Affordable Housing Trust Fund Coalition

The Affordable Housing Trust Fund (AHTF) Coalition convenes stakeholders from a variety of sectors—including education, development, health, housing, and human services—that actively support increased funding and a greater role for the AHTF in the City of St. Louis and St. Louis County.

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St. Louis Housing Report Card

The St. Louis Affordable Housing Report Card was created as an accessible, easy-to-use tool for community organizations, housing advocates, regional decision-makers, and residents in St. Louis City and County who want to see growth in and more equitable use of affordable housing resources. The Report Card was created to start conversations, give community leaders the tools they need to make their own recommendations, and provide policymakers and elected officials with data they can use to better understand housing needs and track progress.

Systemic racism and white supremacy have starved communities of color for resources and investment. In St. Louis, 75% of low-income Black households are cost-burdened (paying more than 30% of their income on housing), compared with 62% of low-income white households.

Although we know that the affordable housing resources currently available are insufficient, in recent years our region has lacked an accurate understanding of the full scope of that need.

The St. Louis Affordable Housing Report Card changes that. It’s modeled after the successful New Orleans Housing Report Card, and it both evaluates the current affordable housing need in St. Louis and allows advocates to reassess whether the region is actually making progress toward meeting our affordable housing needs.

Many thanks to the Deaconess Foundation for supporting this collaborative effort.

Upcoming Events:


The Affordable Housing Trust Fund (AHTF), administered by St. Louis City’s Affordable Housing Commission (AHC), awards loans and grants to develop affordable housing projects and provide housing-related services, including accessibility modifications, home repair, and support for the homeless.

Examples of Programs Supported by Affordable Housing Trust Funds in St. Louis:

How does the AHTF work?

  • The AHTF is funded by the City’s Local Use Tax.

  • City ordinance requires that AHTF funds go to support St. Louis’ most vulnerable residents.

    • All AHTF funds awarded must benefit families and individuals with incomes at or below 80 percent of the Area Median Income (AMI).

    • Forty (40) percent of funds awarded must benefit those earning 20 percent or less than the AMI.

 

increased funding for the affordable housing trust fund: Something to write home about

In 2019, residents wrote over 120 postcards to elected officials in support of increased funding for affordable housing. Thanks in part to this effort, the City of St. Louis’ 2020 budget included a $1 million increase to the AHTF.

Here are a few reasons why St. Louisans wrote to elected officials who serve the areas they call home:

  • A chance to lead and follow: Setting an example by increasing funding for the Affordable Housing Trust Fund will lead to strong, stable neighborhoods for all. The City has an opportunity to lead both the region and the nation in equitable housing.

  • Housing as a human right: Everyone deserves a home. Affordable housing will improve the health and wealth of a region.

  • Ensuring equity: Affordable housing is a way to change patterns of racial and economic injustices such as disinvestment that have been present and continue to pervade our region.

    Thank you to all who wrote postcards to their elected officials!

 

What about St. Louis County?

 

Why is the AHTF important?

  • It catalyzes investment that might not flow otherwise.

    • Every $1 the AHTF spends on home construction and major rehab is matched by $17 in public and private funds. Expanding the AHTF means a competitive St. Louis that’s more attractive for outside investment.

    • Most AHTF loans to developers and homebuyers are repayable, which allows these resources to be reinvested in our community over time.

  • It builds strong communities.

    • AHTF dollars replace underutilized, unsafe, and substandard buildings with safe, attractive, accessible, energy efficient, and affordable homes.

    • The AHTF combats vacancy by rehabilitating properties and putting them to productive use for people who need housing.

  • It works to solve homelessness.

    • Affordable housing is getting harder to access for a growing number of people. A resident earning minimum wage in the City of St. Louis would have to spend 67 percent of their income for a two-bedroom apartment at fair market rent—more than twice what the federal government defines as affordable. As an example, the AHTF awarded funds to the East Fox Homes project led by Rise and Messiah Lutheran Church in 2016. The project is restoring 47 affordable and energy-efficient rental homes in the historic Fox Park and Tower Grove East neighborhoods. Messiah Lutheran Church provides social services for Bhutanese refugees that live in these homes.

    • The services and projects the AHTF funds helps put housing in reach for our most vulnerable neighbors.

  • It’s a local solution to federal disinvestment.

How does the AHTF improve St. Louis?

  • Between 2003-2017, the AHTF has funded 1,583 rental units and 184 homes for sale.

  • The AHTF funds services that stabilize communities, including rent, utility, and mortgage assistance and elder services that help people age in place.

  • The work the AHTF makes possible has real effects on our community’s health and safety. Research shows that affordable housing projects increase property values in low-income areas and reduce crime rates.

  • The AHTF eradicates lead from homes, and all homes funded by the AHTF are lead safe. Lead exposure has been linked to crime, antisocial behavior in children, and reduced academic performance.

  • The AHTF provides funding for home repair to build wealth in areas with low access to capital.

Where are AHTF dollars invested?

The maps below illustrate the scope of the AHTF’s impact in the City of St. Louis through the rental and for-sale projects that AHC has funded since 2003. The first three maps examine data by neighborhood; the fourth breaks data down at the ward level.

This data was shared with us by the AHC team, and we’re grateful to Senior Housing Analyst Loretta Hiner for her help and guidance as we worked to explore it.

 

Some More Ways We’ve worked to Raise Awareness…

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CBN and the AHTF Coalition led a breakout session on the Affordable Housing Trust Fund and why it matters at the Equal Housing Opportunity Council’s Fair Housing Conference

Housing trust fund experts Michael Anderson and Chris Genese of the Center for Community Change visited St. Louis. Michael and Chris led a workshop co-hosted by the AHTF Coalition, engaged in conversations with St. Louis County leaders about the possibility of establishing an AHTF in the County, and stopped by Northside Community Housing for a site visit.

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The Coalition hosted a workshop to support organizations interested in applying for the current AHTF funding round. Special thanks to panelists Michael Burns of Northside Community Housing, Inc., David Kessel of Employment Connection Saint Louis, and Michael Powers of Habitat for Humanity Saint Louis as well as moderator Jessica Payne of Old North Saint Louis Restoration Group for helping to make the event a success.