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    Steve Young 8:26 AM on October 21, 2023 Permalink | Reply  

    From The Fort Worth Report… 

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    More than half of renters in Fort Worth are cost-burdened, new census data shows

    Every month, 52-year-old Zolanda Cravin is faced with the same question: What will she have to cut out this month to ensure she can pay her bills?

    Cravin, who works in Fort Worth ISD’s security and safety department and rents an apartment downtown, makes $24,000 a year and brings home $1,653 each month. 

    That money doesn’t stay in her account for long. Every cent is already budgeted: her rent costs $1,190 each month; her car payment is $478; and electricity costs her an average of $300 each month. Her bills cost more than she’s bringing in — forcing her to make difficult choices. 

    “I’m actually not paying [one bill] to pay something else,” Cravin said. “I’m stressed out.”

    Like Cravin, over half of renters in Fort Worth — nearly 55% — spend more than 30% of their income on rent, according to the latest numbers released by the U.S. Census Bureau. Most financial experts agree people should not spend more than 30% of their income on housing.

    Mary-Margaret Lemons, president of Fort Worth Housing Solutions, blames a housing stock that has not kept pace with the city’s population growth. Combined with wages that have remained stagnant for years, people are forced to live paycheck to paycheck. 

    “We’re behind on both single-family and multifamily production. We have people competing at all different income levels for the same units,” Lemons said. 

    Being cost-burdened means many of these renters are locked in a vicious cycle, unable to move up the ladder and become homeowners. 

    Cravin was making $20,000 before a pay raise in September, but the $4,000 income boost still isn’t enough to make her homeownership dream a reality.

    Not all cost-burdened renters feel equal pressure

    While housing costs are a serious problem, Amy Connolly, assistant director for Fort Worth’s neighborhood services, cautioned that the census numbers are a bit more complicated than they initially appear. 

    When the city looks at populations that are cost-burdened with rent, staff must take students, voucher holders and those who make above a certain income out of the equation — granular populations that aren’t represented in census cost-burden data. 

    “Theoretically, if you have a higher income, even though you’re rent-burdened, you may be rent-burdened because you just have a nicer apartment, right?” she said. “You just decided to live in a particular area of town where your rent is higher, and so you’re willing to make that sacrifice.” 

    Excluding the groups Connolly mentioned, the city of Fort Worth estimated that about 32,000 residents were truly housing cost-burdened in 2021. 

    The Huntley Apartments, 100 Harding St., are located near downtown Fort Worth. The Huntley Apartments are listed as a partner complex by Fort Worth Housing Solutions. The agency has 38 mixed-income properties in high opportunity areas, according to its website. They have 6,797 units within those 38 properties. (Cristian ArguetaSoto | Fort Worth Report)

    Mortgages, interest rates put Fort Worth homeowners on the ropes

    Homeowners are also affected by housing cost burdens, albeit in a different way than renters. About 24% of Fort Worth homeowners spend more than 30% of their income on housing costs like mortgage payments, according to census data. 

    “We used to say all the time that homeownership was cheaper than renting. We can’t say that anymore,” said Donna VanNess, president of Housing Channel, a nonprofit agency that helps people build wealth through homeownership. 

    The average price of a home in Fort Worth in August was about $335,000, according to the Greater Fort Worth Association of Realtors

    High down payments, high interest rates and mortgages are some of the factors making homeownership unattainable.

    Trying to close the housing gap with new construction alone would be too expensive, Connolly said. For example, if the city wanted to build 32,000 new units, the public cost would range between $1.1 billion and $2.9 billion. 

    “We have to make investments that are strategic because there’s just not enough public money to get the private market to do it. And it has to come with a subsidy,” Connolly said. 

    Across Tarrant County, affordable housing is disappearing. Join us Dec. 6 – we’ll explore solutions at our next event.

    Fort Worth’s response

    In response to the growing affordability crisis, the city released its Neighborhood Conservation Plan and Housing Affordability Strategy, which lays out strategies to tackle the lack of affordable housing in the city over the next five years. 

    “This is something that is a big endeavor for Fort Worth,” Lemons said. “We haven’t really gotten to this granular level since I’ve been in the seat.”

    Despite housing advocates applauding the plan, some opponents were able to delay City Council’s vote to adopt it over specific concerns about one of the plan’s recommendations. The City Council ultimately adopted the plan at its Oct. 17 meeting. 

    The city is exploring other ways to address housing affordability beyond just density. Those include creating a land bank, a community land trust, mixed-use developments and finding other ways to help developers with the cost of building affordable housing.

    “The biggest issue that this plan showed was that the biggest need is for capital,” Connolly said. 

