To say that the average household in Kings Beach spends more than they can afford to live in overcrowded conditions is not an exaggeration.
A recent survey conducted by Domus Development, the Workforce Housing Association of Truckee Tahoe and other local groups gauged the realities of the bleak housing situation in the Kings Beach grid.
Its a really good snapshot of how people actually live, said George Koster, an affordable housing advocate who helped coordinate the survey. What the housing stock is and what the housing situation is in our community.
A vast majority of respondents said they spend more than 30 percent of their income on housing expenses. Housing is deemed affordable if it consumes only a third of your income.
Only one in four households interviewed by nonprofits and at community events said they actually make enough money to live in housing that is within affordable range of their income.
About 40 percent of those interviewed reported living in overcrowded conditions, based on the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developments guideline of a maximum of two persons per bedroom.
In 2006, the California median household income was approximately $56,600. The median annual household income in Kings Beach from the door-to-door interviews and community responses was $32,500 and $30,000, respectively.
The survey delved into the nitty gritty of Kings Beach living conditions, examining where people live and work, transportation and household size and income.
I just think [the survey] is a tremendous body of work, said Tom Ballou, housing services director for WHATT. It helps put a face on the need.
Affordable housing advocates hope the numbers will prove to officials and the rest of the community that there is a profound need for quality housing that is attainable for Kings Beach residents.
Realistically, the only way youll get support for housing is if you have the science behind it, said Emilio Vaca, of the Tahoe Womens Services, who knocked on doors to interview residents for the survey.
The survey also specifically defines the type of housing affordable housing developers should build.
From that perspective, it identifies needs, said Executive Director Steve Teshara of the North Lake Tahoe Resort Association, who contributed funding to conduct and publish the survey.
President Meea Kang of Domus Development, a San Francisco-based affordable housing developer who is proposing to build affordable housing in Kings Beach, said the surveys data about family size, transportation and employment were particularly insightful.
That really helps to inform us as to what kind of new housing to build, Kang said. So the larger family units with play structures ... thats the type of market that we need to be building for.
Kang said this is the first housing survey of its kind that Domus has sponsored. The demographic information that affordable housing developments typically use to make building decisions does not exist for Kings Beach, she said.
We felt that in order to be accurate, we needed to collect our own data, Kang said.
The survey interviewed 323 individuals, each representing separate households. Two-thirds of the respondents completed the survey in Spanish.
Volunteers knocked on the doors of every fifth house in the back streets of Kings Beach in late September, filling out nearly 100 door-to-door surveys. The remaining respondents were interviewed at community events, through nonprofit organizations, such as the Tahoe Womens Services, Project MANA and the North Tahoe Family Resource Center.
The door-to-door subgroup likely gathered results that reflect the greater Kings Beach community. Whereas the community subgroup is more indicative of those who would qualify for affordable housing, those that conducted the surveys said.
The positive thing was that we were able to talk to people who would not normally fill out a survey, Vaca said, noting that most of the doors he knocked on supported and completed the survey. The most important thing was that it was someone going to them and talking to them.
While this housing survey focused on a concentrated area in the Kings Beach grid, an area identified by affordable housing developers, regional officials and affordable housing advocates would like to see a similar survey conducted on a larger scale throughout the North Tahoe and Truckee area.
[The survey] is not the end result, Vaca said. Its not the only solution. Its part of the solution.
A recent survey conducted by Domus Development, the Workforce Housing Association of Truckee Tahoe and other local groups gauged the realities of the bleak housing situation in the Kings Beach grid.
Its a really good snapshot of how people actually live, said George Koster, an affordable housing advocate who helped coordinate the survey. What the housing stock is and what the housing situation is in our community.
A vast majority of respondents said they spend more than 30 percent of their income on housing expenses. Housing is deemed affordable if it consumes only a third of your income.
Only one in four households interviewed by nonprofits and at community events said they actually make enough money to live in housing that is within affordable range of their income.
