Planet Money - How to fix a housing shortage
Episode Date: August 30, 2024When Cody Fischer decided to get into real estate development, he had a vision. He wanted to build affordable, energy efficient apartments in Minneapolis, not far from where he grew up.His vision was ...well-timed because, in 2019, Minneapolis's city council passed one of the most ambitious housing plans in the nation. One aim of that plan was to alleviate the city's housing shortage by encouraging developers like Cody to build, build, build.But when Cody tried to build, he ran into problems. The kinds of problems that arise all over the country when cities confront a short supply of housing, and try to build their way out.Today on the show, NIMBYism, YIMBYism and why it's so hard to fix the housing shortage. Told through the story of two apartment buildings in Minneapolis.This episode was hosted by Amanda Aronczyk and Kenny Malone. It was produced by Emma Peaslee and Sofia Shchukina, and edited by Molly Messick. It was engineered by James Willets and fact-checked by Sierra Juarez. Alex Goldmark is Planet Money's executive producer. Help support Planet Money and hear our bonus episodes by subscribing to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/planetmoney.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Real estate developer Cody Fisher and I are standing facing a big old house.
We're at the intersection of Minnehaha Avenue and 36th Street in south Minneapolis.
The house has got brown stucco and yellow siding.
To me, it looks, I don't know, like a big house
with yellow siding on a corner lot.
To Cody, this looks like a great place to build.
Mini Ha Ha's, it's a busier street
with dedicated bike lanes, high frequency transit.
When you say high frequency transit,
I picture something amazing,
but you're just talking about buses, right?
Yes, yeah. I am. That's the advocate in me.
Yeah, Cody seems to be one of those
relentlessly optimistic types.
Their buses? Amazing.
He used to work at nonprofits
on issues like food security and hunger.
Cody also worked for Chicago Public Schools.
He got an MBA.
And now, Cody is, optimistically, of course,
trying to fix one of the country's
toughest policy problems.
Housing.
Housing.
As you're probably aware, we're living through
a massive housing shortage, and that's driving up
home prices all over the country.
If you want to solve a housing shortage,
advocates and economists and experts agree,
we need to build more housing.
Build an abundance of housing. And Cody, this is his mission.
Cody started a company called Footprint Development, and it only builds energy-efficient, carbon-smart housing.
This is what gets Cody up in the morning. He wants to build a lot of this kind of housing. And that is why he's managed to get the development rights for the corner lot on Minnehaha Avenue
and 36th Street. He plans to take down that one yellow house in order to put up much more
housing in the same space.
So we have a four-story, 32-unit mixed-use building planned for here.
Four-story, 32-unit?
32 unit.
32 units.
Okay.
Yes, yeah.
So it'll be a mix of studios, one bed and two bed units.
These small to midsize apartment buildings
that Cody wants to build,
they don't get built much these days.
Because of that, they have this special name,
the missing middle.
It's called the missing middle
because we get a lot of single family homes in North America.
We get a lot of huge 100 plus unit apartment buildings.
And for many decades, we haven't been getting that missing middle housing scale.
Missing middle buildings are considered this really important potential fix for the housing crisis,
because, you know, think about it on this lot, you could have one house with yellow siding but it could also fit something the size of Cody's proposed
apartment building with with room for 32 people or couples or families.
Minneapolis called for all kinds of new housing including missing middle
buildings when it passed one of the most ambitious housing plans in the nation
few years back.
And so last September, Cody got the main approval he needed for his plan to replace that yellow
house.
The vote was, in fact, unanimous.
But then, before he could drink champagne out of his hard hat or whatever, a problem
popped up that was so big that a ton of new construction in Minneapolis was forced to
stop, including Cody's unanimously approved apartment building.
So it was actually the same day that I got the approvals,
and within an hour that I got that news.
So I didn't celebrate.
I actually was, it was devastating.
It went from soaring high and feeling good
to, you know, getting a gut punch
and wondering what the future of the project was.
