But at least one planning commissioner is questioning how that could be. The 2012 Jackson/Teton County Comprehensive Plan sets a goal of housing 65% of the Jackson Hole workforce locally. Annual Indicator Reports â amalgamations of environmental, transportation and housing data prepared by the town and county â track the communityâs performance against that metric and, after prolonged decline between 2002 and 2014, a draft 2021 report said the numbers may be plateauing. April Norton, director of the Jackson/Teton County Housing Department, took that as good news, even though, hovering between 58% and 59%, the community is underperforming the 65% metric. âWeâve stabilized our percentage of the workforce living locally,â she told the Jackson Hole Daily.