Homeport's Bruce Luecke on his 'bittersweet' retirement, the affordable housing conversation

Homeport President and CEO Bruce Luecke says the time is right from him to step down from the top job at the Central Ohio nonprofit.

"I am really proud of where Homeport is at," said Luecke, who took over the housing developer nearly six years ago, after retiring from his banking job.

“This is bittersweet," Luecke said of his decision to retire. "I love the impact we're able to make. That is what's driven me and been the joy of the last six years."

Luecke said Homeport has what is probably the largest real estate pipeline in the organization's history, with several redevelopments in progress and groundbreakings forthcoming. But more must be done going forward, something Luecke leaves in the hand of his successor and the broader community.

"I am thrilled to death that affordable housing has become a larger community issue that many people are now talking about. It's an economic development issue," Luecke said. "And the issue is going to get larger and larger if we don't do something collectively."


Carlie Boos, the executive director of the Affordable Housing Alliance of Central Ohio, said Luecke will leave Homeport in a good position for the next leaders of the organization.

"Bruce is a bold and thoughtful leader who cares deeply about the people of central Ohio," Boos said in an emailed statement. "He leaves Homeport strong and ready for the future and, as a director of the Affordable Housing Alliance, we’re forever grateful for the resolute focus and constant wisdom he brings to our work expanding Franklin County’s affordable housing toolkit."

The labor shortage is also an affordable housing problem

As businesses have reopened amid the pandemic, employers across the country — particularly restaurants and others in the service and hospitality industries — have voiced concerns over staffing shortages. In recent Ohio Restaurant Association polls, a majority of those surveyed cited hiring issues due to employee shortages.

Think tanks and pundits continue to argue over reasons for the shortage, with some citing a reliance on pandemic unemployment assistance (see: “The myth of ‘nobody wants to work’”) and others pointing to a lack of childcare options for workers. But a recent report from the Coalition on Homelessness and Housing in Ohio (COHHIO) sheds additional light on the issue.

COHHIO, which partnered with the National Low Income Housing Coalition on last month’s “Out of Reach” report, found that in Columbus, the average renter makes $16.99/hour. But in order to afford the fair market rent for a two-bedroom apartment without paying more than 30% of their income on housing, Columbus workers need to make $19.83/hour — a gap of $2.84/hour from the average wage.

In fact, out of the top 10 jobs in Columbus listed by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, only one occupation pays more than $19.83/hour: registered nurse. (RNs earn well above the two-bedroom pay rate at $31.59/hour, while the next two in line, office clerk and customer service representative, average $17.93 and $17.45, respectively.) 

In short, while jobs are available all over Columbus, many potential employees can’t afford to live here. 

“There is very much a correlation” between the worker shortage and the city’s affordable housing crisis, said Bruce Luecke, president and CEO of local nonprofit developer Homeport. 

In addition to the rent/wage mismatch, proximity to jobs plays a role, Luecke said. Many workers are unable to live near their place of employment, a problem exacerbated by the city’s reliance on buses for public transportation. “For all the great work that COTA is doing to extend transportation, Columbus is pretty much a driving town,” Luecke said.   

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John Edgar, executive director of Community Development for All People on the South Side, described COTA bus routes as “spokes on a wheel,” with Downtown at the center. Many of the South Side residents his organization serves work manufacturing jobs farther south of the city, which means those who can’t afford a car often have to catch a bus that takes them Downtown, where they then wait for a different bus that goes south to the warehouses.

“Including the time it takes to wait for the first bus, and then the second bus, hour-and-a-half commutes are not uncommon,” said Edgar, noting that some workers may only end up getting a two- or three-hour shift for their trouble.

The wage/rent problem boils down to an oft-cited statistic from the Affordable Housing Alliance of Central Ohio: 54,000 households in Franklin County pay more than half of their income toward housing costs. “Twenty-eight percent of Ohioans don't know how they're going to pay August rent,” said Carlie Boos, executive director of the Affordable Housing Alliance of Central Ohio, earlier this month.  