From one day to the next, to getting a gut punch and wondering what the future of the project was.
From one day to the next, a city that thought it was on its way
to solving a housing crisis
was no longer building the new homes it needed.
Hello and welcome to Planet Money, I'm Amanda Oranjic.
And I'm Kenny Malone.
When Minneapolis passed its big plan,
it became a kind of testing ground
for lots of new ideas
about how to fix housing. Housing experts and advocates from all across the country were looking
on to see, will these new policies actually work? And if so, could Minneapolis be a model for other
cities? Today on the show, the story of Minneapolis's big housing experiment. We'll tell it through two buildings and the fight to get them built.
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When Cody Fisher was thinking about how to get into this
fix the housing crisis real estate stuff,
he tried to find other developers who were also interested
in building green housing,
but he kept running into dead ends.
I couldn't find anybody that was doing stuff
the way that I would want to do it,
which is energy efficient, low carbon and smaller scale.
And so I just didn't think there was a career there for me.
But then in 2018, Cody gets word of something
that changes his mind and puts him all in
on building climate friendly middle-sized apartments.
He hears that Minneapolis is working on some set
of bold new housing policies,
and they're all part of a city plan called
Minneapolis 2040, which sounds like an Olympics bid,
but no.
So what the Minneapolis 2040 plan did
was lay out exactly how big you can build,
what shape it can take, you know,
what the city wants in all these different areas.
And what does the city want and how do they plan to get it?
Well, for that, we went to Nick Erickson.
He's a housing policy expert
who works with developers in Minnesota.
The first thing I asked Nick when we met up was,
could he show me a copy of the Minneapolis plan?
We did not assume that he would hear that and think,
could you print a copy of the Minneapolis plan?
The printer on the last 15 pages, 20 pages, got jammed and stopped working. It's a massive document.
So you broke the printer? Broke the printer, yep. It is more than 1200 pages, so that would be the
equivalent of probably War and Peace or Les Mis. I mean, it's a large document.
It's actually longer than War and Peace and Nick.
Nick talks about the Minneapolis plan
as though when it was published,
it entered the canon of great works.
It didn't just say this is what we're going to do and why.
It was very clear saying this is the roadmap
of how we're going to get there.
The plan was a big deal for a lot of reasons,
but there was one thing in particular
that really made headlines.
Minneapolis became the first major city in the nation
to get rid of single-family zoning.
It got rid of zoning that stipulates
you can only have housing for one family on this lot.
That's it.
Right, so one way to think about what is happening here
is that if you do live in a bucolic family
neighborhood with lovely historic homes, well, any of those houses could now theoretically
be turned into a duplex or a triplex or in some places even like a middle-sized apartment
building.
And Minneapolis eased up on all kinds of other rules and regulations too.
They basically gave developers a path
towards quick and easy approvals,
all for this one big goal, right?
To build, to increase the supply of housing.
Now, this plan, it is huge.
It includes policies to address racial justice
and climate change, to increase housing density.
It has big goals.
And at the same time, as Nick points out, what is remarkable is how specific the plan
gets.
So you've got these neighborhood maps that you could probably zoom in if you had reading
glasses on and find your block in the city.
Yeah, like for example, if you look at the maps and pick a block, it'll say on this block
we want new construction that's between two and six stories tall.
But on this other block, downtown,
we want new construction to be at least 10 stories tall.
And so broadly what Minneapolis is up to
with this approach is an idea that became popular
in the mid 2010s.
You know, you may have heard about this before,
but instead of people being nimbies about new developments,
not in my backyard, people need to become yimbies.
Like, yes, build things in my backyard.
We asked Nick to show us an example of a new building
that could only have come into existence
because of the city's plan.
If you need to adjust the seat, feel free.
Thank you.
So we are driving down a commercial main street.
We pass a car mechanic, some breweries, a coffee shop,
and then we take a turn onto a residential street.
Here's the building we're gonna see right here,
this blue and white one.
Now in our tale of two buildings,
this building came first.
