Massachusetts Comprehensive Permit Act: Chapter 40B

The Comprehensive Permit Act[1] is a Massachusetts law which allows developers of affordable housing to override certain aspects of municipal zoning bylaws and other requirements. It consists of Massachusetts General Laws (M.G.L.) Chapter 40B, Sections 20 through 23, along with associated regulations issued and administered by the Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development.[2][3] Chapter 40B was enacted in 1969 to address the shortage of affordable housing statewide by reducing barriers created by local municipal building permit approval processes, local zoning, and other restrictions. Its goal is to encourage the production of affordable housing in all communities throughout the Commonwealth.

For the purposes of this statute, affordable housing is defined as a unit which could be purchased or rented by a household making up to 80% of the median income of the area. Such housing must be subject to affordable housing restrictions to preserve affordability in the long term.

Comprehensive permitting process

Under Chapter 40B, in any municipality where less than 10% of its housing qualifies as affordable under the law, a developer can build more densely than the municipal zoning bylaws would permit, allowing more units per acre of land when building a new development, if at least 25% (or 20% in certain cases[4]) of the new units have long-term affordability restrictions.

Chapter 40B continues to be controversial and it has not overcome the multiple barriers that exist to building affordable housing in the state. A study by the National Low Income Housing Coalition rated Massachusetts as being the least affordable state in which to rent an apartment in 2003.[5] Despite the law, fewer new affordable housing units are built in Massachusetts compared to the state's needs. The state government as a policy works toward increasing the supply of inexpensive housing. The shortage contributes to sprawl as workers move further away from jobs in order obtain affordably priced houses. The high price of housing is one reason that young adults move away from Massachusetts.[6] However, some municipalities resist the permitting and building more housing, because the cost of the services demanded by the new occupants with children, largely for education, is greater than the taxes received for the housing unit.

Municipalities have occasionally attempted to gain "affordable" classification for existing inexpensive housing units which are not deed restricted to maintain the long-term future affordable status of the units. Some municipalities have requested that mobile homes be allowed, but this has been denied. Others attempted to include prisons and school dormitories to little avail.

The law permits developers to override local zoning regulations to build apartment developments in areas zoned for single family homes, or area zoned for other purposes. A potential long-term effect is one of increasing housing density in the outer suburban ring of Boston without the infrastructure to make such development sustainable or desirable.

Impact

The goal of the Affordable Housing Law (Chapter 40B) is to make at least 10% of every Massachusetts’s community’s housing stock affordable for moderate income households. As of June 30, 2011, 39 communities had met that goal. Details are available on the Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) Subsidized Housing Inventory. In addition, 101 communities have developed Affordable Housing Production Plans that have been approved by DHCD. Six of those communities have been certified as meeting the benchmarks in their plans, which entitles them to “safe-harbor” protections from Chapter 40B proposals under 760 CMR 56.03()(b) and 56.03(4)(f).

Over the last decade, the Affordable Housing Law has been directly responsible for approximately 80% of the affordable housing built in Massachusetts outside the major cities. More than 58,000 homes have been created for working families, seniors, and people with disabilities all across the state because of this law. Nearly half of all of the units were created by non-profits, like Habitat for Humanity.[7]

Enforcement

The Massachusetts Office of the Inspector General, from 2005 to 2012, issued several reports criticizing lax enforcement of developers' profit limitations for 40B developments, and described subterfuges used by developers to earn more profit on affordable housing than the statute and regulations permit, and that the municipalities and the state have inadequate supervision, auditing, and enforcement of the municipal agreements with developers and developers' reporting of sales and profits under the agreements and law. [8] [9] In addition, until he left office in 2012, Massachusetts Inspector General Gregory Sullivan frequently criticized Chapter 40B.[10] As a result of recommendations from the Office of the Inspector General, the Department of Housing and Community Development has “taken constructive actions to address the identified weaknesses that will strengthen the overall control process exercised by both Chapter 40B rental development owners and project administrators to ensure that only income-qualified households occupy affordable apartments developed under Chapter 40B.” [11]

Changes in the law, 2008: SJC decisions and revised regulations

In 2008 the Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development issued a comprehensive revision of regulations and guidelines for Chapter 40B. The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court issued seven decisions on substantive and procedural issues in regard to Chapter 40B law, nearly the number of decisions rendered during the previous decade.[12]

Opposition

Historically and at present, there has been opposition to Chapter 40B, with some claiming that it encourages building unaffordable homes at high densities with few affordable units.

Campaign to Protect the Affordable Housing Law

On November 2, 2010, Massachusetts voters rejected an initiative petition (Question 2]) that would have repealed Chapter 40B. The vote was 1,254,759 (58%) against repeal to 900,405 (42%) in favor of repeal.[13] The Campaign to Protect the Affordable Housing Law, a state ballot committee, had been formed to oppose the elimination of the law. The campaign was a coalition of more than 950 individuals and organizations, including civic, business, religious, and academic leaders as well as senior, environmental, housing, and civil rights groups. The campaign was supported by all three gubernatorial candidates, Deval Patrick, Tim Cahill, and Charlie Baker. The group contended that repealing the affordable housing law would immediately halt the creation of housing that is affordable to seniors and working families in many communities across the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.[7]

See also

Notes

  1. See Town of Hingham v. Dept. of Housing and Community Development, 451 Mass. 501, 502 (2008).
  2. Massachusetts General Laws (M.G.L.) Chapter 40B, §§ 20-23. Originally enacted via the statutes of 1969, chapter 774.
  3. Code of Massachusetts Regulations 760 CMR 56
  4. If the affordable units are rented or sold so as to be affordable to households with income not exceeding 50% of the area’s median income—instead of the normal 80%--only 20% of the units in the development must be affordable. See, e.g., ‘’Webster Street Green, LLC v. Needham,’’ No. 05-20, slip op. at 2 (Mass. Housing Appeals Committee Sep. 18, 2007).
  5. Michael D., Goodman, Ph.D. (January 2004). "Winners and Losers in the Massachusetts Housing Market" (PDF). Agricultural and Resource Economics. Director of Economic and Public Policy Research, University of Massachusetts Donahue Institute. Retrieved 2007-05-17.
  6. Serghino, Rene (2004-02-15). "Massachusetts residents leaving for new borders". The Boston Bay State Banner. Archived from the original on August 29, 2007. Retrieved 2007-05-17.
  7. 1 2 http://www.protectaffordablehousing.org
  8. Office of the Inspector General, 40B Publications.
  9. Sullivan, Gregory W. (2007-10-23). "Letter to the Chairs of the Joint Committee on Housing, Massachusetts General Court" (PDF). Office of Inspector General, Massachusetts. Retrieved 2007-12-23.
  10. The Coalition to Repeal 40B (opinionated contra Chapter 40B)
  11. Office of the Inspector General, 2012 Annual Report (April 2013), p. 10 also see Office of the Inspector General, 40B Publications.
  12. "A New Look at an Old 40B: New Regulations, New Rulings". Advanced Legal Studies (course listing). Suffolk University Law School. Summer 2008. See also A New look at an Old 40B (table of SJC 40B decisions in 2008)
  13. Mass. Secretary of State

References

Further reading

External links

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