We will continue to develop
programs to encourage homeownership, emphasizing affordable
apartments over single-family homes
Most people consider homeownership one of the foundations
of the American dream. In New York City, the homeownership
rate is the highest it has been since we began collecting
information on homeownership in 1965: currently 33%
of New Yorkers own their own homes. While this is an
all-time high for the city, we will continue to encourage
homeownership so that more New Yorkers can build equity
and savings instead of spending money on rent that they
will never recoup.
For those who do leap into the home-ownership market,
their choices have been constrained by the available
supply. Smaller houses, including two-family and three-family
homes, have traditionally provided the first opportunity
for renters to become homeowners across New York City.
But in a strong real estate market, opportunities for
the development of larger, affordable co-operative and
condominium buildings have increased-and in some cases
been introduced for the first time-into neighborhoods
across the city. From Harlem to the South Bronx, new
opportunities for the empowerment of homeownership are
emerging, without fostering a suburbanized pattern of
growth.
In the coming decades, we will continue to build on
a range of financing programs and partnerships that
encourage homeownership. Today, low-income New York
City residents living in overcrowded or substandard
housing conditions in Harlem, Queens or Brooklyn can
qualify for financing through HPD programs, such as
Habitat for Humanity, towards the purchase of a home.
For New Yorkers who don't have enough money saved for
their down payment and closing costs, HPD's HomeFirst
Down Payment Assistance program provides qualified home
buyers with up to 6% of the home's purchase price.
In addition, we are continuing to partner with the
Nehemiah program, a collaboration between HPD and a
consortium of community-based churches in Brooklyn that
over the past 15 years has constructed nearly 3,000
single-family homes in East New York and Brownsville.
Under the Neighborhood Homes Program, HPD conveys occupied
one- to four-family buildings to community-based not-for-profit
organizations for rehabilitation and eventual sale to
owner-occupants.
Progress (as of 4/22/08):
On December 5, Mayor Bloomberg and City Council Speaker
Quinn announced the formation of a new non-profit, the
Center for NYC Neighborhoods, to mitigate the effects
of concentrated foreclosures. An effort of HPD, the
City Council, private philanthropy, banks and lenders,
and the nonprofit community, the Center expects to provide
assistance to approximately 18,000 New Yorkers in its
first year. To do so, the Center will fund a major expansion
and coordination of counseling and referral services,
legal assistance, loan remediation, preventive outreach
and education, training, research and advocacy around
sub-prime lending and mortgage foreclosures. The Center
is the first of its kind in the nation and will establish
national best practices for addressing the crisis. In
addition, the Administration will continue to create
and preserve home ownership units on City-owned land
and through partnerships as a part of the Mayor's New
Housing Marketplace plan as it did on September 7, when
HPD and NYCHA released an RFP for the development of
sites in the Bronx to provide affordable rental and
home ownership housing. |