The high cost to convert the building into affordable housing — estimated at more than $1 million per unit — is a worthwhile endeavor because it is unusable in any other capacity, Modén told the Union-Tribune.
“This is the best reuse program for that building — to convert it to affordable housing and leverage federal financing through tax credits,” Modén said. “We’re going to be able to house up to 800 people in this building and provide a lot of family units. And we are desperate for affordable housing.”
Affordable housing projects are subsidized by a combination of local, state and federal subsidies to offset construction costs. The subsides, which allow for units to be rented at below market rates to income-qualified tenants, come with government oversight. Rental rates are set by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development each year and are specific to each renter’s family size and annual income.
The MRK-Create team’s financing plan calls for two federal subsidies — low-income housing tax credits and historic tax credits —.that will contribute $114.7 million to the $250.3 million conversion project.
The team will seek $82.5 million in low-income housing tax credits, which are highly competitive and doled out on a rolling basis by the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee. If the developer is awarded the tax credits, it would sell them to private investors to secure project funding. The group is also banking on receiving $32.2 million in tax credits associated with historic properties even though 101 Ash St. is not a historic property.
The ground lease gives the developer a two-year window to secure financing, according to a staff report prepared for the committee meeting.
San Diego is not providing a cash subsidy, but it will underwrite the project through the aforementioned seller’s note, which closes the project’s financing gap. As proposed, the developer will start to repay the $46.5 million loan around year 15, when the project is refinanced. The city will then receive annual payments equal to 50% of the project’s rental proceeds, minus expenses, with money deposited in the city’s general fund.
“Our office believes that the proposal before you today is sound on its fiscal, economic and policy merits,” Noah Fleishman, a fiscal and policy analyst in the Office of the Independent Budget Analyst, told committee members.
Fleishman also noted that the city spent $7.2 million between fiscal years 2023 and 2025 on the maintenance of the unusable building. The city recently budgeted an additional $2.5 million for property management costs in the fiscal year that started Tuesday.
As such, committee members are anxious to get the building off the city’s books. Campillo was disappointed to learn that the deal, as proposed, would require the city to continue paying for building expenses until the close of escrow, which could take up to two years.
Despite a favorable assessment, Fleishman flagged one concern.
“Our office would like to note that the pro forma relies on the project being awarded a federal historic tax credit. Historic tax credits are not guaranteed because the building is not currently registered as a historic building or contributing to a historic district,” he said.
Lawyer Michael Aguirre, the former San Diego city attorney who is trying to unwind the city’s lease-to-own deal for the property, cautioned council members against moving the deal forward, in part because transaction documents were not ready for review.
“If you approve this, we will be in court, and I will tell the judge, ‘Your honor, they never even saw the agreement before they approved it,’” Aguirre said during public comment. “You don’t know what’s in there. … What happens if the income isn’t sufficient to pay the bonds? Who pays the bonds? Do you know? Does anybody here know that? I don’t think so.”
Aguirre also questioned the logic of entering into a 60-year lease agreement for a building that was determined in a 2016 appraisal to have only a 50-year economic life.
The 101 Ash ground lease and development deal documents should be ready next week with the aim of returning to the full City Council at the end of the month for final approval, Bibler said. The timing is meant to ensure that the development team can compete for low-income housing tax credits in September, she said.
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