Smuttynose
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- May 26, 2006
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Affordable. Housing. Crisis.
There isn't a housing shortage. There's an affordable housing shortage. The idea that we're going to build our way out of this problem by zoning little districts of Roslindales next to cow pastures in places like Sudbury is misguided and unrealistic. This is a global problem which was created and is being perpetuated by the policies of national governments and central banks (especially our own) , and it can only be solved at this level. To believe the MBTA Communities Act will do anything to alleviate this is naive. It will merely further enrich developers, landlords and others connected to the real estate industry at the expense of citizens and municipal governments who will be left to deal with the externalities.
Ahh yes, the trusted chief NIMBY talking point: “Developers will be ‘enriched’ if we build more housing.” Do you have a job? Because if you do, you participate in the capitalist framework where you are compensated or “enriched” for providing a good or service. Why under NIMBY code, this is acceptable for you and everybody else except for developers, landlords, and those in “the real estate industry” is beyond me.
And what exactly are these “negative externalities” you are so terrified of? More economic growth and dynamism? Oh, the horror! But yes, that would likely be a consequence of more housing. States with lower housing costs are experiencing much faster economic growth than high cost ones: Cheap housing states dominated post-pandemic jobs boom: https://stateline.org/2024/05/29/lo...ousing-dominated-the-post-pandemic-jobs-boom/
Let me guess, you’re also worried that more families with children will move to your community, because the second favorite NIMBY talking point is: “more children will overwhelm our schools.” Newsflash, public school enrollment is lower in Massachusetts today than it was in 2000. You mentioned Sudbury, well enrollment in Sudbury, according to the Department of Education, is down more than 400 students or 14% since 2000. And the most recent round of financial stress for Districts in Mass was due to sudden drops in enrollment, not increases: https://www.wbur.org/news/2024/09/04/massachusetts-public-schools-budget-shortfalls-cuts Your local school district could use more students; it would help them, not hinder them.
These arguments are so exhausting because they are not tied to facts; it is simply an emotional response some people have to growth that somehow their quality of life will suffer. Unfortunately these folks dominate seats on local regulatory boards and Massachusetts is suffering the consequences: Record number of Massachusetts residents moving out of state, report says: https://www.wgbh.org/news/local/202...residents-are-moving-out-of-state-report-says