The City of Columbus is proposing a $1.5 billion bond issue on the November ballot that includes $200 million to expand affordable housing. It is four times more than what the city proposed in 2019.
Supporters and developers said it鈥檚 a crucial step to address the demand for affordable housing. But more work needs to get done to make it happen.
Two years ago, the city borrowed a lot of money to build more than 1,300 affordable housing units. At the time, before the COVI-19 pandemic, more than 50,000 people were using half their income to pay rent or make mortgage payments.
Officials have said the $50 million is not enough. But they say it was a good test run.
The city needs to build 14,000 new units per year to meet demand.
Carlie Boos directs the Affordable Housing Alliance of Central Ohio, said the city is falling 3,000 units short of its goal.
鈥淭he first bond package we saw an impact, we saw those numbers begin to come down, we have great momentum," Boos said. "Right now it鈥檚 about scaling. It鈥檚 about taking what was a test pilot and bringing it to scale.鈥

Affordable housing developers at Homeport used some of that initial 2019 money to fund . The building will have up to 100 affordable senior living apartments and 3,000 square feet of retail space. Homeport is also building 10 single-family housing units nearby. Developers broke ground in March.
The next buidling phase is projected to be bigger, said Homeport president and CEO Leah Evans.
鈥淭he next round is going to be larger, four times as large," Evans said. "And so, are we going to see four times as many houses? Maybe. Maybe we鈥檒l see a multiplier of that because I think it鈥檚 unlocking how we think about housing and where housing could be.鈥
Homeport hopes to . It remains to be seen if it will receive funding if the bond passes.

Erin Prosser is the assistant director of Columbus鈥 housing strategy division and said no resident should pay more than 30% of their monthly income on rent or mortgages.
鈥淚t really allows us to bring different pieces and parts together to bring as many units as possible in that affordable realm for folks and families earning below $50,000,鈥 Prosser said.
Officials promise The city will spend the rest of $1.5 billion bond package on transportation, utilities, plus parks and recreation.
Homeport's Evans said to maintain affordable housing, those other improvements are also needed.
鈥淭he intersection of all these infrastructure pieces is what builds communities. You don鈥檛 want a community that goes the other way right? You don鈥檛 want to have blight and vacancy. But that takes investment, intentional investment in certain strategic projects that will continue that momentum."
But more needs to be done to address Columbus鈥 housing shortage. The city鈥檚 current zoning code Boos with the Affordable Housing Alliance, said it鈥檚 an archaic process that drives up costs for both developers and the city.
鈥淪o if a builder wants to give a consumer the kind of housing that they鈥檙e demanding, they have to walk through a maze of regulation to do it," Boos said. "The bottom line is that we cannot let archaic regulation stand in the way of what people want.鈥
It will be the first the code has been changed in over 70 years. Otto Beatty III, a former lawyer and now small-scale housing developer, said that the current zoning code often derails what projects set out to be.
鈥淧rojects can go from a plan of 100 units to 70 units and then it doesn鈥檛 work," he said. "Or a use that your looking for 鈥 hey we鈥檝e got this lot we want to put four units on it not just a single 鈥 it鈥檚 dead," he said. "So I don鈥檛 want to underestimate the importance of that, you know overhaul.鈥
City officials promise if voters approve the bond package, there won鈥檛 be an increase in taxes or cuts in city services.
The $1.5 billion bond will appear on the November ballot.