Barbara Henny is one of many elderly tenants of Front Street Apartments whose life was upended in the last two years.
In 2016, Henny and other tenants found out the rents at their subsidized housing complex in Lahaina will be raised to market rate levels by August聽 2019 — 32 years sooner than expected.
Henny has since assumed a leadership role among the complex’s more than 250 residents.聽She runs around sticking flyers on doors and organizes monthly meetings at a nearby church.
鈥淚t鈥檚 always on my mind,鈥 said Henny, 70. 鈥淚 wake up in the morning and I think 鈥極h my god’ … a lot of us came here thinking this would be the final move in our life.鈥
These days, she focuses her efforts on mobilizing her neighbors to support , which would allow the聽 to use eminent domain to acquire the property if the state agency can鈥檛 find money for rental assistance or strike a deal with the land owner. A similar bill died in committee last session.
鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty dismal,鈥 Henny said during a March Labor and Public Employment Committee hearing. 鈥淧eople are getting stressed and sick.鈥
State and county officials say there are no other options to relocate the tenants. Some have signed up on years-long waiting lists for other affordable housing options.
Front Street Apartments, a 142-unit complex, was built in 2001 using low-income housing tax credits that required the developer to keep the units affordable until 2051. Maui County also waived more than $2 million in property taxes during the last 16 years.聽
All of the units are affordable to people at or below 60 percent , or an individual in Maui making聽$36,180 or less annually in 2017.
It鈥檚 unclear how the building owner, Front Street Affordable Housing Partners, was able to get out of its 50-year affordability requirement in just 18 years.
State and county officials point to leasehold increases from the landowner,聽, which supposedly made the complex too expensive for Front Street to operate on reduced rents.
That apparently justified the use of a聽, the Internal Revenue Code option that allowed the developer to increase the rents early.
Corbett Kalama, the foundation鈥檚 vice president of real estate and community affairs, said the foundation has not significantly increased the rent on the developer.
Front Street Affordable Housing Partners declined to comment for this story.
Whatever the case, Maui Councilwoman Elle Cochran of Lahaina said she鈥檚 not holding her breath for solutions from the state. She plans to introduce legislation to get an appraisal on the property so the county can consider eminent domain.
Reuben Pali, a tenant of Front Street, has watched about a dozen people move out for fear of eviction, including his own family members. 聽
Fourteen units already vacated are now rented at market rate, according to testimony provided by Front Street’s attorney to a legislative committee.聽
Pali and his wife Ronda watched as a single mother with two children left a two-bedroom apartment across the hall from them. The unit has since been remodeled, embellished with granite countertops.
Eminent Domain An 鈥楨xtreme Solution鈥
Eleven years ago the state faced a similar situation when owners of Kukui Gardens, an 857-unit complex in Honolulu鈥檚 Chinatown, threatened to raise rents to market rate.
The Legislature聽 $25 million in general obligation bonds and provided other funding so the state could purchase part of the building and keep 389 of the units affordable.
Even though there is a precedent, HHFDC spokesman Kent Miyasaki calls eminent domain an 鈥渆xtreme solution.鈥
In testimony opposing SB 2293, William Meyer, a lawyer representing Front Street Affordable Housing Partners, estimates the property鈥檚 market value is now between $35 million and $52 million. Maui County鈥檚 assessed value for the property is around $24 million.
It’s unclear if the sizable appropriation to purchase the property or offer tenants rental assistance will be included in this year’s Senate bill.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a blank there for a reason, we need to see how all of this shakes out,鈥 Sen. Rosalyn Baker of Maui said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of questions that don鈥檛 get answered until we go to conference (committee).鈥
Lawmakers could put the money in the budget during next year鈥檚 legislative session.
But the 2019 session ends just three months before the Front Street rents are set to increase. It鈥檚 also hard to say if the county will be willing to match the funds because county officials don鈥檛 know how much the state will require them to dedicate.
鈥Please understand, I don鈥檛 have a crystal ball,鈥 Baker said. 鈥淏oth leaderships know that it鈥檚 very important not to lose affordable housing.”
Nowhere To Move
Miyasaki said the agency is focusing its efforts on building new housing units on Maui.
He pointed to The Villages of Leilalii, a housing project with thousands of units, half of which will be sold to people at or below 140 percent of area median income, or an individual making at or below $84,420.
Ronda Pali worries the state鈥檚 pending housing projects won鈥檛 cut it for her and other tenants.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge waste of money and so much stress on everybody to try to kick us out of our homes and try to reapply for something we can鈥檛 afford,鈥 she said.
There is demand in Maui County for about 14,000 new housing units between 2015 and 2025. About 45 percent of the demand comes from people who make $45,000 or less annually, according to a state聽
One of the tenants, Helen Bullion pays $975 per month in rent at the Fort Street complex. A big increase will force her out –and she has no idea where she’ll go.
Growing up on Molakai, Bullion, the daughter of an Okinawan pig farmer, says her mother used to offer their house up to strangers who didn鈥檛 have a place to stay.
鈥淲hen we woke up in the morning we always saw a stranger on the floor because she used to bring home the construction workers from the outer islands who didn鈥檛 have a place to stay,鈥 Bullion, who is now 77, said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 just not that way anymore鈥 We鈥檙e all in the situation where you鈥檙e going to be homeless sooner or later.鈥
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