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2.4 The guiding principals of the Roseville's Housing Policy is to provide a variety of <br />housing for all residents, collaborate with other agencies and keep the housing programs <br />small and incremental. The following housing goals will be considered when evaluating <br />current and future housing programs: <br />1) provide a variety of housing types (owner occupied and rental) that balances <br />affordability, maintains quality of housing and the urban environment, has access to <br />public infrastructure, services and employment and enhances neighborhood viability. <br />2) improve the quality of approximately 200 existing units which are below the average <br />physical condition and less than 75 percent of the median value of housing units <br />within the community (currently 55 single family and 160 multi-family units). <br />3� provide housing for all stages of the life cycle such as the needs for entry level <br />housing and more affordable senior housing. Specifically, assist in the provision of <br />entry level family housing to regenerate the community, schools and our <br />neighborhoods. <br />4) meet the Metropolitan Livable Communities Act and support the Local Housing <br />Incentives Program for that purpose. <br />2.5 The City's participation in the Metropolitan Council's Local Housing Incentive Program <br />provides the City with the eligibility to participate in the Tax Base Revitalization <br />Program, the Livable Communities Demonstration Program, the Local Housing Incentive <br />Account and the Inclusionary Housing Account. <br />2.6 The City has benefited from that participation with the award of over $471,000 in <br />contamination cleanup funds from the Tax Base Revitalization Account, over $300,000 <br />from the Livable Communities Demonstration Account for mixed use projects and over <br />$700,000 as part of the I-35 W Corridor Coalition under the Livable Communities <br />Demonstration Planning Account. <br />2.7 Most of the programs the City Council adopted in relation to the Livable Communities <br />Program (LCA) in Roseville were originally approved as part of the Vista 2000 (1992-3) <br />and the Comprehensive Plan (annually updated). The focus has always been to use the <br />approved housing section of the Comprehensive Plan as a basis for the LCA program and <br />the Roseville Housing Policy. The city's direction has been to collaborate with other <br />agencies, institutions, the private sector (especially the local banks and <br />development/contractor sectors) and the neighborhoods as our program partners to <br />implement the programs. <br />RCA — Livable Communities 2001 10/23/00 — Page 2 of 3 <br />