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By Ben Ewen-Campen
Ward 3 City Councilor

I’m very happy to say that my wife Alex and I are expecting our first child in November. So, even more than usual, I’ve been thinking about the future of Somerville. This city is an incredible place to be born – if you can afford to stay. Every year, rents and home prices ratchet up relentlessly, and it becomes harder and harder for anyone who isn’t already well-off to live or start a family here. We all want a diverse and economically just Somerville, yet today’s status quo is pulling us in the exact opposite direction.

According to the Somerville Public Schools, at least 42% of our students are classified by the State as “economically disadvantaged,” and 37% of Somerville families are “severely rent burdened,” meaning they spend more than half their income on housing costs. To put it simply, many thousands of Somerville families are perilously close to – or already have been – forced out of our community by housing costs. The affordable housing waitlist in Somerville is so long that, at the current rate, it will take three decades to find a home for every Somerville resident currently in need. And, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, our housing crisis is threatening to transform into a catastrophic “tsunami of evictions” for lower-income families, disproportionately affecting people of color.

If we want a diverse and thriving Somerville, we need to do everything in our power to ensure that you don’t have to be wealthy to live here. And right now, the single most impactful action we can take at the municipal level is to make it easier to build more affordable housing in Somerville. And I believe that the best tool that the City Council has within its authority to enact right now is a city-wide Affordable Housing Overlay District. This policy would make it easier to build affordable housing by offering permitting, density, and height benefits to 100% affordable buildings, and as Chair of Land Use, it is my top legislative priority for the coming months. 

This past summer, I asked our City Staff to conduct interviews with a wide range of affordable housing developers, to better understand the major obstacles, at the municipal level, to creating affordable housing in Somerville. Overwhelmingly, we heard about two obstacles. First, and most obviously, is the cost of land. Today, it is nearly impossible for any non-profit housing developer to purchase property in Somerville. This is no surprise: they are competing against “market rate” developers and investors who can afford to pay far more because they’ll soon be making windfall profits in our red-hot real estate market. Second, the funding agencies that support affordable housing are looking for predictability and certainty in the projects they support. This means that the uncertainty, delays, and discretionary nature of the permitting process in Somerville can be a major issue when attempting to secure funding. Together, these two obstacles mean that new affordable units in Somerville are almost always created by market rate developers through Somerville’s “20% inclusionary zoning” policy, which is absolutely necessary but nowhere near sufficient to meet Somerville’s goals for affordability.

We have taken this feedback and used it to generate a proposal for a Citywide Affordable Housing Overlay District that would directly address both issues. A working draft was introduced to the Land Use Committee on September 29, and you can view it here. Essentially, the proposal does two things: first, it gives a “height bonus” to 100% affordable buildings, meaning that these buildings can be taller than would otherwise be allowed for market rate developers. This greatly helps to level the playing field when it comes to buying property, because non-profit developers get more “bang” (livable square footage) for their buck. And second, it simplifies and streamlines the permitting process specifically for 100% affordable buildings, providing predictability and security for when non-profit developers are lining up funding sources.

Modern affordable housing buildings are well-made, beautiful, and held to incredibly high standards of energy efficiency. To see some local examples, click here, or pay a visit to the gorgeously renovated historic Somerville Waterworks building, which was recently transformed into affordable senior housing. That said, I know that the idea of taller buildings can be a hot-button issue for some people, so I want to be clear about what this proposal would and would not entail.

The proposed overlay would not change lot setbacks or open-space requirements, and it would not mean that buildings of any height can be built on any lot, willy-nilly. Instead, the proposed overlay will continue to follow the underlying zoning map for Somerville: taller buildings in major squares and along major travel corridors (“mid-rise districts”) and more modest buildings on smaller neighborhood streets (“neighborhood residence” or “urban residence” districts.) The overlay would mean that, in areas where a market-rate developer would be allowed to build a four- or five-story apartment building, a 100% affordable building could go to seven or eight. On a smaller residential street where two-and-a-half story buildings are normally allowed, a 100% affordable building could be three or four stories. When it comes to these policy details, the City Council is still actively deliberating, and we are looking forward to hearing public input at an upcoming Public Hearing in the coming months. Altogether, this policy will go a long way towards removing some of the common obstacles that non-profit housing developers face in Somerville.

(A personal note: my wife and I lived for years on Warren Avenue in Union Square, just up the block from Properzi Manor, an 11-story apartment building managed by the Somerville Housing Authority, and we never had a single problem with shadows, parking, noise, or anything else – just a lot of great neighbors. So, in my experience, while the idea of a taller building can sometimes be unpopular, as soon as these buildings actually exist and fill up with neighbors, they quickly become part of the neighborhood.)

Our proposed Affordable Housing Overlay District wouldn’t cost the city a dime, and unlike many other bills we want to pass, it does not require State approval to enact. Our proposal is similar to one that was just passed in Cambridge, and Boston seems likely to move in a similar direction, too, which is great news considering the regional nature of our housing crisis.

There is no silver bullet to addressing our affordable housing crisis, but that is no excuse for inaction. When City Council President Matt McLaughin gave his inauguration speech last January, he emphasized that local government officials can learn a lot from the Serenity Prayer: “Grant this City Council the serenity to accept the things we cannot change, the courage to change the things we can, and the wisdom to know the difference.”

