Affordable Housing on the Wane in Ouray County
by Kate Kellogg1 day 11 hrs ago | 83 views | 0 | 0 | | RIDGWAY – A new analysis of Ouray County’s housing needs, packed with facts and figures, provides the hard evidence of a growing dearth of affordable housing in Ouray County.
Consultants from Denver and San Miguel County presented their Ouray County Housing Needs Assessment to the public on Wednesday, April 16 at the Ridgway Community Center. In view of trends in wages and home prices, the assessment predicts that by 2015, 30 percent of new employee households in the county will need some form of affordable housing.
Nearly half of the 650 Ouray County households who responded to a survey on housing needs ranked affordable housing as one of the most serious problems facing the county.
The assessment was commissioned by the newly formed county-wide Affordable Housing Authority, an independent entity created to help locate, finance, build, and administer affordable housing in Ouray County. The authority is comprised of representatives from the county, City of Ouray and Town of Ridgway. Funded by a grant from the Colorado Department of Local Affairs, the housing needs assessment is the work of two consulting firms: the San Miguel County-based Affordable Housing Solutions and the Denver office of Economic & Planning Systems, Inc.
“One purpose of the assessment was to find out what residents want and need and to target appropriate housing prices,” said Affordable Housing Solutions’ Dawn Ibis.
The report highlights the growing disparity between income and housing prices. While real wages earned in the county have increased by 2.1 percent annually since 2000 (exceeding the rate of increase for the state), the increase in median value of Ouray County homes has risen 11.6 annually since 2003. The median price of a single-family home in Ouray County in 2006 was $395,000 and in 2007, $431,500. The average sale price for a condo or townhouse was $310,000 in 2007.
In 2006, the county’s area median income was $51,250 for a 2.5-person household. Not surprisingly, 26 percent of all renters and 33 percent of homeowners in the county are what the report calls “cost burdened,” meaning they spend over 30 percent of their incomes on housing. Moreover, 40 percent of all county households meet the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s definition of low income, as they earn 80 percent or less of the county’s median income.
Andy Knudtsen, of Economic & Planning Systems, attempted to “put a human face” on such affordability measures. He cited the report’s example of a household comprised of a teacher earning the average 2006 wage of $25,832 and a retail trade worker earning the 2006 average wage of $20,088. Combining their incomes, an affordable house would be priced at $157,400, far below the average available market unit from 2006.
That hypothetical household is earning about 90 percent of the area median income. Those 40 percent of the county’s population who earn 80 percent of the median could only afford a $140,000 home or a $1,000 per month rental unit.
One group that is apparently finding adequate housing is second home owners. While total housing units in Ouray County increased by an average of 112 per year from 2000-2006, the number of resident households increased by about 42 per year. Thus, 70 new housing units per year were either vacant or occupied by part-time residents.
A survey of employers in the county found that about 33 percent of Ouray workers and 75 percent of employees who work in Ridgway commute from other locations, both within and outside Ouray County. The 21 employers who responded attributed a number of employee losses to housing problems. About 25 percent of the employer respondents offer some form of housing assistance to their employees.
To prevent further shrinkage of the employee pool, essential workers should receive priority ranking as candidates for affordable housing, the study recommends. “Teachers, tellers and cops” broadly describes the cross-section of key service providers who may not be able to find affordable housing in the county, noted Knudtsen.
According to the study, the county’s current housing deficit is 165 units, a figure derived by adding the number of unfilled jobs countywide to half of the county’s in-commuters (assuming some employees commute for reasons other than housing costs). Based on employment projections, that deficit could grow to 881 by 2015.
A review of master-planned development projects highlighted the six affordable units planned for the Silvershield development in Ouray and 10 affordably priced units in Ridgway’s Parkside and Preserve developments. According to the assessment, none of the prices for any of these units will be below $220,000, or affordable for households earning less than 100 percent of the median income.
“All of these projects were initiated by developers,” said Ibis. “To achieve lower costs, such projects must be subsidized with state or federal grants.” She said the new affordable housing authority may eventually identify funding sources that will help fill the gaps.
