January 8, 2020 Page 5 Housing and a Backup Plan C ontinued from f ront older people who are “always on the receiving end, and the first ones out the door,” she said. “My idea is to work with community college districts to see if we can get folks trained in different career paths so they can have a backup plan.” Horner served previously as executive director of economic development for the city of Ox- nard, Calif. but her department was eliminated after California decided to pull redevelopment funds from cities to help balance its budget. That hurt California, she said, because 20 percent of property tax revenue went toward affordable housing, and now it can’t catch up with the demand. But PCRI is working hard to win that battle in Portland and the state of Oregon. “We are a nonprofit affordable housing entity and we lead in this industry for Portland, especially when you’re talking about getting communities of color into afford- able housing, PCRI is leading the way,” she said. “We sort of set the tone on how affordable housing should be developed in this com- munity.” PCRI builds and manages multi-family properties for rental and buys, develops and sells con- dos and houses to expand home ownership. Work is almost com- plete on a 70-unit apartment com- plex in the 6000 block of Northeast Martin Luther King Boulevard for income-restricted rentals, and over the years the organization has bought hundreds of homes and sold them to low-income residents at below market prices. Down payment assistance to help future homeowners can come after applicants complete pro- grams that PCRI offers. “We don’t just pick people and put them into homes, we prepare them for home ownership that teaches people how to save and get into home ownership, even if it takes a couple of years,” Horner said. According to its website, PCRI “will preserve and manage afford- able, high quality, scattered site, single family homes; expand and manage our portfolio of small multiplexes; and acquire/develop multi-family housing to preserve affordable housing choices in our community.” That overall goal includes Path- way 1000, which will take on new life once Horner hires a new hous- ing director early this year. “Once that person is hired we will be moving full steam ahead,” she said. “We’re looking within our portfolio for land that could be used to construct new units.” Horner has 42 employees at present, and though they’ve al- most outgrown their location in a historic house at 6329 N.E. Mar- tin Luther King Blvd., she says they’re going to try and stay put. “We are a landmark and des- tination place for people of color and those who have had challeng- es in terms of creating home own- ership and home stability,” she said. “This is a place where people come and shed their tears over this table and we tell you how to cor- rect your situation and get ready for either home ownership or how to get into our affordable rental projects. It’s beautiful.” In addition to overseeing the daily operations of PCRI, which manages over 700 units of afford- able housing, Horner now puts renewed emphasis on Pathway 1000, a project with an estimated cost of $250 million that is pro- jected to provide $875 million in economic impact for communities of color and will encourage gener- ational wealth. Building housing is very ex- pensive because of the high cost of land, she said, pointing to the collaboration and partnerships needed to get it done, along with a lot of creative thinking. Horner said one new way to add housing stock that’s gaining momentum is for homeowners to build ADUs, or additional dwell- ing units, on their property. “We’re working with Haci- enda, another nonprofit housing team, and other nonprofits to build ADUs onto properties, starting with a prototype of 527 square feet, the dollar amount that pencils out to a little more than $100,000 to construct that unit,” she said. “But what we’re trying to do is get that property owner trained up and in reality being an entrepreneur… we think that individual home- owner will receive about $200 a month income stream.” Portland is way ahead of other communities in battling the hous- ing crisis, Horner said, and one reason is that the city realizes its past mistakes in displacing com- munities of color in the name of “progress.” “This organization started in 1994 and has been through some very challenging things that hap- pened to the African American community,” Horner said. “The city’s recognized that and that to me is rare and an oddity, that the city recognizes that displacement, that mistakes have been made, and so they have a commitment to correct that. That’s what Pathway 1000 speaks to.” To learn more about PCRI, call 503-288-2923 or log onto pcri- home.org.