August 2015
Houston’s ability to continue to attract young
people, particularly within the creative class, is key to its long-term
economic sustainability. Recent studies on Houston’s demography reveal that
over 80% of the population growth within the Greater Houston region following
the 2009 recession has occurred in the suburbs. Data from the Census Bureau
revealed that while the population of the Houston region grew by approximately
156,000 in 2014, the City of Houston only accounted for 36,000 new residents.
This continued trend of Houston’s diminishing role as the main driver of
population growth for the region raises concerns about the City’s ability to
maintain the growth of its economy and the City’s tax base over the long run.
Houston’s ability to sustain across-the-board growth
is tied to its ability to continue to attract employers and new residents
within the city limits. Employers need to know that their workforce will have
ample affordable housing options, and can live close enough to work, where
traffic and the transportation costs do not become major deterrents,
particularly for the working class. According to a July 2015 Houston Business
Journal report on Houston’s largest private employers, 7 of the top 10 are in
industries where the average worker is paid hourly, and earns somewhere between
minimum wage and $42,000 annually; the top three being HEB, Landry’s Inc, and
Academy Sports + Outdoors.
The Census Bureau, and Bureau of Labor Statistics 2015
data show that, of the approximate 804,000 households within Houston city
limits, 456,000 take home less than $50,000 annually. To make it even more
plain, the median income within the city of Houston is estimated at $45,000,
which means 50% of residents make above that amount, while the other half is
below that number. At a median income of $45,000, the average resident is not
able to afford a mortgage for the median home value of $159,000 ($187,000 was
the median home sales price reported by the Houston Association of Realtors for
June 2015). With the average rental price of a new one bedroom apartment
ranging north of $1,200, working class families are millennials are left with a
tough financial balancing act.
The City of Houston can get ahead of the curve and
maintain its competitive edge by tackling the issue of workforce housing head-on.
City leadership must prioritize development of workforce housing as a critical
component of securing Houston’s economic future and growing the tax base. The
City should take steps to leverage its existing land and financial resources to
encourage development of workforce housing. Chiefly among these would be
selling existing surplus land at a de minimis amount to workforce housing
developers, rather than selling it off to balance its budget as it has done over
the last five years. Next, the City also needs to leverage its federal housing
funds and involve Tax Increment Reinvestment Zones (TIRZ’s) in partnering with
developers to spur development of workforce housing throughout all parts of
Houston. Furthermore, the city should prioritize development of workforce
housing in areas where it’s making significant infrastructural investments and
in areas within proximity of major employment centers.
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