Rental subsidies such as housing vouchers (often referred to as Section 8) are effective in helping low-income renters, but the federal program has been underfunded for years. In Columbus, thousands of residents are eligible for housing vouchers but only a fraction of those who apply and qualify receive them.  

Income increases are another way to help address affordable housing challenges, and some local businesses have begun raising wages to attract and retain workers, including restaurants like White Castle, Yellow Brick Pizza and Pierogi Mountain. But a $15/hour minimum wage is still nearly $5 away from the $19.83 needed to rent a fair-market, two-bedroom apartment in Columbus.

Jumping to a higher wage bracket usually requires further education or training, though Luecke said Homeport’s residents often tell him, “I'd love to be able to go through a training class or get more education or to be re-skilled, but I can't afford to take one day off, much less a week or a month. … I’ll lose my home.” 

Luecke cited a partnership with Columbus State Community College called Success Bridge, which helps low-income students with housing costs, as a recent example of a creative pilot program to address income and housing needs, which has also led to funding for a new pilot program for the general market, Resiliency Bridge

Edgar and Community Development for All People took a different approach to workforce housing with the Residences at Career Gateway on the South Side, a partnership with developer NRP Group and Nationwide Children’s Hospital — by far the neighborhood’s largest employer — that provides residents with career training for jobs at the hospital, which is only a 10-minute walk from the development. 

“Part of what made that program so innovative was, the housing itself has some development subsidies on the construction site — what's called a Low-Income Housing Tax Credit. Often, that housing gets referred to by the Ohio Housing Finance Agency as ‘workforce housing,’” Edgar said. “When we were first getting involved in this, I was asking, ‘Why do they call it workforce housing?’ And they said, ‘Well, it's intended for entry-level workers.’ But I said, ‘Does it do anything to help people get into the workforce?’ And at that point, the answer was no. So we decided to develop a project that was truly workforce housing: You live there and it helps you get into the workforce.” 

“That's a really neat model,” Boos said, “and Columbus is the only one who figured it out. … We could copy-paste that for any industry in town: education, medical, insurance, banking — you name it.” 

Of course, local developers could also address the crisis by building more affordable housing, which some are doing, though not at a pace that can realistically catch up to growth and need. “You can’t build your way out of this,” said Luecke, who noted the speed at which Columbus is growing and stressed the need to preserve currently affordable housing. “There are dollars we need to reinvest in our community to keep housing affordable. … There are a lot of investment dollars coming into Columbus, buying up multifamily apartments, and they're paying some premiums that are pretty steep, which means they have to increase rents to pay for that investment.” 

Some Central Ohio municipalities are taking a more proactive approach than others to affordable housing for their workers, Luecke said, citing Whitehall and Reynoldsburg. Recently, megachurch Christian Missionary Alliance relocated its headquarters to Reynoldsburg from Colorado.  

“The first thing they said about why they did that is, ‘You've got affordable housing,’” Boos said. “How many other deals are passing us by because they're looking at the Columbus market and going, ‘No, I don't want to relocate here if I have to pay Seattle wages in Columbus, Ohio. That's not an economic decision that I want to make.’” 

“If you want to do economic development work, and you want to do it right, and you want to court businesses to come into the community to create those jobs,” Boos continued, “you're never going to do that unless you address our housing challenge.”

Columbus Is Getting A New Low-cost Internet Option

Internet Service Provider Starry is set to launch their service at the end of August.

When the pandemic sent everyone home and life moved online, some families were left behind. One out of five households in Franklin County “did not have a cable modem, digital subscriber line, or fibre Internet accounts in 2019” according to the Franklin Country Digital Equity Commission (FCDEC).

Lack of digital literacy and devices are surely problems, but the cost is a big barrier to connectivity.

“Households with income below $35,000 were about one-quarter of all Franklin County households in 2019, but they accounted for nearly 70 per cent of those with no internet subscription,” according to the FCDEC.

