Corvallis Housing Development Task Force: Recommendations and Completion
| 
 | Recommendation | Completed | 
| 1.) | Establish a Construction Excise Tax (CET) | 2016 | 
| 2.) | Develop an inclusionary zoning program | On hold awaiting changes to State law to legalize inclusionary zoning | 
| 3.) | Approve financial incentives for the development of Accessory Dwelling Units (ADU)s by temporarily waiving System Development Charges (SDCs) for the development of ADUs | 2021 | 
| 4.) | Temporarily offer a low-interest or interest-free SDC payment deferral option | |
| 5.) | Amend the Land Development Code to remove the requirement that a property owner must occupy either the primary residence or the ADU | 2020 | 
| 6.) | Amend the Land Development Code to allow for the creation of more than one ADU on a single lot. (This concept has been integrated into the City’s Cottage Cluster standards which will allow multiple small units on a single lot.) | 2022 | 
| 7.) | Evaluate impacts of these ADU incentives annually (This occurs in the Land Development Inventory Report (LDIR)) | |
| 8.) | Re-evaluate System Development Charges (SDCs) methodologies to provide incentives for small/affordable unit construction or to allow waivers. | |
| 9.) | Act as a convener of meetings for affordable housing interests with an Annual Housing Summit and City staff currently working with Oregon and national affordable housing developers. | 2016-Ongoing | 
| 10.) | Receive and distribute donations of land and money for affordable housing | The City has not received donations of land or money for affordable housing. | 
| 11.) | Expand the Community Development staff capacity for affordable housing planning and for investigation and development of the policy concepts outlined. | 2019 | 
| 12.) | Fund the expanded staff capacity in the Community Development | 2019 | 
| 13.) | Dedicate a portion of the revenues from the CET to cover the costs of expanded planning and program development capacity. | 2019 | 
| 14.) | Implement Property Tax Incentive Programs 
 | 2023 | 
| 15.) | Implement City-sponsored/initiated annexations | No longer necessary due to State changes to the voter approval requirements for annexation. In addition, some City initiated annexations are identified in the SOP | 
| 16.) | Utilize development agreements to be applied in conjunction with other options (e.g. City-sponsored annexations or urban renewal for infrastructure). | Complete | 
| 17.) | Re-designate/rezone land for housing | 2018-Ongoing | 
| 18.) | Examine mixed use zones that allow residential development to determine why so little interest has been shown in that type of redevelopment. | Sept. 2022 (2022) | 
| 19.) | Use Urban Renewal to pay for the infrastructure extension to create housing | Spring 2022 (2022) | 
| 20.) | Encourage cottage/ clustered housing | June 2022 (2022) | 
| 21.) | Review allowable densities and create density bonuses for affordable housing, small homes, and housing in certain locations (transit corridors, major neighborhood centers, adjacent to parks) | 2021-2022 | 
| 22.) | Reduce parking requirements for low income or special needs housing | June 2022 (2022) | 
| 23.) | Parcel assembly/land banking, which could include banking of developed properties for rehabilitation and/or resale. | 2022 | 
| 24.) | Facilitate and support community land trusts as an affordable housing tool | 2013-Ongoing | 
| 25.) | Small/Tiny homes for homeless transitional housing | 2020 | 
| 
 | Increase the supply of developable residential land inside the city limits. | Monitored Annually as part of the LDIR | 
| 26.) | Work proactively with Oregon State University on plans, policies and practices related to on-campus student housing, including making close-in OSU lands available for the private development of student-faculty-staff housing. | Ongoing | 
| 27.) | Consider initiatives to incentivize off-campus student-oriented housing at specified locations. (The concept of “student oriented” implies regulation of the occupants of the housing which would be problematic from a Federal, State, and Local Fair Housing Perspective.) | The City has rezoned properties and created both regulatory and funding incentives to encourage more multi-family development. | 
| 28.) | Simplify housing-related elements of Land Development Code. | June 2022 (2022) | 
| 29.) | Develop strategies to incentivize the development of homes affordable to the “missing middle” (between 80% AMI and 120% AMI) without competing for the financial resources provided for low income housing. | June 2022 (2022) | 
| 30.) | Develop strategies to improve transitional housing for non-homeless populations (disabled, ex-offenders, and alcohol and drug treatment participants). | Nov. 2021-Ongoing | 