It's a brand new four story apartment building.
They're rentals, and they just went on the market in March.
And for Nick, this is a perfect example
of the kind of new missing middle housing
that Minneapolis says it wants.
This building has 23 apartments,
and it replaced a small single family house
that was built back in the 1970s.
Really, you know, highlights this neighborhood
in-fill project where you're taking what was probably really, you know, highlights this neighborhood infill project
where you're taking what was probably a home or two
and turning it into several more units here.
Now, Nick said infill there, which is essentially the housing world's term
for adding housing by repurposing land in the city,
as opposed to, like, the sprawl version,
where you're building brand new subdivisions further and further outside of the city on
undeveloped land. This only exists because you can do something beyond a
single-family home in this neighborhood. This blue and white building not only
has solar panels and draft-free triple pane windows it also has some you know
fun amenities. We walked up and looked inside. It also has some fun amenities.
We walked up and looked inside.
You have a pet washing station.
There is a pet washing station.
This is the most millennial building I've ever seen.
It is.
And they've got a bike room and a pet washing station.
And I think that somebody's vinyl collection over there
couldn't quite make out if it was a good vinyl collection or not.
Hope so.
Now, look, this blue and white building, it is exactly the kind of project that the city theoretically
paved the way for.
It's increasing the density, check.
It's energy efficient, check.
It's near public transit, check.
And of course, that meant that it got built with zero problems and no controversy at all.
Yeah, no.
No.
It turned into a messy fight.
The neighbors hated it.
They did not like the idea of an apartment building
going up on their block.
We were standing outside the building
when our tour guide, Nick,
gestures for me to look at something.
I do want to show you this real quick.
Yeah.
He points out a sign staked in the yard
of the house right next door.
So this is emblematic of the housing policy discussion.
They're the sign that says, neighbors sacrificing for developers' pocketbooks.
So this is the least catchy slogan I've ever seen.
It is a tiny little sign.
It is on the gray single family home
right next to this brand new apartment.
And it's facing the apartment.
This is what we call Minnesota passive aggressive.
That's just how we do things here.
We'll put a passive aggressive lawn sign up
that our neighbors have to look at.
This sign is a leftover from a fight
that sounds like it got aggressive aggressive.
Yes, regular aggressive.
Regular normal aggressive.
Because what happened here is a kind of fight that we have gotten used to seeing
whenever a bigger development is proposed in a residential neighborhood.
Our final discussion item this evening is item number 12.
When the blue and white building was proposed, there was an online meeting of the city's
planning commission and people from pretty much every house on the block showed up.
This is just an ill-conceived place to put this property, and I totally object to it.
They said the building is going to ruin the cute residential street.
If this apartment building wasn't built, we would only see a wall.
That it would bring congestion.
He is providing no parking.
And it would cost them money.
What it's going to do to our property values in proximity to that is not fair.
If you are happy living in your residential neighborhood, yeah, many of these things would
be a drag, but also kind of classic nimby situation here.
Now that proposal for the blue and white apartment building, it actually came from a developer
you've already met, Cody Fischer, the relentlessly optimistic developer from the very beginning
of our story.
Because of all the pushback from the neighbors, the Planning Commission initially rejected
his proposal, which Cody found totally baffling.
We followed the design requirements that the city had to the T, and so it was supposed
to be kind of a rubber stamp approval.
Like that's what was supposed to happen.
Yeah, you know, the city had basically told him to propose this kind of missing middle
building when they passed that ambitious housing policy.
And then when the neighbors said they didn't like the building, the city's Planning
Commission was like, yeah you know what, no you're not allowed to build it.
Oof, right. So we ran this particular situation past a housing policy
journalist whose work I really like. Yeah, my name is Jerusalem Demsis. I'm a
staff writer at The Atlantic. Jerusalem has reported on this housing situation in Minneapolis and in other places.
And she's got a book coming out called On the Housing Crisis, Land Development Democracy.
And her observation about what Cody ran into is this is a tricky thing about the way government
works at a local level.
