Housing

Housing
More housing and good regional planning are the keys to ensuring healthy communities and protecting our natural environment.
MountainTrue works with community members, planners, decision-makers, and partner organizations in cities and towns across the Southern Blue Ridge Mountains to secure a greater abundance and more diverse housing options and to discourage sprawl and the destruction of our natural environment.

Smart Growth
Through “Smart Growth” strategies, we can prevent sprawl and reduce our dependency on cars by focusing new development along existing corridors and where infrastructure already exists.

Housing Choice
More choices in the kinds of housing available in our region will help increase supply, bring down prices, and get the most from the land that does get developed.

Housing Security
We can help keep long-time residents in their homes by adopting policies and funding streams to preserve existing homes and stop displacement.
Become A Housing Advocate with MountainTrue
Join our housing e-mail list, and we’ll keep you up to date on housing and development issues, events, and advocacy opportunities.
Our Housing Priorities
Small scale, multi-family housing permitted by right
Affordable housing does not have to take the form of huge apartment complexes. By reintroducing missing-middle housing (duplexes, cottage clusters, townhouses, and the like), we can create more affordable units for the service workers, teachers, and civil servants that currently struggle to find housing near where they work. Multi-family housing is also more energy efficient and better for our changing climate.
Building on existing corridors
We can add housing to our communities while preserving the forests and farmlands that surround us by building in areas that already have roads, grocery stores, and sewer systems. It is also a better use of taxpayer dollars to rely on and maintain existing infrastructure instead of building more.
Enhanced multimodal transportation networks
By limiting the need to rely on personal vehicles, we can better accommodate more people living in and near our town centers. If we build smart, more housing does not have to mean more traffic! With people able to walk, bike, or bus, we also mitigate the impacts of climate change by reducing the need to drive further from home to get to schools, jobs, and appointments.
Preservation of naturally occurring affordable housing (NOAH) & NOAH Loan Funds
The more we can support people staying in their homes, the less we need to build new ones. Funding, programs, and zoning changes that prevent displacement and support people as they age in place is a more cost-effective way to house our community than destroying existing homes and building new ones.
Latest Housing News
Public Testimony from MountainTrue’s Housing & Transportation Director, Susan Bean
Susan Bean on MountainTrue's support of the missing middle housing study proposed by the City of...
2023 Western North Carolina Conservation Legislative Priorities
Protect Public Health – and the Jobs and Businesses that Rely on Clean Water A recent report...
Action Alert: Delivering on Goals Requires Stregthening Recommendations
MountainTrue has significant concerns about the latest draft of the 2045 Henderson County...
MountainTrue’s Chris Joyell Writes About Housing, Open Space, and Climate Change in MTX
In this Mountain Xpress Contributor Piece, MountainTrue Healthy Communities Program Director Chris...
MountainTrue’s Analysis of Henderson County’s Draft Comprehensive Plan
Update: We have added detailed analysis and recommendations to improve the Comprehensive Plan...
Oppose the weakening of land-use regulations and save the Henderson County Comprehensive Plan.
Take action to oppose the weakening of land-use regulations and to save the Henderson County...