Multi-Family Zoning Requirements for MBTA Communities

Can someone summarize for non-subscribers?

Via ChatGPT:

The article discusses a recent Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruling on the MBTA Communities Law, which aims to address housing shortages by requiring towns served by the MBTA to create zoning for multifamily housing near transit stations. Key points include:

  1. Ruling Highlights:
    • The court upheld Attorney General Andrea Campbell’s authority to enforce the law and sue noncompliant towns, such as Milton.
    • The law is mandatory, not voluntary, and towns must adhere to its requirements.
  2. Guidelines Invalidated:
    • The court found that the state’s detailed zoning guidelines were improperly established without a formal regulatory process, rendering them legally ineffective. These guidelines must be revised and reissued.
  3. Impact on Housing Strategy:
    • The MBTA Communities Law is central to Massachusetts’ effort to address its housing crisis, with 116 towns already adopting zoning changes and 3,000 new housing units in the pipeline.
    • Governor Maura Healey’s administration plans to issue emergency regulations to address the ruling and continue the program’s progress.
  4. Conflict and Broader Implications:
    • The case highlights tensions between state and local authority over zoning and housing policy.
    • Milton’s resistance to the law reflects broader debates about local control and the state’s role in solving regional housing issues.
The ruling is considered a victory for state housing advocates but introduces procedural hurdles that could slow the law’s implementation.
 
Can someone summarize for non-subscribers?

The SJC unanimously ruled that the AG has the authority to sue towns such as Milton to enforce compliance with the MBTA communities Act.

However, the court invalidated the state’s detailed zoning guidelines for the law, citing an improper public process. These guidelines, which shaped the rollout of the law, must now be reissued, which may potentially delay implementation. Healey’s office plans to issue emergency regulations to address the issue.
 
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Bottom line: total defeat for Milton and any city or town refusing to comply based on Milton's position. The MBTA Communities Act is mandatory, and the AG can enforce it.

In addition to wasting everyone's time with an argument they were repeatedly told was dead wrong, Milton taxpayers will be on the hook for the likely hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees that Milton paid Goodwin (one of the most expensive law firms in the country for those that don't know) defending this lawsuit. Maybe the Milton Planning Board can hold a bake sale.
 
Bottom line: total defeat for Milton and any city or town refusing to comply based on Milton's position. The MBTA Communities Act is mandatory, and the AG can enforce it.

In addition to wasting everyone's time with an argument they were repeatedly told was dead wrong, Milton taxpayers will be on the hook for the likely hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees that Milton paid Goodwin (one of the most expensive law firms in the country for those that don't know) defending this lawsuit. Maybe the Milton Planning Board can hold a bake sale.
Better to take the trash out and empanel a new planning board.
 
Agreed. Why not something simple and straightforward? Residents of towns and cities that are building a lot of housing, since that housing is helping the economy, pay a reduced income tax rate - say 4% versus 5% for everybody else. That would certainly capture the attention of all those officials complaining in anti-housing communities.
I think they'd pay to keep out "the riff-raff" and a 1% tax on their income to do so would be just fine. A 50% increase on their property taxes may get noticed tho?
 
Bottom line: total defeat for Milton and any city or town refusing to comply based on Milton's position. The MBTA Communities Act is mandatory, and the AG can enforce it.

In addition to wasting everyone's time with an argument they were repeatedly told was dead wrong, Milton taxpayers will be on the hook for the likely hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees that Milton paid Goodwin (one of the most expensive law firms in the country for those that don't know) defending this lawsuit. Maybe the Milton Planning Board can hold a bake sale.
Wrong.

This was not a total defeat at all. The SJC invalidated the EOHLC's guidelines, so there is currently nothing to be in compliance with. None of the current municipalities that failed to adhere to this mandate are in violation of the law, so there is no basis for the AG to sue. The governor attempted to sidestep proper legal processes to establish her guidelines and the court ordered that proper procedures must be followed in order for these guidelines to carry the weight of law. Healey has stated that she will attempt to adopt the guidelines again without following proper legal procedures by using emergency measures. This is a desperate (not to mention, blatantly undemocratic) political ploy and, again, will not pass legal muster.

The longer this goes on, the more people are becoming increasingly aware of he heavy-handed, autocratic nature of how this law is being pushed on the people of this state by the Healey administration and its supporters. Honestly, they come across as psychotic, relying on coercive tactics, utilizing force and threats of force, a total unwillingness to work with communities to find acceptable alternatives, demonizing opposition and a general authoritarian approach to government. More and more people are getting tired of it.
 