About 40 percent of those interviewed reported living in overcrowded conditions, based on the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developments guideline of a maximum of two persons per bedroom.
In 2006, the California median household income was approximately $56,600. The median annual household income in Kings Beach from the door-to-door interviews and community responses was $32,500 and $30,000, respectively.
The survey delved into the nitty gritty of Kings Beach living conditions, examining where people live and work, transportation and household size and income.
I just think [the survey] is a tremendous body of work, said Tom Ballou, housing services director for WHATT. It helps put a face on the need.
Affordable housing advocates hope the numbers will prove to officials and the rest of the community that there is a profound need for quality housing that is attainable for Kings Beach residents.
Realistically, the only way youll get support for housing is if you have the science behind it, said Emilio Vaca, of the Tahoe Womens Services, who knocked on doors to interview residents for the survey.
The survey also specifically defines the type of housing affordable housing developers should build.
From that perspective, it identifies needs, said Executive Director Steve Teshara of the North Lake Tahoe Resort Association, who contributed funding to conduct and publish the survey.
President Meea Kang of Domus Development, a San Francisco-based affordable housing developer who is proposing to build affordable housing in Kings Beach, said the surveys data about family size, transportation and employment were particularly insightful.
That really helps to inform us as to what kind of new housing to build, Kang said. So the larger family units with play structures ... thats the type of market that we need to be building for.
Kang said this is the first housing survey of its kind that Domus has sponsored. The demographic information that affordable housing developments typically use to make building decisions does not exist for Kings Beach, she said.
We felt that in order to be accurate, we needed to collect our own data, Kang said.
The survey interviewed 323 individuals, each representing separate households. Two-thirds of the respondents completed the survey in Spanish.
Volunteers knocked on the doors of every fifth house in the back streets of Kings Beach in late September, filling out nearly 100 door-to-door surveys. The remaining respondents were interviewed at community events, through nonprofit organizations, such as the Tahoe Womens Services, Project MANA and the North Tahoe Family Resource Center.
The door-to-door subgroup likely gathered results that reflect the greater Kings Beach community. Whereas the community subgroup is more indicative of those who would qualify for affordable housing, those that conducted the surveys said.
The positive thing was that we were able to talk to people who would not normally fill out a survey, Vaca said, noting that most of the doors he knocked on supported and completed the survey. The most important thing was that it was someone going to them and talking to them.
While this housing survey focused on a concentrated area in the Kings Beach grid, an area identified by affordable housing developers, regional officials and affordable housing advocates would like to see a similar survey conducted on a larger scale throughout the North Tahoe and Truckee area.
[The survey] is not the end result, Vaca said. Its not the only solution. Its part of the solution.
What the survey says, by the numbers.
39- Percentage of door-to-door respondents who said that housing eats up at least half of their combined household income. 75- Percentage of households whose members live and work in Kings Beach and live in a housing unit with only one bedroom. The average household size for this group is five people.
70- Percentage of respondents who use a car as their households primary mode of transportation.
1.8- Average cars per household interviewed door-to-door.
75- Percentage of respondents who pay rent.
68- Percentage of respondents who live in households that include at least one child.
Free shuttle to the TRPA meeting
The Tahoe Regional Planning Agency governing board will determine which projects will be accepted into the Community Enhancement Program at their meeting next week, and affordable housing advocates want to make sure that the agency leaders hear the communitys voice.A group of Kings Beach nonprofits are sponsoring a free shuttle to take people to the meeting, which will be held at 11 a.m. on Jan. 27 at the TRPAs South Shore offices.
To actually let the governing board hear from the people who actually live in Kings Beach, said President Meea Kang of Domus Development. Whos voices dont usually get heard at these types of meetings.
For more information, please call (530) 386-6253. Departure will be at 9 a.m. at the North Tahoe Family Resource Center in Kings Beach.


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