The housing study recommends that Ridgway create a standard zoning requirement that developers set aside a portion of new units as affordable housing. Accordingly, the town should provide incentives to developers such as permit fee waivers, tap fee deferrals and density increases. It suggests that the city of Ouray could capitalize on its tourism economy by designating a fraction of sales or accommodations tax for affordable housing. Ibis noted that Telluride reserves .5 percent of its sales tax for that purpose. Since developable land in Ouray is limited, the city might provide incentives to include affordable housing in redevelopment sites.
Recognizing that the county and municipalities are protective of environmentally sensitive areas, the assessment recommends targeting areas of lesser growth, such as the Colona area, for affordable housing. The county might also use this approach for lands that immediately abut Ridgway and Ouray.
David Schwartz of Economic Planning & Systems commended the countywide attempts to address the area’s critical housing needs. “It’s great to see this collective community effort,” he said. “The challenge is to develop clear and consistent standards and generate public support for administration of future programs.”
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
County Considers Donation of Historic Mining Claims
County Considers Donation of Historic Mining Claims
Courtesy of the Ouray County Watch
JONATHAN MINE – The Ouray County Board of Commissioners has been asked by the Red Mountain Project group to acquire two mining claims: the seven-acre American Girl near the top of Red Mountain Pass just off U.S. Highway 550 and the 10-acre Jonathan Mine (above) on Gold Hill overlooking Ouray, which according to Ouray Mayor and a RMP group member Bob Risch included a blacksmith shop, boarding house with kitchen, and tram station. (Courtesy photo)
slideshow OURAY – Ouray County could be the recipient of approximately 17 acres of historic mining sites in the near future, including the seven-acre American Girl Mine just south of Ironton and the 10-acre Jonathan Mine north of Ouray.
Ouray Mayor Bob Risch, speaking on behalf of the Red Mountain Project at the March 31 meeting of the Ouray Board of County Commissioners, invited the commissioners to consider taking title to the land so that preservation of these prominent mining sites and the buildings on them may continue.
The commissioners agreed to consider the offer and asked County Attorney Mary Deganhart to explore any legal issues that the county may encounter by accepting ownership. They also asked County Administrator Connie Hunt to schedule a workshop soon with the Red Mountain Task Force and the Ouray County Historical Society. Risch said he is already planning to have a meeting in early May with the historical society, which usually participates in the process of transferring historic mining sites to public ownership.
The donation would add to the120 acres that the county previously acquired from RMP for its mining claim inventory, including the Ironton Townsite, the Larson Brothers claims and the Beaver/Belfast mines, as well as to nearly 200 acres of mining claims already in county ownership.
The American Girl Mine, according to Risch, is a favorite subject for area artists and photographers and is “one of the most prominent historic mining structures along the length of the San Juan Skyway,” he said. The mine was supposed to be deeded to the U.S. Forest Service along with two other claims collectively named White Cloud, but the overlapping juxtaposition of those claims triggered some confusion, and the American Girl was missed during the transfer. The result, said Risch, is that the Trust for Public Land still holds title and is making it available to the county.
Acquisition of the Jonathan Mine, located on Gold Hill overlooking Ouray, is crucial for its future preservation, according to the task force. This site contains a tram terminal, blacksmith shop and boardinghouse. Access to the site is by historic roads and trails, which cross privately owned claims, making access to the mine problematic. Risch said that the county should be able to negotiate road access with neighboring landowners at that location in the future. “Our hope and expectation is that county acceptance of the Jonathan would be a positive step toward the protection of the public interests in this remarkable property,” Risch said.
Risch said that most of the county’s approximately 320 acres of mining holdings might eventually be worthy of protection as a National Historic area. “Under those circumstances the county’s inventory of historic properties might best be sold, exchanged or otherwise conveyed to the federal government. In the meantime, acceptance of the above-listed properties is one more invaluable step the BOCC can take in the continuing role as stewards of irreplaceable resources,” said Risch in a memo to the county commissioners.
The Red Mountain Project was founded in 1998 with a goal to preserve 10,500 acres of historic landscapes and structures within and around the historic Red Mountain Mining District. The Trust for Public Land, a national nonprofit land conservation organization, has acquired and conveyed approximately 7,800 of those acres to the Forest Service. TPL is a key member of the Red Mountain Project Task Force, along with county commissioners from Ouray and San Juan counties, representatives of Fort Lewis College and the U.S. Forest Service.
