Laserfiche WebLink
Housing & Economic Development <br /> partner with cities to facilitate the creation of affordable housing through direct financial <br /> assistance and/or advocating for additional resources through the Minnesota Housing <br /> Finance Agency. <br /> Metro Cities supports the location of affordable housing in residential and mixed- <br /> use neighborhoods throughout a city. Metro Cities supports a city's authority to <br /> enact its own inclusionary housing policy. However, Metro Cities does not support <br /> passage of a mandatory inclusionary housing state law imposed on local <br /> governments that would require a certain percentage of units in all new housing <br /> developments to be affordable to households at a particular income level. <br /> 3-D Metropolitan Council Role in Housing <br /> The Metropolitan Council is statutorily required to assist cities with meeting the <br /> provisions of the Land Use Planning Act, which requires cities to adopt sufficient <br /> standards, plans and programs to meet their local share of the region's overall projected <br /> need for low and moderate income housing. The Council's responsibilities include the <br /> preparation and adoption of guidelines and procedures to assist local government units <br /> with accomplishing the requirements of the Land Use Planning Act. <br /> The Metropolitan Council also offers a variety of programs and initiatives to create <br /> affordable housing opportunities, including the Livable Communities Program, and <br /> operation of a metropolitan housing and redevelopment authority. <br /> Unlike parks, transit and wastewater, housing is not a statutory regional system. Thus, the <br /> Met Council's role, responsibilities and authority are more limited in scope, centered on <br /> providing assistance to local governments by identifying the allocation of need for <br /> affordable housing, projecting growth for the region and identifying available and <br /> effective tools, resources, technical assistance and methods that cities can use to create <br /> and promote affordable housing opportunities in their communities. <br /> The Metropolitan Council should work in partnership with local governments to ensure <br /> that the range of housing needs for people at various life-cycle and incomes can be met. <br /> • Metro Cities opposes the elevation of housing to "Regional System" status. <br /> • Metro Cities supports removing the Metropolitan Council's review and <br /> comment authority connected to housing revenue bonds under M.S. 462C.04. <br /> In 2014, the Metropolitan Council released a housing policy plan, the first of its kind in <br /> nearly 30 years. The housing policy plan should include clearly defined local, regional <br /> and state roles around the provision of housing in all sectors, identify the availability of <br /> and need for tools and resources for affordable and lifecycle housing, be explicit in <br /> supporting partnerships around the advocacy for state and federal resources for housing, <br /> and encompass policies, best practices and technical guidance for all types of housing. <br /> The plan should also recognize the diversity in local needs, characteristics, and resources. <br /> 2017 Legislative Policies 22 <br />