UNC-Chapel Hill collaborating with 22 counties to address affordable housing needs in North Carolina

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s Carolina Across 100 initiative announced on Wednesday that 14 community teams across North Carolina have been selected for the Our State, Our Homes program. The University will work with community teams to improve access to and availability of affordable housing options in the state. The teams – made up of business, civic, education, nonprofit, faith-based, and government entities representing 22counties from the mountains to the coast – will receive a variety of supports, all aimed at connecting their communities with the tools and resources needed to assess and make collaborative decisions on how to respond productively to local affordable housing contexts. 

The statewide program is offered in recognition of the growing challenges with housing affordability across the state. Nearly one-third of households in North Carolina are considered cost-burdened, meaning that they spend more than 30% of their income on housing. This lack of affordable housing options poses a barrier to attracting employers and workers, limits households’ economic positions, and adversely impacts health outcomes. 

Chancellor Lee H. Roberts announced the program, entitled “Our State, Our Homes” in September. 

This University exists to serve the people of this state. As such, the University is proud to offer this program bringing together expertson our campus and in communities, who are focused on addressing housing needs in our state,” said Chancellor Lee Roberts. Through Carolina Across 100, we are dedicated to responding to the greatest challenges facing communities in each of North Carolina’s 100 counties by bringing our many campus resources to bear to support them.”  

The selected groups represent urban, suburban, and rural areas across the state facing myriad challenges impacting housing supply including population growth, aging housing stock, environmental hazards, and rising construction costsRead the full list and view the map.  

Participating communities will emerge from the eighteen-month program with a data-driven understanding of housing issues in their local contexts, high-impact tools to facilitate community conversations around housing needs, a detailed understanding of local partners and assets, and increased knowledge and capacity to implement innovative strategies for improving housing affordability. In addition, teams will receive coaching, technical assistance with innovation projects, and opportunities to build relationships with peer communities as well as national, state, and campus-based housing experts across the state. These supports reflect the significant affordable housing expertise on campus, including from the UNC School of Government’s Development Finance Initiative. 

"Affordable housing needs are too complex for any one town or county to address alone," said Sarah Odio, associate director at DFI. "We are eager to connect local leaders with our specialized finance and development expertise as they collaborate with their peers across the state to spark new ideas for local solutions." 

Anita Brown-Graham, director of the ncIMPACT Initiative and lead coordinator for Carolina Across 100, said she was struck by the passion and dedication conducted by the groups who applied 

The demand for this program was strong, with countries showing interestUltimately, over half of our counties in NC appliedrepresenting the largest number of applicants for any Carolina Across 100 program.” Brown-Graham said. “We know this means other communities will want to learn from our work and we are committed to sharing program our resources and findings to help communities in all North Carolina counties benefit from Our State, Our Homes.   

Carolina Across 100 is a five-year initiative, led by the ncIMPACT Initiative, seeking to support community-driven recovery and build sustainable efforts in all 100 counties by providing human resources, data insights, coaching, facilitation, coordination efforts, and program design. “Our State, Our Homes” is the fifth program in this larger initiative. The program is funded by the Office of the Chancellor and private foundations. 

The ncIMPACT Initiative coordinates Carolina Across 100. impacts a statewide initiative launched by the UNC School of Government in 2017 to help local communities use data and evidence to improve conditions and inform decision-making. Visit ncimpact.org. 

The UNC-Chapel Hill School of Government established the Development Finance Initiative (DFI) in 2011 to assist local governments and their partners in North Carolina and beyond with achieving their community economic development goals. DFI partners with communities to attract private investment for transformative projects by providing specialized finance and real estate development expertise. Visit dfi.sog.unc.edu.