An aging mobile home sits across the street from a new house.
A few years ago, Habitat for Humanity of Greater Charlottesville purchased the Sunrise Mobile Home Court in Woolen Mills and turned it into a community of site-built stick houses, a portion of which are considered affordable. The Carlton Mobile Home Park is right next door. Credit: Credit: Mike Kropf / Charlottesville Tomorrow

What are the most pressing housing needs in the area?

That’s what the Thomas Jefferson HOME Consortium is asking in an online survey open to anyone working or living in the City of Charlottesville, or in Albemarle, Fluvanna, Greene, Louisa, and Nelson counties.

The purpose of the survey is to help those communities determine how to spend federal tax money that’s been earmarked for housing, over the next five years. It includes questions about which services folks feel are lacking, and the types of challenges people have experienced in finding housing.

The city receives about $415,000 in Community Development Block Grant funding each year. It can be used for a variety of projects, including economic development, blight eradication, public services, home improvements, home visitability for people with disabilities, infrastructure improvements, anti-poverty programs, said Alex Ikefuna, director of community solutions in the city’s department of neighborhood development services.

Logo reads "Short & Important"

Additionally, the region receives roughly $750,000 annually from the Office of Housing and Urban Development’s HOME Investment Partnerships Program. That funding is set aside for housing specifically, and is distributed evenly among all of the aforementioned localities, said Laurie Jean Talun with the Thomas Jefferson Planning District Commission.

HOME funding can be used for rental assistance and home repairs for low-income homeowners. It can also go toward developing both rental housing, or homes to be sold at an affordable price, for low-income households.

“While it’s a large sum, creating affordable housing is a high-cost endeavor,” said Talun, and in that sense, the funding is limited. “We don’t want people to think this funding will completely solve the national housing crisis.”

The consortium hopes the survey will help them understand what each community most needs, but it won’t be their only source of information. They’ve sought expertise from more than 30 individuals and organizations heavily involved in housing and providing services to people who are elderly, disabled, and/or experiencing homelessness. Data matters, too, so they’re using data about the housing market, Census Bureau statistics, and economic outlook reports for the region, said Talun.

(You can find data about Charlottesville neighborhoods in the Changing Charlottesville series as well.)

Take the survey online now through Sunday, Feb. 19. It’s available in English, Spanish, and Swahili, with a Farsi language and print versions available upon request.

Anyone with questions or in need of assistance can contact Alex Ikefuna, ikefuna [AT] charlottesville [DOT] gov, or Laurie Jean Talun, ljtalun [AT] tjpdc [DOT] org.

While we can’t cover every story that’s important to you, we do our best to be responsive to your needs. We use tips from readers to choose which stories to cover, to incorporate information into broader reports or to help us decide how to grow Charlottesville Tomorrow. Here’s where you can tell us what you think we should be covering.

More about affordable housing


More local News

image_printPrint

Erin O'Hare

I'm Charlottesville Tomorrow's neighborhoods reporter. I’ve never met a stranger and love to listen, so, get in touch with me here. If you’re not already subscribed to our free newsletter, you can do that here, and we’ll let you know when there’s a fresh story for you to read. I’m looking forward to getting to know more of you.