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Metropolitan Council <br /> June 25, 2010 <br /> Mr. Dallas Larson <br /> City Administrator JUN 28 2010 <br /> City of Centerville <br /> 1880 Main St <br /> Centerville MN 55038 <br /> Dear Mr. Larson: <br /> The City of Centerville previously elected to be a participant in the Metropolitan Livable <br /> Communities Act Local Housing Incentives Account (LCA LHIA. Participation in the <br /> voluntary LCA LHIA provides the City with the opportunity'to compete for grants and <br /> loans to support activities that help the City meet its affordable and life cycle housing <br /> goals, clean up polluted sites, and support demonstration projects linking jobs, housing <br /> and transit. <br /> The City's previously adopted LCA LHIA affordable and life cycle housing goals were <br /> negotiated with the Metropolitan Council for the period 1996 — 2010. Those goals are <br /> indicated in Enclosure A. <br /> If the City elects to continue its participation in the LCA, it must establish new <br /> affordable and life -cycle housing goals for the next decade (2011 through 2020). <br /> As part of the City's recently submitted 2030 Comprehensive Plan Update, it <br /> acknowledged its fair share of the region's affordable housing need. For the City of <br /> Centerville the fair share number is 170 units over the next 10 years. <br /> Although the Council fully supports the need for this total number of new affordable units <br /> over the next decade, it also acknowledges the reality of limited funding available to create <br /> new affordable housing opportunities. For this reason, the Council asks the City establish <br /> its LCA affordable housing goal as a range of 111 to 170 units for the period 2011 to 2020 <br /> with the low end of the range representing the number of units that can be accomplished at <br /> currently available funding levels region -wide. <br /> Regarding the City's life -cycle housing goal to diversify the type and density of housing to <br /> meet residents' changing housing needs and preferences, the Council asks the City <br /> establish a goal range of 170 to 270 units over the next decade. The low end of the range <br /> represents the community's total share of the region's affordable housing need and the <br /> high end is the potential number of units permitted by the land use guiding in the City's <br /> 2030 Plan Update for medium, high, mixed use, redevelopment, TOD or similarly named <br /> residential development, or the total forecasted household growth for the community to <br /> 2020, whichever number is less. <br /> www.metrocouncil.org <br /> 390 Robert Street North • St. Paul. MN 55101 -1805 • (651) 602 -1000 • Fax (651) 602 -1550 • TTY (651) 291 -0904 <br /> M Eq=1 Opport -Ru Employer <br />