    Staff is also looking to increase its Homebuyer Assistance Program from $20,000 to $25,000 per individual, which helps low-income families with down payment and closing costs. 

    Zolanda Cravin looks out of a window at the Amon Carter-Riverside High School. Cravin, like many other Fort Worth renters, is housing-cost burdened. (Cristian ArguetaSoto | Fort Worth Report)

    For residents like Cravin, change needs to come sooner rather than later. After she spoke with the Report about her struggles, Cravin received notice that her electricity is in danger of being turned off for failure to pay. She’s now seeking a second job to help pay her bills.

    “I’m just making do with what I can,” she said. “I’m living off noodles and water and whatever I can get.”

    This article first appeared on Fort Worth Report and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

    Contact me, Steve Young with RE/MAX with questions about investment opportunities, property management for residential & commercial properties, and sales. Over 35 years of real estate sales/leasing in the DFW Metroplex!

     
  • Unknown's avatar

    Steve Young 8:26 AM on October 9, 2023 Permalink | Reply  

    Realtors cautious as Fort Worth home prices fall, inventory increases. 

    By: Bob Francis

    New projects set to bring more homes to market 

    Fort Worth home prices fell again in August, and housing inventory continued climbing upward as the market continued to cool from last year when prices rose and inventory was limited. 

    The median home price in Fort Worth in August was $335,000, down 4.3% from a year earlier. But, with mortgage rates — which hit a multi-decade high in August — now above 7%, monthly mortgage payments have gone up significantly from a year ago.

    In Fort Worth, closed sales have consistently been down year over year throughout 2023. The total of 2,187 closed sales in Tarrant County in August was down almost 10% from 2022. In Fort Worth, that number was down 4%.

    “Until mortgage rates start to come down, buyers are going to continue to be limited in their price range and therefore their options,” said Bart Calahan, 2023 President of the Greater Fort Worth Association of Realtors and an agent at Roots Real Estate Co. 

    According to the latest RE/MAX National Housing Report, Dallas-Fort Worth ranks fifth in the U.S. for the largest decrease in home-sale prices year-over-year. The report showed the median home sale price in Dallas-Fort Worth is $400,000.

    The Fort Worth area is a little lower than the Dallas area in terms of price, Steve Young with RE/MAX Associates of Arlington, said.  

    “We’re down a little bit from Dallas right under $400,000, maybe around $375,000, for the median home sale price,” he said. 

    The high interest rates and limited inventory are keeping some people out of the market, Young said. The market also favors out-of-town buyers who frequently come to buy with lots of cash, Young said. 

    “I’ve had more cash deals in the last four years than I’ve had in my 30 or so years of being in real estate,” he said. 

    Young advises buyers to have as big a down payment as they can afford. 

    “Right now, the market is still in the seller’s favor, so when I work with a buyer I have to tell them to be ready, things may get rough. But it’s gotten a little better, depending on where you’re buying,” he said. 

    Young and Calahan are hopeful that the inventory issues that have limited the supply of  homes for sale may be lessening. 

    “In August, the housing inventory was 2.4 months,” said Young. “That’s not perfect, but it’s better than where we were last year.” 

    Calahan is pleased to see some home-building projects get announced that will increase inventory. 

    “We were a bit worried that the high interest rates might impact home building, but that hasn’t been the case here,” he said. 

    In August, Walton Global, which is developing large swaths of land around Chisholm Trail Parkway announced that Arlington-based homebuilder D.R. Horton purchased 151 acres in southwest Fort Worth for a residential development called Longhorn Estates. D.R. Horton plans to deliver homes on the site in late 2024,

    The land is slated for residential development of 398 single-family homes, the first two phases of an anticipated four phases with nearly 1,000 homes. The property is just west of Crowley and about 20 minutes from downtown Fort Worth. 

    Over the next decade, Walton Global and D.R. Horton plan to deliver about 4,600 single-family homes in the southwest Fort Worth market, as well as another 2,000 to 3,000 multi-family homes. 

    Developments in those areas of southwest Fort Worth were once too far outside the city for most families, Young said. 

    “With the Chisholm Trail Parkway, homeowners there can commute to work in downtown Fort Worth pretty easily,” said Young. “It really helps us because it gives the homebuyer a lot of options.” 

    Meanwhile, Hillwood Communities has started work on a project just west of Justin, near the Alliance area. Called Treeline, the 800-acre project is expected to bring 2,500 single-family homes to the area, which is in Northwest ISD. Homes there are expected to hit the market in 2025. 

    Bob Francis is the business editor for the Fort Worth Report. Contact him at bob.francis@fortworthreport.org

     
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