Right.
You know, there are these things that we say we want that we idealize, like civic engagement
and people having a voice. There are these things that we say we want that we idealize, like civic engagement and
people having a voice.
But when it comes down to the need to build more housing, which is more of a big collective
need, it tends to be that the preferences of just a few people, like the neighbors,
can get in the way of that.
I'm not saying the people on that local block don't deserve a say.
They do.
But they're not the only ones affected by these decisions.
Jerusalem's saying, think about the people who would like to live in this neighborhood.
Like say there's someone who's about to move to Minneapolis for a job, but they can't find
a place to live.
That person also has a stake in whether this apartment building goes up or not.
But they are probably not showing up to the city planning commission and saying that they
want the building into the microphone there. And so Jerusalem says that local governments are in a
way not asking the right questions when they hold these public meetings about
proposed development. Like they tend to be like the mic is open so immediate
neighbors what do you guys think about this new building? We've created
institutions at the local level where you ask people hey do you want things to stay the same or do you want things to change in some
unknown way? And of course people are like, no, don't change how things are. I
feel pretty happy with the current way my neighborhood looks and I'm scared of
what that change might look like. Instead, Jerusalem says that the starting point
should be there's a housing crisis. We have to build 10,000 new homes over the next 10 years.
Where do you want that to go?
The question is not yes or no to this new building.
It's where do you want it to go?
Because it's going to have to happen.
According to some estimates,
we need about 5 million new homes nationwide.
Now, obviously Cody's blue and white building
eventually did get built with a pet washing station, of course.
But he had to hire a lawyer and lobbyists and he also had some environmental
groups on his side and he managed to win that fight.
But clearly if any new development can be derailed by angry neighbors, that is an enormous
weakness of Minneapolis's ambitious plan to fix a housing shortage.
The other building in the story, the apartment building that Cody still has planned for the
corner of Minnehaha and 36th Street, where there's currently that big old yellow house,
that building got stuck in a much bigger and much more intractable fight.
A fight that teaches us something about trying to fix not just Minneapolis' housing crisis,
but the whole country's.
That's after the break. something about trying to fix not just Minneapolis's housing crisis, but the whole country's.
That's after the break.
Truth.
Independence.
Fairness.
Transparency.
Respect.
Excellence.
This is NPR.
Okay, so we promised you a tale of two buildings. The first one, the missing middle apartment building with the pet washing station.
That got built after a protracted expensive fight.
But our story's second building, it still has not been built.
So my building has four floors on it.
So we are back at the old yellow house
at the corner of Minnehaha and 36th,
and we're here with the real estate developer
Cody Fischer again.
And in theory, the yellow house on that lot
should not still be standing.
Like Cody was planning to have it deconstructed already.
Right, and we are saying deconstructed
instead of demolished because Cody,
who's trying to build new housing
in the most environmentally sound way that he can,
he doesn't just knock down the buildings he's replacing.
It's much more painstaking than that.
So taking it apart board by board, piece by piece,
basically what you're left with is, you know, a concrete basement hole filled with sheetrock.
Pretty much everything else gets diverted from the landfill.
That way, a lot of the materials get recycled or reused instead of ending up in the trash.
But, ironically, Cody's very green apartment buildings were not allowed to go forward, ostensibly for environmental reasons.
Here's what happened.
A group of environmentalists sued the city
over its big plan, saying that the whole plan
should have gone through an environmental review,
you know, the same way a lot of major new developments would.
Right, so like not suing Cody's project or another project,
the entire plan.
And what they were arguing is that the plan would increase housing
density in a way that could be harmful for the city's water and air and ecosystem.
Then, last September, the judge who was considering the case agreed that the city needed to do
an environmental review, and imposed a temporary injunction that brought a lot of new development
to a halt. It was a massive
curveball. At that time we were working towards starting construction in April
of 2024 and then the city was like, nope, we can't issue permits, you know,
completely on hold indefinitely. The journalist Jerusalem Dempsis says this
particular fight is rooted in big generational
differences.
