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Equitable Development Toolkit
Equitable Development Toolkit
Community Land Trusts
What Is It?
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Even in disinvested neighborhoods, concern about gentrification may be a major factor in the choice of the CLT model.  For low-income communities suffering from disinvestments, the primary goals are to sustain owner-occupancy and prevent a return to absentee ownership. For communities where property values are rising, as in Albuquerque , New Mexico and Burlington , Vermont , the primary goal is to limit resale prices so the homes will continue to be affordable for lower income households.

CLTs provide flexible community development options

Many land uses are possible- from facilities for community services such as food banks, Legal Aid, Technology Centers , to local businesses, parks, and plazas, to gardening and fuel wood production in the case of some rural CLTs.

Communities at both ends of the economic spectrum have established CLTs. Today a number of CLTs are being developed in areas characterized by new investment and rapid growth, where there is strong demand for housing and rapidly rising real estate prices.  These include both large metropolitan areas such as Portland , Oregon , where an ambitious citywide CLT is being launched, and many smaller areas of active economic growth. The Burlington , Vermont CLT has preserved more than 500 units of permanently affordable housing.  CLTs also reflect a noteworthy trend toward CLT development in prosperous university towns.

Faciliatate Affordable Housing

In many resort communities, the development of vacation and retirement homes on highly desirable but limited land is pricing local people out of the housing market.  A dramatic example exists in Wyoming , where the Jackson Hole Community Housing Trust is producing permanently affordable homeownership units in a community with an extreme scarcity of developable private land. Much of the workforce is forced to commute long distances from outside the area.  Another place where limited land supply increases the value of land trusts are island communities.

Communities characterized by high-priced housing markets and gentrification are not the only ones that have organized CLTs to address their problems.  CLTs have been established in low-income neighborhoods that have suffered from disinvestment, absentee ownership, and the physical deterioration that results from these trends.  In these situations the most immediate goals involve fighting absentee ownership, promoting homeownership for lower income residents and improving the physical condition of neighborhoods.  The CLT model gives such communities long-term control over new or rehabilitated homeownership units, assuring that when the units are resold they will not revert to absentee ownership and deteriorate once again.  These efforts stand in marked contrasts to public redevelopment efforts that utilize eminent domain to funnel land and housing into university or private commercial enterprises that frequently displace longtime residents. 

National Applications

Environmental concerns can also inspire the development of land trusts. In Albuquerque , New Mexico , activists in the Sawmill Neighborhood struggled for a decade to eliminate the industrial pollution that was undermining the health of their working class community.  When the community won the opportunity to control the redevelopment of 27 acres of previously industrial land adjacent to their neighborhood, they formed a community land trust to make sure that the affordable housing they developed would remain affordable for low-income residents.  Economic development opportunities created on this land benefit local residents.

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