County-wide study shows Tumwater has surplus land capacity for low-income housing needs until 2045 

City planner urges more work to be done to identify more capacity

Posted

A county-wide study shows that Tumwater has sufficient land capacity to accommodate future housing needs for low-income households until 2045, but a city planner warns that the margin of error is too small to be complacent. 

Planning Manager Brad Medrud told the General Government Committee on Wednesday, Oct. 9, that an analysis by the Thruston Regional Planning Council (TRPC) show that available zoned land in the city can accommodate a surplus of 35 low-income residential units. 

The land capacity study shows that the city would have capacity for 5,729 low-income housing units compared to the 5,694 units needed for the city. 

“We've got 35 more in capacity than what the need is, which to my mind, the margin of error is way too small to say, ‘Yeah, we're fine,’” Medrud told the committee. 

“My proposal going forward is that we still have to do some work to really make sure that we account for the 80% [area median income households] by a higher factor than what this shows,” Medrud added. 

The required numbers are based on preliminary data by TRPC which has been working on how it would allocate 54,356 housing units among its cities and urban growth areas. The Washington Department of Commerce (Commerce) projected the county would need that much to accommodate growth until 2045. 

Of that amount, 29,053 will be for low-income households, which is defined as those earning 80% or less of the area median income.  

TRPC reviewed several methods for allocating the housing needs and ended up on a variation of a method used by Snohomish County.  

The chosen methodology led to the TRPC allocating 5,694 low-income housing units for Tumwater. The following table breaks this number further among various levels within the low-income bracket. 

 

Tumwater 

Income level (% of area median income) 

0-30% (in permanent supportive housing 

0-30% (not in permanent supportive housing) 

30-50% 

50-80% 

City 

554 

1,320 

1,002 

1,129 

Urban Growth Area 

170 

415 

307 

797 

Total 

723 

1,736 

1,309 

1,926 

Commerce also projected that the county would need 936 emergency housing units, 184 of which TRPC allocated to Tumwater.  

Councilmember Michael Althauser noted this number is very low compared to the number of people experiencing homelessness. Medrud agreed but said that he would need to research further how Commerce came up with the projected number. 

The land capacity study found that Olympia, Lacey, and the unincorporate areas of the county also have sufficient capacity to accommodate future low-income housing needs, while Tenino, Yelm and Grand Mound will be deficient. The study stated that the three jurisdictions would need to develop strategies in their comprehensible plan update to eliminate those deficits. 

Comments

5 comments on this item Please log in to comment by clicking here

  • FirstOtter

    Who desginates what type of land is considered 'sufficient"? Farm Land? Grassland, forests, anything that's not paved and is currently considered unbuildable? Does it mean 'land' in the form a small lot in the middle of Olympia, for instance, that currently has a vacant building on it? Don't go saying there's sufficient land if you're using the same metrics the state used when it tried to shove a mega airport up our rear ends. That was seven square miles of what they called "Greenfields" that were anything but. Their map covered thousands of homes, buildings, cemetaries, tree lots, schools, and only after their project was nixed did the planners admit that 'greenfields' meant 'anywhere there's not an airport".

    In this case, open land, rural land, farms, ranches, prairies, forests, are NOT sufficient for yet more development.

    4 days ago Report this

  • Southsoundguy

    Www.strongtowns.org for reading on better governance around this issue.

    4 days ago Report this

  • FirstOtter

    Why hasn't the old Tumwater Brewery been considered for development? It already has the water, sewer, electrical necessities. It has a huge parking lot. There's even a green area that can be used as a park for the residents of a low income housing. It's even on a bus line, for pete's sakes!

    3 days ago Report this

  • Deanima

    First Otter, the land capacity analysis was for land WITHIN the city limits and urban growth areas. Before shooting from the hip, read up on the things you comment about. Also, redevelopment work on the old brewery the old brewery has been underway for some time and is well documented.

    Yesterday at 1:59 PM Report this

  • FirstOtter

    Deananima, I didn't know that about the brewery. Thanks for the information.

    Yesterday at 7:19 PM Report this