Gov. Josh Stein joins panel to discuss, debate housing affordability and supply crisis
High construction costs, labor shortages and supply chain issues all contribute to soaring housing costs and supply shortages, Gov. Josh Stein said Tuesday. But the state's growing popularity as a destination for transplants is also a big part of the problem, Stein said.
The governor noted that North Carolina is the third fastest growing state since the last census. The state, he said, added more people than any other except Texas and Florida. 'There are just a lot of people moving here and houses aren't being built fast enough,' Stein said.
When people move to North Carolina, Stein said, they need a place to stay and when there is a shortage of available units, newcomers, who often come with higher salaries and larger bank accounts, are willing to pay more for housing.
'And then it means everybody else is left to struggle,' he said.
Stein made his remarks during a roundtable discussion in Raleigh with more than a half-dozen housing experts and elected officials. The event was held at Milner Commons, a 156-unit public/private venture on Russ Street in Raleigh that was built to house seniors 55 and older with modest incomes.
Tuesday's meeting was an opportunity for Stein to discuss solutions to the housing crisis with housing experts and local officials and to consider legislation and public policy initiatives to speed up the building process to boost the state's housing supply.
'Our state is growing, and people need a safe and affordable place to live,' Stein said. 'We will remain focused on identifying solutions to lower the cost of housing for North Carolinians at every stage of life and work to ensure every person has a safe place to call home.'
The housing crisis in North Carolina is real. The state faces a five-year housing inventory gap of 764,478 units (322,360 rental units and 442,118 for-sale units), according to a recent statewide report commissioned by the NC Chamber Foundation, NC REALTORS and the N.C. Homebuilders Association.
And across the country, people, particularly those with low incomes, are finding rents increasingly unaffordable. A recent report by the National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC) found a national shortage of 7.1 million affordable and available rental homes for extremely low-income renter households – those with incomes at or below the poverty level or 30% of their area median income, whichever is greater. This means that there are just 35 affordable and available rental homes for every 100 extremely low-income renter households nationwide.
North Carolina was slightly better off than the nation as a whole, but only slightly. The report revealed that only 41 affordable and available rental homes are available for every 100 of the 332,199 extremely low-income households in the state.
Even though Milner Commons is considered an affordable property, Yolanda Winstead, president and CEO of DHIC, the nonprofit that developed the senior community, said the rents are higher than DHIC would like because construction costs grew and interest rates continued to increase during the development process.
'With those things happening in real time as we're trying to get it on the ground, we had to fill the gaps that we experienced,' Winstead said.
Raleigh City Councilman Corey Branch said affordable housing developers are facing funding challenges that require government assistance due to higher construction costs and other development obstacles.
'A lot of the costs developers are facing, people don't see,' Branch said. 'So those are the things that we see and continue to put money into … but if you raise property taxes, then you're impacting the people you're trying to help.'
Samuel Gunter, executive director of the NC Housing Coalition, said it is critical to focus on increasing the state's housing supply.
'If we're not fixing and making sure that we have enough supply, then all of the other stuff we do to subsidize and stabilize [housing] is just not going to go far,' Gunter said.
Scott Farmer, executive director of the NC Housing Finance Agency, said the preservation of existing homes is often overlooked in the struggle to provide safe and affordable housing. One of the agency's most important tools is its Urgent Repair Program, which finances emergency repairs for low-income homeowners who are elderly or have disabilities and whose incomes are below 50% of the area media, Farmer said.
'We're able to go in and do small scale repairs to keep people in their homes,' Farmer said. 'Being able to open $17,000 to keep somebody in their house for an additional five years goes a long way toward saving those [state and federal] dollars because in an institutional setting, we know that's going to cost the state and federal government a lot more money.'
Stein's proposed state budget included $60 million to leverage federal and private resources to build more housing for low-income families, veterans, seniors and people with disabilities, he said. His proposal also includes $15 million for the Workforce Loan Program to aid in the construction and repair of affordable housing. He said he supports bipartisan proposals in the General Assembly to cut red tape and make it easier to build more homes. Budgets advanced by state lawmakers, however, have not been nearly so ambitious.
State Sen. Julie Mayfield (D-Buncombe) said getting legislation passed to ease construction restrictions has been difficult this legislative session. Mayfield has introduced several housing-related bills including one that would allow more mixed-used developments across the state.
'We're working on it, but we haven't gotten anything passed yet,' Mayfield said. 'It's a little challenging … but I'm not giving up until that gavel comes down.'
