What's Hot

    Surprise Council Approves Rezone for Church Campus

    May 29, 2026

    Dirty Data Does a Disservice to AI  

    May 29, 2026

    Kingman Council Approves Master Plan Commercial Requests

    May 29, 2026
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    AZBEX
    NEWS TICKER
    • [May 29, 2026] - Surprise Council Approves Rezone for Church Campus
    • [May 29, 2026] - Dirty Data Does a Disservice to AI  
    • [May 29, 2026] - Kingman Council Approves Master Plan Commercial Requests
    • [May 29, 2026] - Arizona Projects 05-29-26
    • [May 26, 2026] - Ariz. Construction Down 800 Jobs in April, 3,100 Year-over-Year
    • [May 26, 2026] - Cottonwood P&Z Advances 252-Unit Apartment Plan
    • [May 26, 2026] - Gilbert Approves $1.7B 10-Year CIP
    • [May 26, 2026] - Industry Professionals 05-26-26
    LinkedIn Facebook
    • Home
    • News
      1. View Latest
      2. ✎ Planning & Development
      3. 📰 Local News
      4. 🔎︎ Classifieds
      5. 🕵 Editorial Analysis
      6. 💰 Budgets & Funding
      7. 🏢 Commercial Real Estate
      8. 👔 People on the Move
      9. 🌵 Arizona Projects
      10. 🏛️ Legislation & Regulations
      11. 📈 Trends