Until August 15, Columbus residents can sign on to Starry’s Voyager Early Adoption program to receive a 50 per cent discount on fast symmetrical internet service. That’s $25 for 200 mbps upload and download. Until you move or change plans, you’ll pay only $25 a month for your internet.

“The pandemic really opened our eyes about how tightly linked affordable housing and affordable home internet are,” said Carlie Boos of the Affordable Housing Alliance of Central Ohio. “Both are essential for kids to excel in school, for parents to access the job market, and for families struggling with housing insecurity to easily apply for rent help from the Impact Hope Fund.”


Not enforcing eviction moratorium could impact housing market and more, local leaders and advocates say

The Franklin County Municipal Court's decision not to enforce the new Center for Disease Control eviction moratorium order could have far-reaching impacts on the housing market and affordability, local business leaders and advocates say.

"We're in for a very long fall and winter," said Carlie Boos, executive director of the Affordable Housing Alliance of Central Ohio.

Boos said there are 213,000 people in Ohio who couldn't pay their rent in July…

Soaring lumber prices taking a toll on affordable housing in Columbus

COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) — Headlines from around the country and in Central Ohio have been ruled by lumber futures during the past 12 months due to do-it-yourself projects, the need for quality lumber, and affordable housing.

“We have an immense amount of need right now,” said Boos. “Before COVID-19, there were 50,000 households that were paying more than half of their income towards housing. That’s the danger zone,” said Boos with emphasis.

That danger zone Boos referred to is when the person has to decide whether to buy food, medicine, make the rent, or pay for gas. Ultimately, the person’s income is stretched too thin.

Columbus housing authority gets fed money for homeless housing vouchers

The Columbus Metropolitan Housing Authority will be using $21 million in new federal money to pay for emergency vouchers to house 298 homeless families.

[Michelle] Heritage said a big problem is the lack of affordable housing. The area lost 19,469 affordable homes — rents less than $900 — from 2017 to 2019 because rents have gone up, according to the Affordable Housing Alliance of Central Ohio. "It’s super difficult to find places people can afford. There's huge competition for every single apartment."

Carlie Boos, executive director of the affordable housing alliance, said she fears homelessness will increase when the eviction moratorium is lifted on June 30.


Affordable-housing apartment complex in the works for Whitehall

Developers continue to be bullish on the Whitehall real-estate market.

The $25 million Enclave on Main project is a 4-story, 102-unit apartment complex set to occupy the corner of Main Street and Maplewood Avenue.


According to the Affordable Housing Alliance Central Ohio organization, housing is generally considered "affordable" if a low-income renter is paying no more than 30% of his or her income for housing (rent and utilities) or if a low-income owner is paying no more than 30% of his or her income for mortgage and utilities. A household is housing-cost-burdened if it pays more than 30% of income for housing and has severe housing cost burden if it pays more than 50% of income for housing.


Housing advocates, Franklin County Auditor show support for property tax relief proposal

COLUMBUS (WCMH) – Supporters of an upcoming bill say it could help keep the most vulnerable Ohioans from being forced out of their homes.
“Unfortunately we know these consequences are more dire for our most vulnerable neighbors,” said Carlie Boos, the executive director at the nonprofit.

“As a result, too many families are being priced out of the neighborhoods that they built and that they nurtured, adding fuel to this already smoldering housing crisis,” said Boos.


Ohio senator to propose bill capping annual property tax hikes at 5% for eligible homeowners

As property taxes increase with soaring property values, a state senator from Columbus plans to introduce legislation that would cap property tax increases at 5% per year statewide.


Carlie Boos, the executive director of the Affordable Housing Alliance of Central Ohio, said fostering homeownership is a key to building wealth.

"Steep tax spikes hinder that," Boos said.

Those consequences affect seniors on fixed incomes and low-income residents in  communities of color facing gentrification, she said.

"The time to tackle these challenges is absolutely right now," Boos said.