Mayfield said voting to increase density in many communities across the state has proven to be a 'one-way ticket to getting unelected.'
'Now, there are enlightened communities like Raleigh and Chapel Hill and Durham and Asheville where that's not so much the case, but we have some communities who are not there.' As a fan of local government, Mayfield said she doesn't like telling local officials what to do. But adopting state laws to increase density could give resistant communities a much-needed nudge.
'These bills are not trying to be punitive to local governments; they're just trying to say we're [lawmakers] going to take this problem and pull it up here, so you don't have political risk around it anymore,' Mayfield said.
Homebuilder D.R. Bryan said local ordinances restricting density slows the development process and makes it difficult to build multi-family homes, which helps to increase the housing supply.
Another obstacle, Bryan said, is city and town employees who continue to work from home five years after the pandemic. He said the practice also slows the development process. Many builders prefer to meet face-to-face to discuss project rather than over Zoom, he said.
'The people who are reviewing our plans, we're having to communicate through email and maybe Zoom, and you just can't get it done,' Bryan said. 'You need to sit there and either have paper plans or a computer and say, 'OK, what do you mean here or there?''
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

6 days ago
North Carolina Gov. Stein signs stopgap budget bill and vetoes opt-in bill helping school choice
RALEIGH, N.C. -- North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein signed into law on Wednesday a stopgap spending measure while lawmakers remain in a state budget impasse. But he vetoed legislation that would direct state participation in a yet-implemented federal tax credit program to boost school-choice options, suggesting state Republicans acted hastily. The Democratic governor had already said this week he would sign the 'mini-budget' that the GOP-controlled General Assembly sent him last week. But he called it a poor substitution for a full two-year budget that House and Senate negotiators were unable to finalize before the new fiscal year began July 1. Instead, Stein said, the spending plan fails to provide substantive pay raises or the full amount needed to cover increased Medicaid expenses. Health and Human Services Secretary Dev Sangvai said the additional $600 million provided annually for Medicaid is hundreds of millions short and unless addressed would require reducing optional services, provider rates or both. 'This Band-Aid budget fails to invest in our teachers and students, fails to keep families safe, fails to value hardworking state employees, and fails to fully fund health care," Stein said in a news release. 'Despite these serious reservations, I am signing this bill into law because it keeps the lights on.' The new law does cover anticipated enrollment changes for K-12 schools and community colleges, as well as for experience-based pay raises already in state law for teachers. There is also over $800 million for state construction projects and funds for state employee retirement and health care. It also creates a new agency for State Auditor Dave Boliek, who is tasked by year's end to recommend which state offices and positions should be eliminated. Some Republican budget-writers have said that Medicaid spending could be adjusted later during the fiscal year. Stein's veto seeks to block a decision by North Carolina legislative leaders to join the tax-credit program contained in President Donald Trump's tax and spending bill that he signed into law last month. The program provides starting in 2027 a one-to-one credit equal to up to $1,700 for those who donate to certain 'scholarship granting organizations,' with those distributing K-12 private-school scholarships among them. The federal law said each state must opt in to the program, and North Carolina Republicans who have already greatly expanded state-funded scholarships wanted North Carolina to be the first to do so. Stein's veto message aligned with arguments by Democratic state legislators who voted against the state measure last week that the program shifts federal funding away from helping public schools and helps wealthy people who can already afford private school for their children. 'Congress and the Administration should strengthen our public schools, not hollow them out,' Stein wrote. By opting in, North Carolina-based scholarship organizations would benefit while costing state government no revenues. The tax credit program is also designed to benefit organizations that provide aid for services for students who attend public schools. Stein said he would opt in to the program for the state once the federal government issued sound written guidance on program rules because he sees opportunities to 'benefit North Carolina's public school kids.' So, he added, the bill on his desk is 'unnecessary.' The vetoed bill now returns to the General Assembly, where override votes could happen as early as Aug. 26. Republicans are but one House seat shy of a veto-proof majority, and last week lawmakers were able to gain the Democratic support needed to override eight of Stein's 14 earlier vetoes. Two House Democrats voted for the tax credit bill. Republican Senate leader Phil Berger said Wednesday that with the veto Stein is "attempting to usurp the General Assembly's authority to set tax policy' and anticipated a veto override "to ensure North Carolina can participate in President Trump's signature school choice initiative.' Stein also signed Wednesday legislation creating an expedited removal process for homeowners and landlords to remove people unauthorized to live on their property. He had previously vetoed another bill containing the language because a provision involving pet shop animal sales was added. But the legislature sent him a new measure last week with the pet shop item absent.
