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The Missing Middle: Eagle 久久热精品视频app’s housing market freezes out mid-income residents

It's not just low-income residents who can't find housing in Eagle 久久热精品视频app

Rick and Colleen Gregory have worked in the Vail Valley for nearly two decades, yet still can't find a home they can afford on their budget.
Chris Dillmann | cdillmann@vaildaily.com
Home Economics
  • Tuesday: Decades in the Making: Vail Valley's workforce housing crisis has been building since the beginning

Editor鈥檚 note: This story is the first of a five-day series focused on housing issues in the Vail Valley. To view the entire series as it unfolds, visit vaildaily.com/news/home-economics.

EAGLE COUNTY 鈥 It shouldn鈥檛 be so hard for Rick and Colleen Gregory to find a house.

It probably wouldn鈥檛 be, if they weren鈥檛 looking in Eagle 久久热精品视频app. The couple has a combined annual income of around $110,000 鈥 which puts them slightly above the Eagle 久久热精品视频app average median income of $105,000. Rick has worked for the town of Vail for 19 years and while Colleen has only been in her current job for a couple of years, she has lived and worked in the valley for almost 17 years.



The Gregorys have homeownership history, having previously purchased residences in Avon and Gypsum. They won鈥檛 have to cobble together a down payment or convince a lender that their credit is up to snuff.

But their housing search isn鈥檛 going well and it isn鈥檛 the first time the Gregorys have faced this problem.

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Commuting nightmare

鈥淲e had to move to Leadville for affordable living four years ago,鈥 Colleen said. 鈥淚t was just so much less expensive.鈥

Back in 2014, the couple purchased a single-family home located just off Tennessee Pass, 1,200 feet from the Eagle 久久热精品视频app line. It鈥檚 a lovely residence, located in an idyllic alpine setting. But living there has extracted a high price.

鈥淚 spend two hours a day, on a good day, driving,鈥 Colleen said.

It鈥檚 not just the time and distance of their work commutes that creates problems for the Gregorys. It鈥檚 the nature of the drive along the steep, two-lane mountain road that connects Lake and Eagle counties. Colleen noted that Rick鈥檚 job with Vail Public Works means he gets called out during stormy winter mornings.

鈥淲hen he goes off at night, I know if he goes off the road no one will know,鈥 Colleen said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very stressful, and is the risk worth the money?鈥

Over the past year, the Gregorys have decided that the answer is 鈥榥o.鈥 So they listed their Tennessee Pass home for sale and started looking for a new Eagle 久久热精品视频app residence in earnest.

Their maximum budget is $450,000. Because Rick works in Vail and Colleen works in Edwards, they would like to live in the mid-valley area of Eagle 久久热精品视频app. Colleen said she found a couple of condos in their price range, but by the time they added in homeowners association fees, the monthly payments were higher than they could handle.

So the Gregorys expanded their search downvalley and they are still looking. Along the way, they discovered a hard truth 鈥 the Gregorys make too much money to qualify for low-income housing options and they can鈥檛 afford the higher-priced, single-family homes in the valley.

鈥淲e are lost in-between,鈥 Colleen said.

The Gregorys aren鈥檛 alone. They are a prime example of what housing professionals call the “Missing Middle.” It鈥檚 a group that鈥檚 expanding in the local housing market.

Rick and Colleen Gregory spend upwards of two hours a day commuting back and forth from their home on Tennessee Pass to their jobs in the Vail Valley. And t鈥檚 not just the time and distance of their work commutes that creates problems for the Gregorys. 鈥淲hen he goes off at night, I know if he goes off the road no one will know,鈥 Colleen said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very stressful, and is the risk worth the money?鈥
Chris Dillmann | cdillmann@vaildaily.com

The Missing Middle

In simplest terms, the Missing Middle is comprised of people who make too much money to qualify for housing assistance programs and too little money to purchase homes on the free market.  In an area such as Eagle 久久热精品视频app, that鈥檚 a big group.

Community Builders Executive Director Clark Anderson is very familiar with this dilemma. The goal of the he oversees is to help leaders make communities more livable. Making sure that people aren鈥檛 priced out of housing is one of the biggest local issues Community Builders faces.