Wrong.

This was not a total defeat at all. The SJC invalidated the EOHLC's guidelines, so there is currently nothing to be in compliance with. None of the current municipalities that failed to adhere to this mandate are in violation of the law, so there is no basis for the AG to sue. The governor attempted to sidestep proper legal processes to establish her guidelines and the court ordered that proper procedures must be followed in order for these guidelines to carry the weight of law. Healey has stated that she will attempt to adopt the guidelines again without following proper legal procedures by using emergency measures. This is a desperate (not to mention, blatantly undemocratic) political ploy and, again, will not pass legal muster.

The longer this goes on, the more people are becoming increasingly aware of he heavy-handed, autocratic nature of how this law is being pushed on the people of this state by the Healey administration and its supporters. Honestly, they come across as psychotic, relying on coercive tactics, utilizing force and threats of force, a total unwillingness to work with communities to find acceptable alternatives, demonizing opposition and a general authoritarian approach to government. More and more people are getting tired of it.

That's a lot of unsubstantiated claims about public opinion to fit in one post. "Many people are saying" that the (of course, limited) polling says that most people are supportive.
 
are becoming increasingly aware of he heavy-handed, autocratic nature of how this law is being pushed on the people of this state by the Healey administration and its supporters.
On what evidence?

It's funny because this is a creature of Charlie Baker's creation. And the Healey administration, if anything has tried to pivot to different things for afforadability - like actually funding some housing bond bills that create revolving affordable housing funds and such.
 
On what evidence?

It's funny because this is a creature of Charlie Baker's creation. And the Healey administration, if anything has tried to pivot to different things for afforadability - like actually funding some housing bond bills that create revolving affordable housing funds and such.
The actual law passed during the Baker administration was a vague three paragraphs slipped into a 2000-page omnibus bill. The Healey administration took that and blew it up into the EOHLC's 27 pages of guidelines. I love how the supporters of this law don't even have the courage to own it, and instead attempt to attribute it to the Baker administration. It reveals their disingenuousness.

Also, the EOHLC's guidelines explicitly do not have an affordability requirement. In fact, the guidelines set the cap on the amount of affordable units an MBTA Communities district may have at 10%. Furthermore, they set the income cap for those who may qualify for such units at 80% of the state median, much higher than typical affordable set asides.
 
The actual law passed during the Baker administration was a vague three paragraphs slipped into a 2000-page omnibus bill. The Healey administration took that and blew it up into the EOHLC's 27 pages of guidelines. I love how the supporters of this law don't even have the courage to own it, and instead attempt to attribute it to the Baker administration. It reveals their disingenuousness.
Ok, I'll bite the obvious bait. This is the letter that EOHED sent out to towns and cities accompanying the final guidelines. Whose name is on the letterhead, and in the text taking credit? The Baker Politio Administration. Also note the date - August 10th, 2022.
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Maura Healey took office 5 months later, on January 5th 2023. By the time compliance deadlines came due she was Governor, the guidelines her administration and AG is now tasked with enforcing had gone through the now-known-to-be-flawed public engagement process and were finalized fully under Baker and his appointees.

Even as AG - if you were to contend that her offices should have taken a more active role in ensuring other state agencies complied with the administrative law that invalidated those guidelines, it's not within the AG's offices remit - agencies and their legal staff promulgate their own regulations, the AG merely defends and enforces them in court.
 
Ok, I'll bite the obvious bait. This is the letter that EOHED sent out to towns and cities accompanying the final guidelines. Whose name is on the letterhead, and in the text taking credit? The Baker Politio Administration. Also note the date - August 10th, 2022.
View attachment 59440
Maura Healey took office 5 months later, on January 5th 2023. By the time compliance deadlines came due she was Governor, the guidelines her administration and AG is now tasked with enforcing had gone through the now-known-to-be-flawed public engagement process and were finalized fully under Baker and his appointees.

Even as AG - if you were to contend that her offices should have taken a more active role in ensuring other state agencies complied with the administrative law that invalidated those guidelines, it's not within the AG's offices remit - agencies and their legal staff promulgate their own regulations, the AG merely defends and enforces them in court.
As I mentioned earlier, the MBTA Communities Act originated as a few short paragraphs in an omnibus bill that consisted of thousands of pages. One of those paragraphs was devoted to specifying the penalties for non-compliant municipalities, and that penalty was... disqualification from receiving four, relatively minor, explicitly named state grants. That's all.

