Support Affordable Housing Creation in Loveland: Join Our Mailing List!
Our city faces skyrocketing housing costs, and we need your help to change that. By joining our mailing list, you will be notified of upcoming housing events, affordable housing projects being considered by the Planning Commission and City Council, and opportunities to voice your support for creation of a diverse housing stock to meet all of Loveland’s affordable housing needs. Without new types of housing (condos, townhomes, apartments, cottages, tiny homes, etc.), costs will continue to rise. Let's make a difference together—affordable housing begins with your participation.
Key talking points to share with your friends and neighbors:
Loveland is facing an affordable housing crisis. We need more rental and for-sale housing to meet the demand, and housing can only be generated through community partnerships and the approval of new projects that generate more housing units: a mix of for-sale market-rate housing, rental units, and qualified deed-restricted housing.
While community growth is challenging, we simply cannot escape our housing crisis without building a more diverse variety of housing types. This necessitates the inclusion of smaller homes in greater density.
People who work in Loveland must be able to afford to live here. Still, for the past several years, teachers, firefighters, police officers, grocery store clerks, and many other workers have been priced out of the local market. Research from 2021 shows that 77% of Loveland’s workforce drives into our community daily, generating higher traffic volumes, reducing revenue for local businesses, and preventing the next generation of families and children to grow and invest in Loveland.
Some neighborhoods must change slightly with allowing more kinds of housing, and some open, vacant, undeveloped land must be developed. We should acknowledge the necessity of change by supporting ambitious new private and non-profit projects to solve the problem.
Key talking points to make at Loveland City Council and Planning Commission meetings. Encourage their approval for housing projects that meet and/or address a combination of the following criteria:
Qualified Housing Partnerships: Developments that include a partnership, clear letter of intent, or plan driven by one of the City’s preferred affordable housing vendors: Loveland Housing Authority or Habitat for Humanity. These entities are informed and driven by our qualified housing needs.
Diversified Housing Stock: Developments that pledge to adopt the new Unified Development Code incentives to generate partnerships toward qualified housing and incorporates three or more housing types into the development, or PUDs that accomplish the same goals. We must support the private sector’s generation of townhomes, duplexes, urban cottages, and condos that will meet the needs of middle-income workers in Loveland.
Missing Middle Housing Creation: Developments whose plans have 20% of total units serving 100% AMI or below. State of Colorado data reveals that virtually any new housing unit helps alleviate the housing crisis. Units that can be purchased by those earning at or below 100% of the Area Median Income (AMI) in the open market are considered naturally-occurring affordable housing. These naturally-occurring affordable units can meet Loveland’s state-driven task to generate 3% more affordable housing a year, as outlined in Proposition 123. Meeting this goal ensures Loveland will draw additional state funding into our community.