鈥淚t’s very difficult in a market like the Eagle Valley to provide housing that is affordable,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淚n our markets, a lot of people are left behind and the people who are getting left behind aren鈥檛 just low-income residents. It鈥檚 the middle and higher-income people as well. It鈥檚 a real conundrum.鈥

Anderson noted there are multiple layers that contribute to the dearth of Missing Middle housing in Eagle 久久热精品视频app. But the biggest factor is demand.

鈥淵ou have different segments of the market competing for the same product,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淥ne segment is the high-end, luxury market and it鈥檚 really hard for everyone else to compete. A lot the housing stock goes to the high-end buyer.鈥

It isn鈥檛 just a case of new housing projects in the valley, Anderson said. An increasing number of middle-income units are changing over to luxury pricing. He offered the following hypothetical example:

In 1993, Harry brought a family home in Singletree. He and his wife are now empty nesters and they want to downsize. They put their home on the market and, naturally, they want to make as much money as possible in the deal to aid with their retirement.

Lisa is interested in moving to the Vail Valley part-time and can afford a second home, but not something in Vail or Beaver Creek area. But Harry鈥檚 home is right in her price range.

鈥淣ow that home is purchased by someone who is going to take it into the luxury market,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 how you have the working people market competing with the luxury market every day. And as long as we allow these two parts of the community to compete against one another, the luxury market is always going to win.鈥

Losing community

鈥淚t is patently obvious that there are tremendous impacts when you have a community, or an entire region, that cannot provide housing for the people who work there,鈥 Anderson continued.

From employee shortages to parking troubles, the lack of affordable housing cascades into other parts of the community.

鈥淧eople don鈥檛 like the impact of traffic on I-70 in the Vail Valley,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 an affordable housing problem, not a traffic problem because of people having to commute to their jobs. I would argue the No. 1 driver of climate change impacting the valley is the lack of affordable housing. The reason why people in the valley drive so much is they live so far from their jobs.鈥

But Anderson believes that loss of community character is the biggest pitfall of driving middle-income residents out of the local housing market. The residents of a community are what makes it special 鈥 the volunteer work they do, the relationships they build and the businesses they support. When those people leave, an empty shell remains.

鈥淭here is a real loss of authenticity in places like that,鈥 Anderson said.

鈥楴o silver bullet鈥

鈥淭he real bummer is there is no silver bullet to solve the housing issue,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淚t is going to take uncommon commitment, resources and strategies.鈥

And in looking at the Missing Middle dilemma, he believes it鈥檚 going to take diversification.

 鈥淭he best thing that could be done would be to make it easier to build a wider variety of housing types,鈥 Anderson said.

Instead of single-family detached housing, the people in the Missing Middle could likely break into the market if there were smaller, more attainable options out there, he said. He believes changing regulations to favor this type of development would spur its creation.

Anderson said communities should look at their own regulations to find ways to loosen the rules if a project addresses the housing need.

鈥淚 think the character impact of losing people who could live in our communities is more important than did we get the fa莽ade of the building exactly right,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淎nd for years, zoning has created minimums. But it has rarely said people can only build so big. We should use maximums more often.鈥

Anderson acknowledged that the first challenge for diversified, affordable housing projects is to find the right places to build. 鈥淚 really think getting the locations right is really important,鈥 Anderson said.

The second challenge is to find someone willing to build those homes

鈥淚 like to believe that with the right incentives, the market will come in and help solve this,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really about how you can incentivize a developer to keep things affordable in a way that doesn鈥檛 get eaten up by the luxury market.鈥

Incentives could include reduced fees if a developer commits to deed restrictions 鈥 full-time residency for owners, price caps or other mechanisms designed to keep housing prices from escalating.

Partnership is another workable solution with governments or businesses teaming with private developers to make projects happen by providing land or money. Anderson says there鈥檚 a great example of how that can work right in the middle of the Eagle River Valley 鈥 Miller Ranch.

Working model

Completed back in 2006, Miller Ranch鈥檚 own website calls it 鈥淓agle 久久热精品视频app鈥檚 premier affordable housing community.鈥 It features 282 units where deed restriction and housing guidelines maintain workforce housing. Miller Ranch offers single-family homes, duplexes, rowhouses, and condominiums. The neighborhood sits on land the county owns and its housing program is administered through the county鈥檚 Valley Home Store operation.

