Over 500 new units of affordable housing will be built in Sevier County with the help of Low Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC) from the Tennessee Housing Development Agency.
THDA Executive Director Ralph M. Perrey joined Sevier County Mayor Larry Waters, Sevierville Mayor Bryan Atchley and Cindy Cameron Ogle, Gatlinburg City Manager, outside the Sevier County Courthouse on Wednesday, July 25, 2018, to announce new LIHTC awards that bring the number of affordable housing units planned for the county up to 536.
“These 536 new units will help address the growing need for access to affordable housing in Sevier County,” Perrey said. “A recent study showed that Sevier County could use as many as 1,000 units of new affordable housing, and these new awards will help put us more than halfway to meeting that number.”
On Tuesday, THDA Board of Directors approved LIHTC awards totaling just over $1.5 million to help build two new apartment developments in the immediate Sevierville area. Vaughn Development was awarded $1,082,222 in annual tax credits over a 10-year period to build the 96-unit Gateview Ridge Apartments, while Waypoint Housing Insights was awarded $490,000 to construct 36 units at Riverside Village.
Those awards are in addition to the board’s June decision to allocate additional credits for projects in Sevier County. The board gave $1,090,883 in annual tax credits to NonProfit Housing’s 96-unit Pickens Way Apartments in Sevierville and $1,074,000 to DPKY Development for the 96-unit Forest Cove, also in Sevierville. Credits of $832,480 were awarded to Wabuck Navigo Development to construct the 56-unit Matthew Manor in Kodak. The Hayes Group’s Watson Glade development in Gatlinburg received $243,850 in credits to aid in its completion. THDA previously awarded $599,271 in credits to Watsons Glade in 2017, along with $1,100,000 in tax credits to the Woda Group to build Douglas Greene Apartments in Sevierville.
In total, the three rounds of tax credit awards represent an investment in Sevier County over the next decade of more than $65.1 million in equity from the state agency.
Perrey said the new affordable units are part of the agency’s ongoing efforts to help Sevier County recover from the deadly Nov. 2016 wildfires that destroyed thousands of structures in the region. At the same time, Perrey said developments would provide much-needed workforce housing for one of the fastest growing areas of the state.
Construction on the five most recent LIHTC projects is expected to begin in early 2019 with an expected completion date of 2020. Projects awarded tax credits during 2017 are expected to come online in late 2019.
Low-income housing tax credits are a credit against federal income tax liability each year for 10 years for owners and investors in low-income rental housing. The amount of tax credits is based on reasonable costs of development, as determined by THDA, and the number of qualified low-income units.
While the LIHTC program also funds mixed income housing projects, all 536 units planned for Sevier County will be low-income, affordable housing units for which tenants must meet income requirements, not exceeding a certain annual household income for their household size. The units must be offered as low-income housing for at least the duration of their tax credit period.