordable Housing Program
funding for acquisition and development of the site for Tierra
Linda's first 45 lots. In 1994 a second HAC loan helped develop
40 more lots for Phase II. While there is sometimes a tendency
to look for "innovative" solutions, Tierra Linda
is an example of a time-tested model in rural areas—self-help
subdivision development—that has succeeded in the colonias,
the Delta and many other rural places. It involves a combination
of actors from all levels: HAC, a national intermediary; the
USDA, which provided administrative funding and low-interest
mortgages; local banks that provided down payment assistance
grants from the Federal Home Loan Bank; local nonprofits that
managed the development process; local contractors; and the
homebuyers themselves, who provided much of the labor in the
construction of their homes.
In other situations, some of the same
partners can be effective in different ways. In the Texas
colonias, for example, replacing existing contracts for deed
with traditional mortgages can increase the security of residents'
ownership while at the same time provide them with funds for
repairs and renovations. One good example of this strategy
is occurring in El Paso County, where the state of Texas has
provided more than $1 million for such loans in colonias with
access to public water. HAC is working with several local
partners to establish a similar program for people living
in colonias without public water systems. Again, a partnership
is involved. The work of managing the loans, counseling the
families, inspecting the renovations and converting the deeds
will be divided among the county's Community Development Department,
AYUDA Inc., the El Paso Collaborative and the Cooperative
Extension Service of Texas A&M University. To reduce costs,
residents will help rehabilitate their own homes.
Joint efforts are important in providing
housing credit in Indian Country as well. For example, lenders
can feel safe about loans on Indian lands by obtaining federal
loan guarantees from programs such as the Department of Housing
and Urban Development's Section 184 program.
RHS/Rural Development loans also can
be made more accessible on reservations and in other special-needs
areas, partly through educational efforts. For example, for
several years HAC has worked in the Northwest with Native
American housing organizations and Rural Development staff,
providing outreach, technical assistance and training so local
packagers can help residents apply for Rural Development loans
and Rural Development staff can understand the needs and underwrite
the loans. The Northwest Areas Foundation supported this project
in its early years, and the USDA funds it now. It provides
a model that can be repeated in other rural places and with
other populations; recently two colonias in Texas have been
added.
A different kind of assistance to local
organizations—technology—is one of several tactics
now being used in the Lower Mississippi Delta. As one of more
than 30 organizations and government entities participating
in a regional strategy called the Delta Compact, HAC has received
funding from the Fannie Mae Foundation and the USDA for a
Delta technology project. This effort involves assessing the
computer needs of 24 local nonprofits, then providing them
with hardware and Internet training.
While of course I am deeply committed
to HAC's work, it is also true that HAC could not accomplish
anything without local housing organizations. In reality,
HAC's role is to provide whatever resources help rural communities
help themselves.
For more information, contact HAC at
(202) 842-8600 or www.ruralhome.org [off-site].
Did You Know...?
Brownsville Nonprofit Receives Award
The Community Development Corporation
of Brownsville (CDCB) has received the Fannie Mae Foundation's
Maxwell Award of Excellence for its Colonia Redevelopment
Program. CDCB created the program to help families replace
their dilapidated homes in the colonias of Cameron and Willacy
counties for as little as $83.33 a month. CDCB designs the
new homes, secures the financing, services the loans and supervises
the contractors. To date, 98 homes are either completed or
under construction.
1998 HMDA, CRA Data Online
The data on 1998 mortgage lending activity
required by the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) and data
on small farm and community development lending required by
the Community Reinvestment Act are available on the Federal
Financial Institutions Examination Council web sites www.ffiec.gov/hmda/ [off-site]
and www.ffiec.gov/cra/ [off-site].
| About Banking
and Community Perspectives
Perspectives
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Community Affairs Office
P.O. Box 655906
Dallas, Texas 75265-5906
Gloria Vasquez Brown
Vice President |
Nancy C. Vickrey
Assistant Vice President and
Community Affairs Officer |
Ariel D. Cisneros
Senior Community Affairs Advisor |
Shelia M. Watson
Community Affairs Advisor |
Bobbie K. Salgado
Houston Branch
Community and Public Affairs Advisor |
Toby Cook
Community Affairs Specialist |
The views expressed are
those of the authors and should not be attributed
to the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas or the Federal
Reserve System. Articles may be reprinted on the
condition that the source is credited and a copy
is provided to the Community Affairs Office. |
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