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Mercury Staff

Many of the newest apartment buildings in Portland represent the height of luxury, with workout rooms, Amazon Echos, and other upscale delights. But their developers are worried: Thanks to a relatively new city program, theyโ€™re being forced to rent some of those pricey units to the less-privileged in Portland. As a result, some say they wonโ€™t build as much housing in the cityโ€”and they place the blame on inclusionary housing (IH), a policy intended to help with the cityโ€™s affordable housing crisis.

IHโ€”a program that requires developers to include affordable units in new residential buildings with more than 20 apartmentsโ€”has been city policy since February 2017. While developers claim IH is cooling the market and driving development to other cities, the programโ€™s advocates say itโ€™s already helping to solve Portlandโ€™s housing shortage.

IH mandates that developers either make 15 percent of the units in large-scale apartment complexes financially accessible to those who make 80 percent or less of Portlandโ€™s median family income (MFI), or make 8 percent of the units accessible for those who make 60 percent or less of Portlandโ€™s MFI, which is currently $34,200 for an individual. The rental rate for IH units is set at 30 percent of a householdโ€™s income, just under the level at which the household becomes โ€œhousing burdened.โ€ At that level, an IH studio apartment rents for $855 per month, while an IH two-bedroom apartment goes for $1,099.