Courtesy of the Ouray County Watch
JONATHAN MINE – The Ouray County Board of Commissioners has been asked by the Red Mountain Project group to acquire two mining claims: the seven-acre American Girl near the top of Red Mountain Pass just off U.S. Highway 550 and the 10-acre Jonathan Mine (above) on Gold Hill overlooking Ouray, which according to Ouray Mayor and a RMP group member Bob Risch included a blacksmith shop, boarding house with kitchen, and tram station. (Courtesy photo)
slideshow OURAY – Ouray County could be the recipient of approximately 17 acres of historic mining sites in the near future, including the seven-acre American Girl Mine just south of Ironton and the 10-acre Jonathan Mine north of Ouray.
Ouray Mayor Bob Risch, speaking on behalf of the Red Mountain Project at the March 31 meeting of the Ouray Board of County Commissioners, invited the commissioners to consider taking title to the land so that preservation of these prominent mining sites and the buildings on them may continue.
The commissioners agreed to consider the offer and asked County Attorney Mary Deganhart to explore any legal issues that the county may encounter by accepting ownership. They also asked County Administrator Connie Hunt to schedule a workshop soon with the Red Mountain Task Force and the Ouray County Historical Society. Risch said he is already planning to have a meeting in early May with the historical society, which usually participates in the process of transferring historic mining sites to public ownership.
The donation would add to the120 acres that the county previously acquired from RMP for its mining claim inventory, including the Ironton Townsite, the Larson Brothers claims and the Beaver/Belfast mines, as well as to nearly 200 acres of mining claims already in county ownership.
The American Girl Mine, according to Risch, is a favorite subject for area artists and photographers and is “one of the most prominent historic mining structures along the length of the San Juan Skyway,” he said. The mine was supposed to be deeded to the U.S. Forest Service along with two other claims collectively named White Cloud, but the overlapping juxtaposition of those claims triggered some confusion, and the American Girl was missed during the transfer. The result, said Risch, is that the Trust for Public Land still holds title and is making it available to the county.
Acquisition of the Jonathan Mine, located on Gold Hill overlooking Ouray, is crucial for its future preservation, according to the task force. This site contains a tram terminal, blacksmith shop and boardinghouse. Access to the site is by historic roads and trails, which cross privately owned claims, making access to the mine problematic. Risch said that the county should be able to negotiate road access with neighboring landowners at that location in the future. “Our hope and expectation is that county acceptance of the Jonathan would be a positive step toward the protection of the public interests in this remarkable property,” Risch said.
Risch said that most of the county’s approximately 320 acres of mining holdings might eventually be worthy of protection as a National Historic area. “Under those circumstances the county’s inventory of historic properties might best be sold, exchanged or otherwise conveyed to the federal government. In the meantime, acceptance of the above-listed properties is one more invaluable step the BOCC can take in the continuing role as stewards of irreplaceable resources,” said Risch in a memo to the county commissioners.
The Red Mountain Project was founded in 1998 with a goal to preserve 10,500 acres of historic landscapes and structures within and around the historic Red Mountain Mining District. The Trust for Public Land, a national nonprofit land conservation organization, has acquired and conveyed approximately 7,800 of those acres to the Forest Service. TPL is a key member of the Red Mountain Project Task Force, along with county commissioners from Ouray and San Juan counties, representatives of Fort Lewis College and the U.S. Forest Service.
Ouray Ice Park Price Tag: $870,000
by Christopher Pike7
OURAY – An unexpectedly high price of $870,000 is what an appraiser has attached to 40 acres of U.S. Forest Service land situated on the south edge of Ouray. The acreage, however, is choice: It is the site of the world-acclaimed Ouray Ice Park, the purchase of which has been a topic of negotiation between the forest service and Ouray officials for at least 18 months.
“The appraisal is a little higher than the city would like. We just got it back. We all have a real vested interest for this. We want to help the city,” Tammy Randall-Parker, forest service district ranger, told representatives of Ouray, Montrose and San Miguel counties at their quarterly Tri-County meeting on March 18 in Ridgway.
Both Ouray officials and the forest service would like the deal to be consummated, now that the details have been worked out. But is the late-arriving price out of reach?
City officials see the park as an essential component of Ouray’s reviving winter economy. However, with an already tight budget, and the 6th Street renovation about to break ground at a price tag of $478,000 (of which the city will pay approximately $150,000 out of pocket), acquisition of the ice park is likely to become more complicated.
