Speaker 2 outlined a county effort to explore 'tiny homes' as a tool for multiple needs: small clustered units for older adults with shared meal and care spaces; affordable starter homes in an $80,000–$160,000 range to help first‑time buyers; and higher‑end movable tiny homes targeted at visitors or second‑home buyers.
The board emphasized the county’s role would be to encourage development — through seed money, property support or by helping to find entrepreneurs — rather than to be the primary developer. Speaker 2 suggested possible seed funding of $25,000–$30,000 from an existing county contingency if a compelling project emerged.
Staff said they are in early talks with the community college and high‑school carpentry programs about workforce training and possible involvement in building units. A planning‑board review and coordination with nearby property‑use rules will be necessary; one member said a prior developer proposal on Collins Road was rejected by the planning board within the past year.
No budget appropriation was made; board members asked staff to pursue further research, bring back development models and coordinate with the planning board and community‑college partners.