No City Council can single-handedly fix the profound structural inequalities driving our housing crisis. And, so many of the policies we are fighting for – rent control, a transfer fee on developers to fund affordable housing, and increased tenant protections – require State approval. But when it comes to powers that we do hold locally, I believe we have an obligation to act.

Earlier this summer, President Trump made it blatantly clear that outright opposition to affordable housing is a central plank in his platform: “You will no longer be bothered or financially hurt by having low income housing built in your neighborhood.” My hope is that Somerville will take this opportunity to stand up as the polar opposite to his hateful worldview, by saying “yes” to diversity and affordability in our neighborhoods.

I will soon be scheduling a Public Hearing to welcome your feedback on this proposal – keep an eye out for the date. In the meantime, please contact City Councilors at CityCouncil@SomervilleMA.gov to share your thoughts on this proposal.

 

12 Responses to “We need a city-wide ‘Affordable Housing Overlay District’ in Somerville”

  1. Harry Lafonte says:

    hmmm…. one of the most densely packed cities in the country and the most densely in New England and the geniuses want to create low-income “towers”. This from the same crew who wants to “defund the police”.

    We have ~ 80,000 people now…. add in another 5 or 10K of low-income (i.e subsidized) people and a police force that is cut the bone and what could possibly go wrong?!!?

    I have an idea on how to handle affordable housing issues: if you can’t afford to live in a certain 4 sq mile area then move to where you can afford. Solved.

  2. Tom says:

    How well did the Clarendon Hill Towers work out?

  3. TheoNa says:

    “Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it”
    — George Santayana

    What the author of this article is advocating is the construction of a large-scale warehousing solution for poor people, commonly called housing projects. That approach has worked really well in other cities such as New York, Chicago, and many other cities. Instead of turning into thriving communities for the “disadvantaged” they instead wound up instead becoming crumbling slums and crime zones as well as financial burdens for the governments that initially advocated their creation. The only ones who benefit from this approach are the developers who construct the housing and then walk away with their profits.

    The desire to live in a particular community is a desire and not an entitlement or right. It’s a “want” and not a “need.” If one cannot afford to live in a particular community there are many options available for them. They can pursue methods that most responsible citizens do. They can look at ways to increase their income or consider moving to more affordable communities. The role of government is to assist with the needs of the people and not the wants.

    Somerville is already one of the most densely populated areas in New England. I fail to see how adding to that population density improves the quality of life for those of us living here. I don’t see or hear the chorus of people wanting more crowds and congestion, more crime, less sky, more traffic, more pollution, more taxes, etc. We’re a small community and not a large city. That’s what makes Somerville an attractive place to live.

  4. Helena Handbasket says:

    “Oye como va
    Mi ritmo
    Bueno pa’ gozar
    Mulata”

    — Carlos Santana

  5. I mind the intrusion of non-historic buildings in our historic multi-family neighborhoods. I mind the cost of this affordable housing, half a million to buy and build or rehab it (per MIT professor of affordable housing finance) and another half a million to subsidize the rent for 30 years, so costly that never enough can be built. I mind that all this housing creates government dependents and a political voting bloc that will vote for more government handouts. I suggest a totally different route: using existing privately owned rental housing and allow some large apartments to be subdivided into two smaller units, which would have “naturally” lower rent, no taxpayer subsidies needed — and better suited to today’s smaller household sizes. For more details, go to http://www.spoa.com and see the first article on the “Solutions” page.
    https://spoa.com/spoa-proposal-create-smaller-sized-lower-rent-units-rapidly-in-existing-rental-housing/

  6. Courtney O'Keefe says:

    Why are we depending on large developers to provide our affordable housing. If there is development that can happen, why isn’t the City taking the initiative to buy the property, rehab it and own the affordable units as a municipality? If there isn’t an interest to do this, we need another (non-hypocritical) CDC in Somerville.

  7. Matt says:

    Courtney, I love the idea, i think it should be doing both. The thing to consider is speed, if the city puts aside 5M to do this each year we will see our affordable housing stock grow by only 6-8 units a year which is not enough..

  8. Linda says:

    aaaaaaaaaand this is why Courtney should be our alderman

  9. SuzieQ says:

    Courtney, yes… because we can trust the city to run things efficiently and there not to be any grubby fingers stealing from the pot. I prefer my city tax dollars NOT going to a housing slush fund that will become a complete disaster of cost overruns and mismanagement. I wouldn’t trust the city and its leaders to paint my garage let alone build and manage housing.

    Pssst…. since the Covid hit we have plenty of available rental units via private owners. Why not utilize the existing private stock? why should the city become a housing agency?

    I have a funny feeling the exodus from Somerville will only continue and there may soon be a housing glut. Mostly due to the far left loony tunes we have as alder(insert gender neutral term) now and the virus.

  10. Linda says:

    Suzieq tell Mark we all said hi. Now goooooooo away

  11. Ronald says:

    I think Courtney’s idea is the way we should go. This city is relying on major developments to give us what we want when we should determine our own destiny on this topic.

  12. June says:

    I am a real estate agent who does some transactions in Somerville and Cambridge. The amount of affordable units that Cambridge owns is unbelievable and is something Somerville can do also. Kudos to Courtney for another idea that I think is worth exploring.