Committee advances affordable-housing funding update and approves $4.13M land-acquisition loan for 5 Points

City of Charlotte Committee Meetings (multiple committees) · February 5, 2026

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Staff updated council on the affordable housing funding policy and the housing-trust-fund bond; committee approved staff's $4,130,000 short-term land-acquisition loan recommendation to support a mixed-income project at 5 Points, passing the motion 4—1.

Rebecca Heffner, director of Housing and Neighborhood Services, briefed the committee on the city's affordable-housing funding policy and the status of the $100 million 2024 housing bond. She said the city typically receives about $13,000,000 annually in federal housing allocations across CDBG, HOME, Emergency Solutions, and HOPWA programs and described the Housing Trust Fund (HTF) schedule and remaining bond balance of about $46.6 million.

Heffner framed the policy's three overarching goals—residential stability, neighborhood affordability and economic mobility—and five investment priorities used to guide RFPs and staff recommendations. Staff noted a rolling RFP schedule timed to state tax-credit cycles, recommendations to council in April and April 27 consideration for HTF awards.

Economic development staff then presented a land-acquisition recommendation for 5 Points to secure site control early in a two-stage TOD land-acquisition program (short-term loan, then a later full development funding request). Staff described the proposed funding mix: a $4.14M takedown where the city would fill a residual after fee-in-lieu funds (fee-in-lieu balance ~$1.74M) and an HTF site-acquisition balance; the acquisition would leave a remaining HTF site-acquisition balance of about $2.6M after the transaction.

Council considered the recommendation and a motion to invest $4,130,000 in the developer's acquisition of the Gold Line site was made, seconded and approved by voice vote (recorded as four in favor, one opposed). Staff said the land-acquisition loan would be short-term (3—25 years, up to 90% LTV) and that the full affordable-housing proposal would return to council for review in the second stage with specific unit counts and AMI breakdowns.

The committee's action advances an acquisition-stage investment designed to protect future affordability in a transit-priority area; the second-stage development application will include the HTF requirements (including the 20% of units at 30% AMI requirement for HTF projects).