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2026 Mid-Year Review: Whitney Pulsifer, The Peabody Companies

Whitney Pulsifer
Vice President, Strategic Development
The Peabody Companies

What projects, initiatives, or types of work have been keeping your team busiest during the first half of 2026?
The first half of 2026 has been focused on balancing growth, compliance, and resident impact. Our teams have remained busy supporting new affordable housing developments, lease-up activities, capital improvement projects, and asset preservation efforts across our portfolio. We have also devoted significant attention to preparing for and responding to HUD’s NSPIRE inspection standards, ensuring our communities continue to meet evolving regulatory requirements while delivering quality housing for residents. In addition, we have invested heavily in talent development, employee engagement, technology modernization, and cybersecurity initiatives to support our growing workforce and strengthen operations. Throughout it all, our focus remains on creating thriving communities while ensuring long-term sustainability and operational excellence.

What trends or shifts have stood out most to you so far this year within your industry?
The increased focus on regulatory compliance and property performance standards, particularly as owners/management companies continue adapting to HUD’s NSPIRE inspection framework. Affordable housing providers are also balancing rising operating costs, utility expenses and capital needs with limited rent growth and increasing pressure on available funding sources. Additionally, the growing concern around vacancy exposure, particularly as operators work to maintain occupancy while navigating affordability challenges and shifting market conditions, and the growing demand for resident-centered services, recognizing that housing stability extends beyond providing a home. Technology adoption, cybersecurity preparedness, and workforce development continue to gain importance as organizations work to strengthen operations while meeting evolving resident, client and regulatory expectations.

What challenges or opportunities have had the biggest impact on your business during the first half of 2026?
The greatest challenge has been balancing increasing operating expenses, capital improvement needs and regulatory requirements with limited rent increases and funding uncertainty. Affordable housing providers are being asked to do more with fewer resources while maintaining high-quality housing, strong compliance standards and meaningful resident services. Vacancy exposure remains an area of focus across portions of the industry, making efficient leasing and resident retention strategies increasingly important. One encouraging development has been the stabilization of the insurance market, with many providers experiencing more moderate renewals or premium reductions compared to recent years. The continued demand for affordable housing throughout New England also presents opportunities to collaborate to create and preserve housing that serves residents for generations to come.

As we look ahead to the second half of the year, what are you watching most closely?
We are closely monitoring funding levels, policy changes, and regulatory developments that could impact affordable housing providers, residents, and the communities we serve. We are particularly focused on the potential effects of reduced public funding and how those changes may affect affordable housing operations, resident services programs, and the vulnerable populations our client groups support. Questions surrounding the long-term stability of housing voucher programs and the continued challenge of limited rent growth remain top concerns for affordable housing owners and operators. We are also watching the uncertainty surrounding Massachusetts’ Low-Income Energy Affordability Network (LEAN), as changes to energy affordability and efficiency programs could have meaningful impacts on both residents and affordable housing providers. Our priority remains preserving affordable housing.

 

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