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The high price of a home

Published 2:21 pm Thursday, October 2, 2008

The high price of a home

The co-owner of Snoqualmie Valley Mortgage Co. has a

half dozen clients approved to buy a home. The only problem is,

they can’t find one in their price range.

The Valley is in the middle of a home construction boom. A

cacophony of hammers and saws fills the air each day as new

developments are built, while others wait to receive word

on whether they can go forward. Once built, the new homes

typically carry a price tag upward of $200,000. Many are triple

and even quadruple that amount.

And that’s what frustrates Wright, who worries that

the Valley’s middle-class, blue-collar workforce may be forced to let

go of their dream of buying a home, or move to a city where

housing is more affordable.

“We will always have hard-working

people who don’t make a lot of money, and they deserve housing, too.”

P. J. Wright

Co-owner of Snoqualmie Valley Mortgage Co.

she said.

Inside her office on Railroad Avenue in Snoqualmie,

Wright told of how she tried to help a retiree who had recently moved

out of his apartment secure a mortgage. The man, a veteran of

World War II, lived on a fixed income and collected Social Security.

He had taken to sleeping in his car because he couldn’t find an

apartment he could afford.

Through Wright’s efforts, the man was approved for an

$80,000 mortgage, only to learn that nothing in that price range existed.

“That one bothers me,” she said.

Prices and permits

Builder and developer Richard Clark said housing is

expensive in the Valley for two reasons: Land prices are sky-high, and

new home construction is overregulated.

“We are in the direct center of one of the highest growth areas

in this region,” said Clark, whose Snoqualm development sits

on more than five acres on Northeast Eighth Street in North

Bend. “There is tremendous pressure for growth here in the

Snoqualmie Valley. This pressure for growth is more extreme than most

any area statewide.”

At Snoqualm, Clark plans to build 14 homes, each

costing $600,000 to $750,000 and offering a majestic view of Mount

Si. He said he determined the price of the houses based on the cost

of the land and development improvements.

“The maximum I can spend percentage-wise for a lot is

25 percent of the total cost [of the home],” he said. “If it ends

up higher than that, the risk factor increases dramatically. This

is where builders and developers can get into trouble

financially, and the failure rate increases as the ratio gets higher.”

The owner of Clark Co Inc. and Emerald Pacific

Development Inc. said he is treading a fine line with his Snoqualm

development.

“I’ve got everything I own on the line to make this

thing [work],” he said.

Like Wright, he’s concerned there is a sizable portion of

Valley residents who won’t be able to buy a home, but he feels

much of the blame must be placed on politicians and bureaucrats

who decide how houses should be built.

“The reason there is no more `starter’ homes is because

we’re overregulated by our government,” he said.

Those regulations can consist of fees and permits, as well as

regulations on how to build each home. They can range from

what Clark deems “excessive” wind shear and seismic requirements

to being forced to use pressure-treated materials in

crawl-space framing, even though he thinks the benefit is minimal and

it “would raise costs that have to be passed on to the home

buyer.” Many of the regulations, he added, were intended for homes in

other parts of the country, where communities face different

weather and safety conditions than cities in the Pacific Northwest.

His assessment is echoed by Erin Shannon, public

relations director for the Building Industry Association of Washington,

a statewide organization of developers.

“Twenty-six percent of the total cost of a new home is

the direct result of government regulations, taxes or fees,” she

said. “That 26 percent often makes the difference between whether a

family can afford a home.”

She said much of the problem stems from the state Growth

Management Act, or GMA, which was adopted 10 years ago.

“The GMA certainly is to blame for a multitude of rules

and regulations,” she said, adding that the act is “out of control.”

“Since its inception, we’ve seen nothing but home prices

increase.”

She said the state’s Shoreline Management Act, which

oversees development along waterways, as well as the federal

Endangered Species Act would also impact how houses are built.

“I think we are only just beginning to feel the pinch,”

she said.

`Red-hot economy’

Rich Thorsten isn’t ready to lay blame at the feet of

growth-management practices for escalating home prices. The

urban policy director for 1,000 Friends of Washington, a

Seattle-based non-profit group that promotes strong growth management,

believes the reason is much simpler.

“The Growth Management Act isn’t responsible for

housing prices going up in King County. It’s the red-hot ecomony.

That’s a major reason why housing prices are going up in this area,” he said.

According to Wright, the owner of Snoqualmie

Valley Mortgage Co., the median income for those living in King

County is $62,600 a year. Travel south to Tacoma and it drops to

$48,900; head north to Bellingham and it’s $48,100.

Because people make more in King County, Thorsten said

it’s natural that home prices would be more.

“I think what’s happening is they’re [builders and

developers] responding to the market, which is able to spend more money

for larger, more expensive homes,” he said.

And it’s not just King County. Thorsten said studies have

shown that counties across the state are witnessing a rise in home

prices, even counties not covered by the Growth Management Act, and

that trend is also evident in other prospering communities in the

United States.

“In places where they have a strong economy, housing

prices are going up quickly in those areas,” he said.

“It’s a fallacy to assume that [urban growth boundaries]

and growth management are directly linked to these increasing

costs that are taking place.”

Moving out

Sitting in his office in downtown North Bend, Harry

Buhler, an associate broker with John L. Scott Real Estate, thinks

many Valley residents may be forced to rent instead of buying a home.

“Lots are so expensive, it’s difficult to build low- to

mid-income housing,” he said. “More and more people will be living

in condos and apartments in the future.”

While cities such as Bellevue, Redmond and Kirkland play

host to a number of high-paying, high-tech companies, much of

the Valley’s workforce can be found inside restaurants, grocery

stores and small retail shops, and those employees often don’t

earn enough to afford a monthly mortgage payment.

“If they’re working in the service industry, it would be

difficult for them to buy a house,” Buhler said.

He’s watched residents move south to cities like Puyallup

and Auburn to find affordable homes and then commute to and

from work, which adds to the region’s traffic problems.

Charlie Connor, president of the Bellevue-based Master

Builders Association of King and Snohomish Counties, said

in Redmond, 75 percent of new employees commute to work

from other cities, and some are commuting from as far away

as Thurston County to their jobs in the Seattle area. It’s also

occurring in the Valley.

“You look at what’s happening in Carnation,” said

Connor, the owner of Conner Homes Co. in Bellevue. “There’s been

no jobs created there. It’s a bedroom community.”

Finding common ground

The problem is both Clark and Thorsten are correct in

blaming regulations and the economy