She says, you know, older people like Gen X and baby boomers, they often see development
as bad.
And to be fair, they picture very disruptive events that happened in the past.
You know, they pictured neighborhoods being displaced, highways plowing through open land,
paradise being
paved over for parking lots.
In the past?
Environmentalism meant green spaces.
It meant what you need to do is be a conservationist in your own right.
It means that you buy an old home and you fix it up.
And that's your sense of what environmentalism is.
That's very different than what I think is happening right now, which is for people like
me, you know, if is for people like me,
you know, if you were born after 1980, how you've been taught about the environment is almost entirely about climate change.
Specifically, fighting climate change by reducing carbon emissions. And cities appear to do that best. In dense places where people live all packed together, there are a lot of efficiencies, you know, like people live in smaller spaces,
which means they use less energy to heat and cool their homes. They use public transit more. And if they do have
cars, they tend to drive shorter distances.
Minneapolis isn't the only place where plans to increase the density of housing are being
challenged. There have been similar lawsuits in Los Angeles and DC and San Francisco and
other cities. Jerusalem says to her, all of this shows that there are limits to what a
city government can do
To me
I think the best way to make these decisions is to move a lot of decision-making process to the state level and say
We're gonna set clear standards and rules for what kinds of housing can be built where and state government
Swooping in is what ended up happening in Minneapolis
Eventually the Minnesota legislature came to a decision
They limited the legal challenges
that a comprehensive city plan can face.
And a few months ago in May, a giant bill
with that detail tucked into it was signed
by someone whose name you've probably heard a lot recently,
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz.
Immediately after he was put on the presidential ticket,
he and Vice President
Kamala Harris were dubbed the first ever Yimbi ticket.
And Jerusalem says that there are a bunch of states now trying to step into the housing
policy discussion, kind of like what happened in Minnesota.
You're seeing this in Colorado, in California, in Washington state, in Arizona, in Texas.
I mean, a lot of states
are realizing that you cannot leave this in the hands of local governments, not
because they're bad people, but because it's actually too big of a problem for
them to solve. Her big point is that this housing shortage we're experiencing is
not just a local issue, but too often we try to treat it like a local issue. For
Cody Fisher, the developer
who's trying to replace the big old yellow house with an apartment building,
he is now finally able to get started on his project again. But, you know, with
with development, it's like the approvals is just step one of 100. Again, there is
no time or desire, I guess, I don't know, to drink
celebratory champagne out of his hardhat. Absolutely not. No. It would be gross. It
would be sweaty, sweaty, sweaty champagne. But look, there was no time
because Cody had to get financing lined up and get a whole lot of people lined
up too. He's reaching out to his architect and structural engineer and
mechanical engineer and asking if they can be free like right now. There's no time to dwell on the delays he's faced.
He needs to plow ahead. I think this is just the work. Very optimistic. Tough to imagine why
after all the setbacks I know. But I think we're there.
But I think we're there. Cody now, optimistically, expects to start building on that corner lot in March 2025,
a year behind schedule.
Today's episode was produced by Emma Peasley and Sophia Shukena.
This episode was, in fact, herley and Sofia Shukena. This episode was in fact her idea and built on
her research. It was edited by Molly Messick, engineered by James Willits, and fact checked
by Ciara Juarez. Alex Goldmark is our executive producer. If you are like our newsletter writer,
Greg Groszalski, and you heard this episode and could only think, I wonder what else there is to
know about Governor Tim Walz's economic record, you can read about it in the Planet Money newsletter.
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Also while you're there, please subscribe, npr.org slash Planet Money newsletter.
Thank you this week to Tushar Khan Sal at Pew and Mavity, the executive director of
the Minnesota Housing Partnership, Libby Starling and Danielle Cabot at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, Realtor Andrea Voracek and new homeowners Charlie and Hannah.
I'm Amanda Oranczak.
And I'm Kenny Malone.
This is NPR.
Thanks for listening.