HOUSING STABILITY ALLIANCE
October 2024 Meeting Summary
The Housing Stability Alliance (HSA) gathered in person on October 25, 2024. The goals included 1) a greater understanding of housing across Kent County, 2) looking at housing data from urban, rural, and suburban parts of the county via roundtable discussions with HSA participants and candidates running for elected office, and 3) a better understanding of policy, advocacy, and the policy framework utilized by the Policy + Advocacy Action Team.
The opening session was a panel discussion featuring the cities of Grand Rapids and Wyoming, Kent County Community Action, and North Kent Connect. The time was centered around the various housing challenges across the urban, suburban, and rural areas of Kent County and how partnerships play a critical role in bringing housing projects to fruition, helping households remain safely housed, and providing household basics like food and utility assistance. The panel session included a time for Q&A.
Following the panel discussion, Housing Kent introduced new District Data Profiles for all districts in Kent County where someone was running for elected office. The data profiles covered urban, rural, and suburban municipalities across the county and included home values, rent pricing, population, household size, and more. This was initially produced to help those running for office to have access to housing data for their area. These profiles are now available to the public on Housing Kent’s website.
Roundtable Discussions
Tables were each given a set of district profile sheets—one urban, one rural, and one suburban—to review and hold discussions on what they were seeing. Major themes from the roundtable discussions included:
- Increased cost in rent across the entire county
- Increased cost of land in rural areas
- Percentage of rental units versus owner-occupied units in rural areas
- Older homeowners who are unable to move due to for-sale home prices
- Young professionals unable to purchase their first home
- Young professionals living with parents with current rent rates
- Wages not keeping pace with rising housing costs
Other topics that arose from the discussions included:
- Property taxes
- Zoning changes
- Landlord engagement
- Employer engagement
- More data
- Households – single parent, two-parent
- Income
- Race/Ethnicity
- Current homebuyers – age, ethnicity
Policy + Advocacy
Michigan League for Public Policy (MLPP) then presented a primer on education versus lobbying and that, contrary to popular belief, nonprofits can lobby. They presented materials on what organizations can do to encourage education on a subject being taken up by the legislature. They also included what constitutes lobbying, when it needs to be reported, and to whom. MLPP provided a quick guide on the difference between advocacy and lobbying and a more in-depth practical guide on what nonprofits need to know.
The next Housing Stability Alliance convening is scheduled for Thursday, March 13, 2025. Registration and additional information will become available in late January.
We know that no one organization or program can fix the housing crisis in Kent County. It will take all of us in the community to change the housing system. If you have not joined one of the action teams, please consider joining Data & Shared Measurement, Community Engagement, or Policy & Advocacy. To learn more about the teams, please visit our website and complete this form. You can also reach out to info@housingkent.org.
Housing our community is the responsibility of all of us. Please consider joining us to help build this coalition to make Kent County a model for a fair and stably housed community. Thank you for being part of this work.