Yahoo
01-08-2025
- Yahoo
NC Senate Race: Cooper leads Whatley with young, independent voters: Poll
RALEIGH, N.C. (WNCN) — The first Emerson College/CBS 17 poll of the 2026 U.S. Senate race in North Carolina gives a six-point edge to former Governor Roy Cooper (D), who launched his campaign Monday. His opponent—Republican National Committee Chair Michael Whatley—announced his entry into the race Thursday. That came a week after sources close to Whatley confirmed his plans to run on July 24, the same day Laura Trump announced on X that she would not be running. With more than a year to go before ballots are cast, this initial poll offers an early snapshot of where Cooper and Whatley stand with voters. Emerson College Polling surveyed 1,000 North Carolinians from July 28–30. Of those respondents, 359 identified as Republicans, 311 as Democrats, and 329 as independents or other. Candidate Favorability Cooper holds a six-point favorability edge over Whatley among all 1,000 participants in the poll. One factor likely contributing to Cooper's edge is name recognition — a point highlighted by a poll question that asked voters how they view each candidate. The percentage breakdown is below. Kimball explained how Whatley's low name recognition presents 'both a challenge and an opportunity.' While only 17% view him favorably, nearly two-thirds of voters either don't know him or are unsure, polling showed. 'That leaves room for his campaign to define him before his opponent does,' Kimball added. GOP Chair Michael Whatley officially announces run for US Senate in North Carolina In contrast, Cooper enters the race with significantly higher name recognition and a more favorable public image. The gap is much wider among independent voters, who favor Cooper 47% to 28%.Spencer Kimball, executive director of Emerson College Polling, also noted a sharp age divide:'Cooper has a 25-point edge on Whatley among voters under 50, 54% to 29%, whereas Whatley leads voters over 50 by 11 points, 52% to 41%,' he said. 'Cooper has a 25-point edge on Whatley among voters under 50, 54% to 29%, whereas Whatley leads voters over 50 by 11 points, 52% to 41%,' Kimball added. 'I love North Carolina': Former Governor Roy Cooper announces run for US Senate seat in 2026 As for retiring Senator Thom Tillis, he currently holds a 30% favorable rating and a 43% unfavorable rating. His retirement appears aligned with weak favorability: just 41% of Republican voters view him favorably, while 35% view him unfavorably. 'He's also underwater with independents, with 43% unfavorable and only 27% favorable,' Kimball noted. More on the Candidates Michael Whatley Whatley led the North Carolina Republican Party for nearly five years before being elected Republican National Committee chairman 17 months ago with Trump's backing. He's hoping to succeed GOP Sen. Thom Tillis, who announced just a month ago that he would not seek a third term after clashing with Trump and voting against the 'Big Beautiful Bill.' In a post on Truth Social last week, President Trump voiced his support for Whatley, giving him his 'complete and total endorsement' and referring to him as 'one of the most capable executives in our country.' The president also wrote, 'I have a mission for my friends in North Carolina, and that is to get Michael Whatley to run for the U.S. Senate.' On Thursday, Whatley used much of his launch speech to target Cooper, accusing him of 'offering North Carolina voters an extreme radical-left ideology — open borders, inflationary spending, and a weak America.' Roy Cooper Cooper brings a powerful record to the race: he has never lost a statewide election. His winning streak began in 1986 when he was elected to represent the 72nd district in the North Carolina House of Representatives. In 1991, he was appointed to the North Carolina Senate, a position he held for 10 years before winning six more statewide elections. Those victories earned him four terms as attorney general, from 2000 to 2016, and two terms as governor, elected in 2016 and re-elected in 2020. The day after Cooper announced his candidacy, former U.S. Rep. Wiley Nickel ended his campaign and threw his full support behind Cooper. The former governor's entry brings optimism to a party aiming to take back the Senate in 2026 with a net gain of four seats — a tall order in a year when many Senate races are in states Trump won easily in 2024. National Republican campaign strategists say Cooper's entry makes North Carolina a more difficult seat for the GOP to hold, though a Democrat hasn't won a Senate race in the traditionally competitive state since 2008, making it one that will be closely watched by the nation. For full results of the Emerson College poll, click here. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

USA Today
01-08-2025
- USA Today
What if I told you there's a Democrat who can still get the Republican vote?
