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Trailblazing city housing plan enters uncharted legal waters

Sarasota Deputy City Attorney Michael Connelly warns of potential legal hurdles as no Florida city has yet to build its own workforce housing development.


The proposed site of a city-owned attainable housing development across First Street from City Hall. The red X marks the location of the city's credit union office, which will remain.
The proposed site of a city-owned attainable housing development across First Street from City Hall. The red X marks the location of the city's credit union office, which will remain.
Courtesy image
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Sarasota City Manager Marlon Brown wants the city to get into the apartment business, and the discussion at their April 15 meeting indicates city commissioners agree.

The idea is to use a small city parking lot and purchase two other parcels across First Street from City Hall. There, the city would spearhead the construction of two 10-story towers for 192 workforce and affordable housing apartments with ground-floor commercial space the city would sell to help offset some costs. 

The city would own the building, perhaps in partnership with other companies and organizations that have an interest in making residences in the downtown area accessible to the workforce class.

As lawyers looking out for the best interests of their clients are prone to do, though, Deputy City Attorney Michael Connelly told commissioners not so fast. There may be valid reasons no other municipality in the state has attempted such an ambitious endeavor.

Commissioner Erik Arroyo quizzed Connelly, who was filling in for City Attorney Robert Fournier at the meeting, about whether he knows of any government entity that has created a limited liability corporation to insulate itself from liabilities incurred in a specific project.

“Is it because government entities can't do that, or it's just because the government part of the public sector just doesn't think about stuff like that?” Arroyo asked.

“It's because I've never seen a governmental entity own and operate an apartment complex yet,” Connelly responded. “Under the Florida Constitution, local government, a city in particular, only has authority to operate for a municipal purpose. And so what is the municipal purpose? All I can tell you is, to my knowledge, it has never happened.”

This building at the corner of Orange Avenue and First Street will be purchased by the city for $5 million to make way for a city-owned workforce-priced apartment development.
Photo by Andrew Warfield

The city currently has the two properties under contract to purchase for $7.4 million. Brown estimated the total cost to be $70 million to $80 million. Because the city is not in the business of making a profit, rents would be capped and the requisite number of affordable and attainable units will be offered per code. 

Connelly cautioned commissioners that he had concerns about five of the 10 directives Brown was seeking, largely surrounding the finances and whether the city can offer organizations — such as the school system or Sarasota Memorial Hospital — reserved units for employees in exchange for contributions to the project without being deemed discriminatory.

The city will have to raise those funds from somewhere. The Barancik Foundation has committed $1.5 million to the project and Brown said he is in talks with Community Foundation of Sarasota County and the Gulf Coast Community Foundation for similar amounts. 

Combined with the more than $4 million in the city’s Affordable Housing Trust Fund, the city still needs to raise nearly $1.9 million to buy the property. That gap may be filled by a request of $2 million in state money by State Rep. Fiona McFarland, which has been approved by both the State House and Senate and is waiting for Gov. Ron DeSantis’ signature, Brown told commissioners.

Still, Connelly’s concerns include:

  • The foundation agreement: “I don't know what the terms and conditions of that will be, and that it is certainly conceivable that there could be things that I would recommend to you not want to agree to, so keep that in mind.”
  • Cash-to-close contingency: “What we recommended is that we would add to each of the two purchase and sale agreements a cash-to-close contingency so the city would have until 30 days before closing to be able to notify the seller that we don't have the funds and then be able to terminate the contract and get our deposit back. That was rejected. If you don't get $7.4 million by September, you still have to close and you're going to have to find that money someplace. You have a contractual obligation to close.”
  • Request for proposals for design/construction and for management/operations: “I want to protect the city from liability. When the city issues a request for proposal, the vendors go ahead and spend their time and money to put together a response to the request for proposal. If we end up withdrawing that request for proposal, we are liable to pay them back the cost they have incurred at that point.”
  • Revenue bonds for construction costs: “Bond counsel had indicated that no other local government in the state of Florida has issued revenue bonds in order to own and operate an attainable or workforce housing project. They're willing to try it, though. There has to be a public purpose. The question is whether the private benefit is paramount or the public benefit is paramount. I want you to be aware that there is no guarantee that you'll be able to issue these bonds, and if the courts say you can issue the bonds, they may well be taxable bonds because of this private benefit that occurs to the 192 households. And if they're taxable bonds, that means you have to pay a higher interest rate.”
  • Construction schedule: “Mr. Brown talked in his presentation that construction would start in 2025. Again, we have the due diligence period. We’re going to have to get the leases for all of those there are tenants in there now. We don't know for sure that we can get those tenants out without incurring liability between now and 2025, so we don't really know what that construction schedule would be.”

With all that on the table, commissioners unanimously approved the property acquisition.

 

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Andrew Warfield

Andrew Warfield is the Sarasota Observer city reporter. He is a four-decade veteran of print media. A Florida native, he has spent most of his career in the Carolinas as a writer and editor, nearly a decade as co-founder and editor of a community newspaper in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina.

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