“I thought there was going to be a land swap or buy/re-sell/trade. I thought it was for land, like an inholding,” said Ouray County Commissioner Keith Meinert.
“Yes, but for essential, critical needs,” replied Randall-Parker. “We can do land exchanges or an outright sale.”
Ouray Mayor Bob Risch told The Watchthat the city is still negotiating, but for less land. “There was not enough of an exchange value. We will have to reduce the size of the parcel. The appraiser is looking for the highest and best value to protect the public’s interest, even though we wouldn’t allow any real estate development… [Ouray’s acquisition of the ice park] is something everybody wants. The forest service doesn’t want the permitting challenges [associated with the ice park] either, including liability concerns.”
In other forest service news, some of the 22 existing range allotments for cattle and sheep in Ouray County could be permanently closed. “It’s down to 13 cattle and nine sheep allotments,” said Randall-Parker. Invoking the Range Rescission Act, the forest service and the Colorado Division of Wildlife have visited with all of the livestock permit holders and are instituting measures to reduce the risk of contact between bighorn sheep and domestic cattle and sheep, which can spread pneumonia to local populations of bighorn.
Randall-Parker also announced that the U.S. Forest Service plans to host field trips on Red Mountain National Historic District’s trails and roads to talk with user groups about management of the areas.
This summer Volunteer Outdoor Colorado will create a new campsite in Yankee Boy Basin for climbers approaching Mount Sneffels, and will eliminate others due to resource damage along the streams.
The forest service has also joined forces with Northern Arizona University’s Ecological Restoration Institute in a forest restoration project covering about 80,000 acres on the Uncompahgre Plateau, according to Randall-Parker.
by Christopher Pike7
OURAY – An unexpectedly high price of $870,000 is what an appraiser has attached to 40 acres of U.S. Forest Service land situated on the south edge of Ouray. The acreage, however, is choice: It is the site of the world-acclaimed Ouray Ice Park, the purchase of which has been a topic of negotiation between the forest service and Ouray officials for at least 18 months.
“The appraisal is a little higher than the city would like. We just got it back. We all have a real vested interest for this. We want to help the city,” Tammy Randall-Parker, forest service district ranger, told representatives of Ouray, Montrose and San Miguel counties at their quarterly Tri-County meeting on March 18 in Ridgway.
Both Ouray officials and the forest service would like the deal to be consummated, now that the details have been worked out. But is the late-arriving price out of reach?
City officials see the park as an essential component of Ouray’s reviving winter economy. However, with an already tight budget, and the 6th Street renovation about to break ground at a price tag of $478,000 (of which the city will pay approximately $150,000 out of pocket), acquisition of the ice park is likely to become more complicated.
“I thought there was going to be a land swap or buy/re-sell/trade. I thought it was for land, like an inholding,” said Ouray County Commissioner Keith Meinert.
“Yes, but for essential, critical needs,” replied Randall-Parker. “We can do land exchanges or an outright sale.”
Ouray Mayor Bob Risch told The Watchthat the city is still negotiating, but for less land. “There was not enough of an exchange value. We will have to reduce the size of the parcel. The appraiser is looking for the highest and best value to protect the public’s interest, even though we wouldn’t allow any real estate development… [Ouray’s acquisition of the ice park] is something everybody wants. The forest service doesn’t want the permitting challenges [associated with the ice park] either, including liability concerns.”
In other forest service news, some of the 22 existing range allotments for cattle and sheep in Ouray County could be permanently closed. “It’s down to 13 cattle and nine sheep allotments,” said Randall-Parker. Invoking the Range Rescission Act, the forest service and the Colorado Division of Wildlife have visited with all of the livestock permit holders and are instituting measures to reduce the risk of contact between bighorn sheep and domestic cattle and sheep, which can spread pneumonia to local populations of bighorn.
Randall-Parker also announced that the U.S. Forest Service plans to host field trips on Red Mountain National Historic District’s trails and roads to talk with user groups about management of the areas.
This summer Volunteer Outdoor Colorado will create a new campsite in Yankee Boy Basin for climbers approaching Mount Sneffels, and will eliminate others due to resource damage along the streams.
The forest service has also joined forces with Northern Arizona University’s Ecological Restoration Institute in a forest restoration project covering about 80,000 acres on the Uncompahgre Plateau, according to Randall-Parker.
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