      Kingman Council Approves Master Plan Commercial Requests

      May 29, 2026

      Cottonwood P&Z Advances 252-Unit Apartment Plan

      May 26, 2026

      P&Z Recommends Approval for 68-Acre Casa Grande Site

      May 23, 2026

      Dignity Health Planning N. PHX Medical Campus

      May 23, 2026

      Dirty Data Does a Disservice to AI  

      May 29, 2026

      Ariz. Construction Down 800 Jobs in April, 3,100 Year-over-Year

      May 26, 2026

      Bullhead Council Hears Vision for Laughlin Ranch

      May 15, 2026

      Tucson Planning to Review Updated Data Center Restriction Plan

      May 6, 2026

      Affordability Reform Legislation May Gut BTR Sector

      April 28, 2026

      Developers Must Work Differently to Counter Intensifying Project Opposition

      January 6, 2026

      Scottsdale Hospitals War May Heat Up with New Banner Request

      July 29, 2025

      Glendale Voters to Determine VAI Resort’s Fate

      May 16, 2025

      Gilbert Approves $1.7B 10-Year CIP

      May 26, 2026

      Mesa Proposing $285M GO Bond for Safety and Transportation Improvements

      May 23, 2026

      Lake Havasu City Considering Major Expenditures for Water Projects

      May 19, 2026

      Chandler Budget Plan Includes $474M in New Capital Projects

      May 12, 2026

      Commercial Real Estate 05-26-26

      May 26, 2026

      Commercial Real Estate 05-19-26

      May 19, 2026

      Commercial Real Estate 05-12-26

      May 13, 2026

      Commercial Real Estate 05-05-26

      May 5, 2026

      Industry Professionals 05-26-26

      May 26, 2026

      Industry Professionals 05-19-26

      May 19, 2026

      Industry Professionals 05-12-26

      May 12, 2026

      Industry Professionals 05-05-26

      May 5, 2026

      Arizona Projects 05-29-26

      May 29, 2026

      Arizona Projects 05-22-26

      May 23, 2026

      Arizona Projects 05-15-26

      May 15, 2026

      Arizona Projects 05-08-26

      May 8, 2026

      Judge Rules for Axon in Latest NIMBY Decision

      May 19, 2026

      Affordability Reform Legislation May Gut BTR Sector

      April 28, 2026

      Judge Finds ADWR Groundwater Policy Actions Illegal

      April 24, 2026

      Flagstaff Considering Imposing Data Center Restrictions

      March 27, 2026

      Dirty Data Does a Disservice to AI  

      May 29, 2026

      Ariz. Construction Down 800 Jobs in April, 3,100 Year-over-Year

      May 26, 2026

      March U.S. Construction Unemployment Hit 6.7%

      May 23, 2026

      Construction Lending Remains Sluggish

      May 15, 2026

      Surprise Council Approves Rezone for Church Campus

      May 29, 2026

      Dirty Data Does a Disservice to AI  

      May 29, 2026

      Kingman Council Approves Master Plan Commercial Requests

      May 29, 2026

      Arizona Projects 05-29-26

      May 29, 2026
    • AZBEX
      • Subscribe
      • Solicitations
      • Classifieds
      • Advertising
    • DATABEX
      • DATABEX Log-In
      • Webinars
      • Monthly Snapshot
    • Events
      • 2026 Mid-Year Update
    • About Us
      • Meet the Company
      • Meet the Sales Team
      • Meet the Editorial Team
      • Meet the BEXperts
    • CIP Special Report
    AZBEX
    Home»Local News»Making the Case for Affordable Housing Supplies One Argument at a Time
    Local News

    Making the Case for Affordable Housing Supplies One Argument at a Time

    BEX StaffBy BEX StaffApril 26, 2023No Comments6 Mins Read
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    By Roland Murphy for AZBEX 

    As more and more people move to Arizona (and as opposition to new development gets more organized and entrenched) the need for advocacy to deliver new housing units, particularly for multifamily, keeps growing. 

    While not a household name to most people outside of the policy and development world, HOME Arizona is diligently working behind the scenes to improve the state’s housing situation. 

    HOME Arizona’s specific mission is educating policymakers and elected officials about the relationship between housing prices, labor availability and economic development.  

    The group’s board of business leaders, former elected officials and economists coalesced in 2021 after observing two trends in their own businesses. 

    First, the price of housing across the Phoenix metro area has been rising at an unsustainable rate for the last several years. 

    Second, it is getting harder to hire good people. 

    “We compiled a lot of really good data around these two issues,” said HOME Arizona’s Nico Howard in a recent interview. “These are really the same issue at different stages in the lifecycle. If you look at how employers choose to relocate to or expand in a municipality, they’re looking at what drives their costs, and one of their biggest drivers is labor, attracting and retaining key talent.” 

    He went on to say, “What employees are looking at is the cost of living, specifically the cost of housing. If they can find cheaper or more quality housing with similar wages than they can in Phoenix, they will go to those other places. We’ll lose that labor force, and if we lose enough of our labor force, we’ll lose major employers. What starts as a housing affordability and fairness issue really evolves pretty quickly into a labor availability and economic development issue.” 

    For several years, Phoenix and the rest of Arizona have benefitted from cumbersome regulation, excessive costs of operation and prohibitive living expenses driving people and companies out of California, New York and Chicago. Unfortunately, these new arrivals have brought with them a willingness and ability to pay much higher housing prices than Arizona was traditionally used to.  

    That price insensitivity, coupled with a chronic undersupply that has only started to get addressed in the last two years, has led to massive escalations in rents and mortgages and has taken the state from an attractively affordable market to one of the least affordable, functionally overnight.  

    “Now we need to be really thoughtful about how we plan for the next five years,” Howard said. “What we’ve seen, specifically, is we need to be thoughtful in our policies to encourage the development and delivery of new (housing) supply. Ultimately, that’s the thing that’s going to keep pricing in check—having enough housing for the people moving here.” 

    Evangelizing that message begins with compiling research and data. Board member Elliot D. Pollack, one of the area’s most prominent economists, has delivered multiple presentations to various city councils, public agencies and other outlets showing the impacts of housing supply scarcity across several economic development scenarios.  

    In addition to the research and government presentations, Howard and his fellow members routinely take part in presentations and debates hosted by development organizations, such as Urban Land Institute’s Trends Day and their own recent symposium in association with the W.P. Carey School of Business. 

    “We’ve presented at the League of Arizona Cities and Towns. We’ve been featured on NPR twice. We’ve been in the Arizona Republic, and we’ve been very fortunate to have made the front page of AZBEX,” he said with a chuckle.  

    “What we’re trying to do is to get all the right stakeholders together and start examining these issues. I think the goal is to educate policymakers and elected officials, but the hope is that in doing so we can begin to reexamine some of these policies and their impact on housing supply and the affordability of housing. 

