LOVELAND’S HOUSING CRISIS ENDS HERE!

Together We Can Solve Our Housing Shortage


In survey after survey, Loveland residents report that home affordability is our community's biggest challenge - and the data proves it. In a strategic effort to understand our housing crisis, eliminate roadblocks to affordability, and create lasting change, the Affordable Housing Task Force was convened in early 2021.

At monthly meetings, the task force brings together representatives from the private, public, quasi-government, and non-profit sectors. 

In 2022, the task force commissioned a study from Economic and Planning Systems, Inc. and learned the following:

  • Most of Northern Colorado’s household growth and housing market is being driven by affluent households. Over the past decade, 64 percent of growth in Larimer and Weld counties has been households earning more than 120 percent Area Medium Income (AMI) – approximately $80,000 for a two-person renter household and approximately $90,000 for a three-person owner household.

  • With the escalation of home prices and rents is the broader appreciation of the entire housing inventory. Over the decade, more than 5,800 rental units became unaffordable to households in the 30 to 60 percent AMI range (the “affordable housing” category) and approximately 7,700 owner units became unaffordable to households in the 50 to 80 percent AMI range (part of the “workforce housing” category).

  • In Loveland, where in 2018 there were nearly 36,000 jobs, just 8,100 employed residents lived and worked locally (23 percent). This means that 77 percent of Loveland’s jobs were held by workers living somewhere else.

Click here to see more of our EPS study analysis, which we presented to Loveland City Council in August 2022.

Task Force Accomplishments to date:

  • Unified Development Code Updates to allow for a diversified housing stock moving forward in Loveland.

  • Private/Non-profit/Quasi-governmental partnership to generate more of the right kind of housing.

  • Equitable Fee Study to ensure there is not a disincentive to building smaller units in Loveland.

  • Study to evaluate and quantify the problem in Loveland.

Who is on the Task Force?

Sam Betters - former executive director of the Loveland Housing Authority

David Gregg - Mission Homes

Eric Hull - Loveland Housing Authority

Eli Scott - Erion Foundation

Trish Warner - Affordable Housing Commission

Tami Lien - Affordable Housing Commission

Alison Hade - City of Loveland Community Partnership Office

Brett Limbaugh - City of Loveland

Cindi Werner - Habitat for Humanity

Jeff White - Habitat for Humanity

Don Marostica - Retired real estate developer, Larimer County commissioner, and state legislator 

Frankie Cole - ANB Bank

Jennifer Swanty- Affordable Housing Commission

Jammie Sabin - Aspen Homes

Kim Perry - McWhinney 

Michelle Ackerman - Habitat for Humanity

Megan Ferguson - Impact Development Fund/Impact Development Builders

Robert Dehn - Dehn Real Estate

Rod Wensing - City of Loveland

Alea Rodriguez - Larimer County