Ka Wai Ola - Office of Hawaiian Affairs, Volume 37, Number 8, 1 ʻAukake 2020 — Affordable Homesteads Through Habitat Partnership [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

Kōkua No ke kikokikona ma kēia Kolamu

Affordable Homesteads Through Habitat Partnership

J O KANŪHOU ĀINA V ^ HO'OPULAPULA f

By Cedric Duarte Over the past few months in this space, we've explored the unique ways the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands is providing diversified housing options to beneficiaries. Another way is through DHHL's self-help construction program with Habitat for Humanity nonprofits throughout the state. These partnerships, whieh have proved successful for many years, eomhine DHHL federal funding, in-kind donations of materials, and the sweat equity from beneficiary families, volunteers, loeal business, and contractors to provide a roof over the heads of some of the Department's most vulnerable families.

When DHHL builds out a lot, beneficiaries on the receiving end don't have to shoulder the cost of infrastracture. Utilizing legislative appropriations and revenues from available lands, the Department constracts roads, sewage systems, water pipes and all the infrastructure needed to prepare the homestead lot for the constraction of a home. In some cases, DHHL puts a home on these lots and the beneficiary pays for the vertical improvement. Over the past two years, the Department has prepared these vertical improvements in the form of turnkey houses for an average price of $358,000. The median home price for a single-

family home in the state of Hawai'i ballooned to $770,000 in 2019. While turnkey homes for less than 50 percent of the State's median home price are a welcomed relief for some applicants on the waiting list, there are others who find the cost remains out of reach. In 2012, DHHL leadership recognized the need to provide more affordable options for potential lessees. Among several initiatives to create more affordable options was an effort to increase the number of vacant lots offered to beneficiaries. A vacant lot does not require a pre-qualification from a bank and allows an applicant to take advantage of a prepared lot with the necessary infrastracture in plaee. With the need for more affordable options in mind, the Department refocused on offering these lot options and offered 54 vacant lots in 2019 for award. This is nearly a third of the number of vacant lots awarded in the previous 20 years. A vacant lot allows a beneficiary to constract a dwelling that is suitable to their needs. This could vary from a very affordable tiny home to a larger multi-generational house. Homesteaders may choose to work with a contractor, act as an owner/

builder, or enter into a self-help constraction program, like the partnerships DHHL has with Habitat nonprofits statewide. In one of the most recent success stories, DHHL and Honolulu Habitat for Humanity partnered on a new single-family home constraction that totaled a mere $267,000 to constract, coupled with a zero-interest mortgage made possible by federal funding through the Native American Housing Assistance and Self-Determination Act. Habitat homes and the generous strate1 gic partnership with the building nonprofit . have proved to be an important tool for

providing affordable homes on Hawaiian homelands. DHHL is forecast to build more Habitat homes throughout the state and is committed to a continued partnership with Habitat for Humanity to get more native Hawaiians back on the land in a way that meets their needs. ■ Cedric R. Duarte is the Information & Community Relations Officer for the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands. He has worked in eommunications and marketing since 1 999 and is a longtime event organizer. A product ofthe Kamehameha SchooIs and the JJniversity of Hawai'i at Mānoa, he resides in 'Aiea witli his wife and two daughters.

Shannon Show and 'ohana receive the keys to their new home built by Honolulu Habitat for Humanity in Kakaina, Waimōnalo. - Photo: DHHL