    “We are not an affordable housing group,” he emphasized. “We are looking at supply across the board. We’re getting stakeholders together to begin addressing this and really starting to take action that we think will have a tangible impact on housing prices.” 

    In the next year, HOME Arizona’s focus will be on working with municipalities to reform the zoning, entitlement, design review and approval processes to make them simpler, more efficient and less costly for developers looking to deliver more housing. 

    Howard said the group believes zoning should stay at the local level and does not support recent legislative efforts to bring entitlements under state control. “We’re asking municipalities to work with us to begin to reform and streamline these processes to remove regulation to make it easier to deliver the housing supply Arizona so desperately needs.” 

    HOME Arizona is working to create a class for municipal officials to learn about the development process. “Zoning is only one stage of the construction process. We spend months and months and then the city says, ‘Okay, you can do this,’ but then you have to get the project permitted. That might be another six to 12 months depending on the municipality. You have to do all your plans. You have to do everything else. Then you have to actually build the thing.” 

    “We want to create a class where people can learn about every stage of the project, all the way from underwriting sites to water challenges, infrastructure, and what does the capital stack look like? We want to educate folks so they can, maybe, see things from a different perspective.” 

    Howard actually expressed appreciation for how well the various neighborhood opposition groups have delivered their messages to local governments. “I think the neighborhood groups have actually done a really good job educating electeds about what their issues are and why they don’t like development,” he said. “They’re wrong. On the merits, they’re wrong, but it’s easy to digest their issues,” referencing items like congestion, traffic, et cetera.  

    “Our issues tend to be economic by nature, not as easy to understand. We haven’t done as good of a job spending time educating people about these issues. As a result, people don’t understand them, and they’ve only heard one side of the issue. I believe that when folks really spend the time to understand our issues and understand how complex and difficult it really is to develop in a modern environment… I think we’re going to have people seeing from a new perspective. I think we’re going to get people that really want to help and really want to change the way we’re currently doing things. There really is a better way to do it.” 

    “We just need things to be simpler, easier, shorter and less costly,” Howard said. “The more regulation and time you add on, the cost gets added on. That’s decreased affordability. I don’t think (opponents) that are fighting these projects really understand how much they’re hurting their kids, their families, their coworkers that are having a hard time finding housing.” 

    affordability affordable housing attainable housing economic development Elliot D. Pollack entitlement Home Arizona housing supply League of Arizona Cities and Towns Nico Howard NIMBY NPR regulation Urban Land Institute W.P. Carey School of Business zoning
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Surprise Council Approves Rezone for Church Campus

    May 29, 2026

    Dirty Data Does a Disservice to AI  

    May 29, 2026

    Ariz. Construction Down 800 Jobs in April, 3,100 Year-over-Year

    May 26, 2026

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Our Picks

    Surprise Council Approves Rezone for Church Campus

    May 29, 2026

    Dirty Data Does a Disservice to AI  

    May 29, 2026

    Kingman Council Approves Master Plan Commercial Requests

    May 29, 2026

    Arizona Projects 05-29-26

    May 29, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • LinkedIn
    • YouTube
    Don't Miss
    Uncategorized

    Surprise Council Approves Rezone for Church Campus

    May 29, 20260

    By Roland Murphy for AZBEX The Surprise City Council has given its blessing to a…

    Dirty Data Does a Disservice to AI  

    May 29, 2026

    Kingman Council Approves Master Plan Commercial Requests

    May 29, 2026

    Arizona Projects 05-29-26

    May 29, 2026

    BEX serves architecture, engineering and construction firms as well as all the ancillary product and service categories that market to them. These include manufacturing representatives, public agencies and private real estate organizations, specialty subcontractors and services providers related to our industry.

    Our Picks

    Surprise Council Approves Rezone for Church Campus

    May 29, 2026

    Dirty Data Does a Disservice to AI  

    May 29, 2026

    Kingman Council Approves Master Plan Commercial Requests

    May 29, 2026
    Contact Us

    Phone: 480-709-4190
    Address: P.O. Box 12196 Tempe, AZ 85284
    Email: sales@azbex.com

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.