According to Tori Franks of the Eagle 久久热精品视频app Housing Department, the Miller Ranch prices are hitting the Missing Middle sweet spot. For example, for a family of four with an annual income of $94,000, $375,00 is an affordable purchase price. For a family of four making $132,000, $525,000 is an affordable purchase price.

鈥淭hat is the Missing Middle marketplace. That is also something we see, very anecdotally, in Miller Ranch,鈥 Franks said.

The development qualifies buyers through a point system that rewards longevity in the valley, particular types of employment and other factors. Potential buyers must complete an extensive application process and are then notified when units become available. The prospective buyers with the most points have first shot at units that become available.

Miller Ranch is exactly where the Gregorys wanted to live.

Completed in 2006, Miller Ranch in Edwards features 282 deed-restricted residences, including single-family homes, duplexes, row houses and condos.
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鈥淲e were excited to apply for Miller Ranch,” Colleen said. “With their point system and being deed-restricted, we were sure we would be at the top of the list. With Rick and I working in Eagle 久久热精品视频app and living there, you would think we would be excellent candidates, especially with my husband being a government worker for 19 years.鈥

But the Gregorys found out the point system didn鈥檛 actually favor their situation. For the past four years, they haven鈥檛 lived in Eagle 久久热精品视频app even though they really could see it from their own backyard.

Then they found out they make about $5,000 too much annually to get the 25-point bump Miller Ranch awards to candidates who make less than 140% of the AMI.  

鈥淲e apparently make too much money for deed-restricted housing but not enough to buy a non-deed restricted home,鈥 Colleen said. 鈥淎fter building a life here, we are left with going broke over a $500,000 tiny condo or having to leave.鈥

Franks noted that it can be tough to hear you don鈥檛 meet the regulations, but Miller Ranch had to institute criteria to make its program work.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 craft programs or process for everyone,鈥 she said. So, while it may seem arbitrary to ding someone for living 1,200 feet from the county line, Franks noted there has to be a set regulation. Likewise, using the AMI as a criterion is a way to keep Miller Ranch pricing in line with the community.

As hard as it is to turn Missing Middle home hunters way, Franks said it鈥檚 equally hard to break the news to qualified applicants that they didn鈥檛 get a unit.

鈥淲e are seeing an average of 15 offers per unit, which means that one person gets in and 14 others don鈥檛,鈥 Franks said.

According to Franks, that鈥檚 the biggest problem with Miller Ranch 鈥 it is only one Missing Middle solution in a valley that needs many more answers.

鈥淎nd we just don鈥檛 have that next Miller Ranch out there,鈥 Franks said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a 100% to 140% of AMI drought.鈥

As governments and businesses mull the issue and struggle to come up with communitywide solutions, today’s Missing Middle home shoppers must fend for themselves. Franks suggested they seek out a local real estate agent who understands the valley鈥檚 deed-restricted market.

鈥淗ave a good team around you because it鈥檚 a fast, competitive process,鈥 Franks said.

The Gregorys are trying to break their Missing Middle shackles by searching valley-wide and thinking creatively.

鈥淲e have toured endlessly for a home for us,鈥 Colleen said. 鈥淲e realized that anything Edwards and east was never going to happen, especially with Miller Ranch being such a long shot.鈥

They have found some downvalley options in the $480,000 to $610,000 range.

鈥淏ut that price point is already a major stretch considering we started with $450,000 as our max,鈥 Colleen said.

A couple of months back the Gregorys tried to get creative with an offer on a Gypsum home. The property included both a house and an adjacent lot, so they offered $20,000 under asking and stipulated the owner could retain the lot. The offer was rejected. They upped their offer and the seller accepted it.

鈥淭he home will be a major stretch and we will probably have to get a roommate, but it made the most sense for the money,鈥 Colleen said. 鈥淲e are in the infancy of this deal, just finishing the initial inspection, but we are hopeful.鈥

If the sale falls through, Colleen wonders what the future will hold.

鈥淢y husband loves his job. That is what keeps us here. But what if we can鈥檛 find housing?鈥 she said. 鈥淲e just feel like we are getting pushed out of this valley. We love it here and our life is here but we are being forced to abandon it because we have no other options.鈥


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