Former NC Gov. Roy Cooper is already giving the national Democratic Party a masterclass in how to run a successful campaign in battleground states. After months of speculation, former North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper announced on July 28 that he would be running for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Sen. Thom Tillis. It's only been a few days, but Cooper is already giving the national Democratic Party a masterclass in how to run a successful campaign in battleground states. Cooper, who has never lost an election, has the popularity and experience needed to flip a seat for the Democrats, who haven't won a U.S. Senate race in North Carolina since 2008. As a born and raised North Carolinian, I have seen these qualities firsthand. North Carolina has been MAGA country since 2016, when President Donald Trump first won the state. The past two U.S. Senate races were expensive and disappointing for Democrats. Within the state, partisan gerrymandering and a voter ID law make it harder for Democrats to win. While Cooper isn't the singular answer to slowing Republican dominance in the state, he is the first candidate in a long time who seems to have a fighting chance. Roy Cooper's economic track record is good for everybody North Carolina's economy, once burdened by the decline of factory and agriculture jobs, thrived under Cooper's leadership. During his two terms as governor, the state added more than 640,000 jobs from companies like Toyota, Apple and Eli Lilly. The state was also ranked America's Top State for Business by CNBC for two consecutive years based on economic investments, its workforce and the state's debt management. Opinion: Men don't like how Trump treats the economy. Democrats must cash in on that. 'For too many Americans, the middle class feels like a distant dream,' Cooper says in the video announcing his campaign. 'Meanwhile, the biggest corporations and the richest Americans have grabbed unimaginable wealth at your expense.' If his first ad is any indication, the Senate candidate seems to be running on a populist message that is likely to resonate. It's a move that Democrats have been shy to make as they crumble under the MAGA reign, but it's a move that could fare well in a state dominated by Republicans. Republicans cut Medicaid. Cooper expanded access for North Carolinians. A crowning achievement of Cooper's tenure as governor is the state's expansion of Medicaid in 2023, which brought coverage to an additional 600,000 North Carolinians. He fought for that expansion for years. Considering that Medicaid is one of the things Republicans in Congress placed on the chopping block recently, Cooper's hand in bringing access to more North Carolinians is sure to bode well for the former governor. Democrats, again, could learn from this: It's not enough to talk about social issues. Medicaid just got cut in the federal spending bill, and hundreds of thousands of North Carolinians will likely lose coverage, including those who benefited from Medicaid expansion. This is an issue they can win on, and one that would show they care about what everyday Americans are facing. The simplest reason? Roy Cooper's actually likable. Cooper's biggest draw, however, may be how deeply his roots are in the state. He grew up in Nash County and attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He was a lawyer and Sunday School teacher in Rocky Mount before entering politics. He spent several Halloweens dressed up as Sheriff Andy Taylor from 'The Andy Griffith Show." He's taken other Democrats to Cook Out for fast foods on the campaign trail. He's such a North Carolinian, in fact, that I wondered if he'd ever take the plunge into national politics. 'I never really wanted to go to Washington,' Cooper says in his announcement video. 'I just wanted to serve the people of North Carolina right here, where I've lived all my life. But these are not ordinary times.' Opinion: Tillis' departure signifies troubling shift. Can any Republican stand up to Trump? It's a reminder to the national Democratic Party that a quality candidate is also a candidate who loves where they're from. A candidate with deep roots in the community is a candidate who can win elections. There's still merit to the idea that a good candidate is someone you can imagine drinking a beer on the front porch with, especially in the South. Cooper is clearly a promising candidate who could break through the Republican stronghold in a state that's gone for Trump three elections in a row. But he'll face an uphill battle in the form of Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Whatley, who was selected by Trump. Republicans are already on the attack, accusing the former governor of "dragging North Carolina left," criticizing his vetoes and complaining that he competently handled the COVID-19 pandemic. Still, this is the same governor who got more votes than Trump in the 2020 election – his odds are better than one might expect for a purple state. Cooper's finances are already showing the promise of his Senate campaign, as he raised $3.4 million in the first 24 hours, setting a fundraising record. If people can get behind a liberal Democrat from rural North Carolina, imagine what would happen if there were candidates of this caliber in all battleground states. Follow USA TODAY columnist Sara Pequeño on X, formerly Twitter: @sara__pequeno