At the time that that letter was issued, this was commonly understood to be the extent of this law. It was only under Healey that these guidelines became comply-or-be-"crushed" edicts. In a shamelessly punitive move, she added many more grants to the list of those that noncompliant towns would be disqualified from. Last I saw, that number was around 20 or so, and, I believe, included those funding things like schools and libraries. She also sicced the AG on non-compliant towns, threatening to remove local control of zoning within their borders. All this taking place in an atmosphere of increasingly threatening and authoritarian rhetoric emanating from the governor and her supporters regarding this law and its implementation.

You'll notice that the issuer of that letter, the Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development, no longer exists. It was replaced under the Healey administration by the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities, which has a different and expanded mission. Also note that the "final guidelines" mentioned in the letter have changed at least four times since that letter. Final, indeed.

My point is, Healey has transformed this law into something far larger and more impactful than it was originally intended to be under Baker, and her administration continues to shape it to best serve its agenda. When it was enacted, no one dreamed this little law would be used the way that Healey is using it today. To pretend this was the intention all along is just dishonest.
 
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As I mentioned earlier, the MBTA Communities Act originated as a few short paragraphs in an omnibus bill that consisted of thousands of pages. One of those paragraphs was devoted to specifying the penalties for non-compliant municipalities, and that penalty was... disqualification from receiving four, relatively minor, explicitly named state grants. That's all.

At the time that that letter was issued, this was commonly understood to be the extent of this law. It was only under Healey that these guidelines became comply-or-be-"crushed" edicts. In a shamelessly punitive move, she added many more grants to the list of those that noncompliant towns would be disqualified from. Last I saw, that number was around 20 or so, and, I believe, included those funding things like schools and libraries. She also sicced the AG on non-compliant towns, threatening to remove local control of zoning within their borders. All this taking place in an atmosphere of increasingly threatening and authoritarian rhetoric emanating from the governor and her supporters regarding this law and its implementation.

You'll notice that the issuer of that letter, the Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development, no longer exists. It was replaced under the Healey administration by the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities, which has a different and expanded mission. Also note that the "final guidelines" mentioned in the letter have changed at least four times since that letter. Final, indeed.

My point is, Healey has transformed this law into something far larger and more impactful than it was originally intended to be under Baker, and her administration continues to shape it to best serve its agenda. When it was enacted, no one dreamed this little law would be used the way that Healey is using it today. To pretend this was the intention all along is just dishonest.
... And the SJC ruled unanimously that that interpretation isn't the case. You know, the entire balance of powers thing? It's the entire point of the 3 branches of government - The judiciary is there to interpret the law that the legislature passes and the executive enforces. And to be sure, they concluded that the legislature's intent was for it to be mandatory for the towns to comply.

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Yes, obviously I, and many others, think the SJC made a bad decision on this issue. I referred to how this horribly crafted law was popularly understood leading up to Healey's administration. This ruling doesn't change that. Now I guess this is no longer a legal problem, but a political one.
 
Ok, I'll bite the obvious bait. This is the letter that EOHED sent out to towns and cities accompanying the final guidelines. Whose name is on the letterhead, and in the text taking credit? The Baker Politio Administration. Also note the date - August 10th, 2022.
View attachment 59440
Maura Healey took office 5 months later, on January 5th 2023. By the time compliance deadlines came due she was Governor, the guidelines her administration and AG is now tasked with enforcing had gone through the now-known-to-be-flawed public engagement process and were finalized fully under Baker and his appointees.

Even as AG - if you were to contend that her offices should have taken a more active role in ensuring other state agencies complied with the administrative law that invalidated those guidelines, it's not within the AG's offices remit - agencies and their legal staff promulgate their own regulations, the AG merely defends and enforces them in court.
Thanks for the lift - I had a busy weekend and wasn't going to go around Google searching while spending time with family. Facts matter and it's long been clear that this is creature of the Baker-Polito administration, despite some folks trying to rewrite history.
 
As I mentioned earlier, the MBTA Communities Act originated as a few short paragraphs in an omnibus bill that consisted of thousands of pages. One of those paragraphs was devoted to specifying the penalties for non-compliant municipalities, and that penalty was... disqualification from receiving four, relatively minor, explicitly named state grants. That's all.

At the time that that letter was issued, this was commonly understood to be the extent of this law. It was only under Healey that these guidelines became comply-or-be-"crushed" edicts. In a shamelessly punitive move, she added many more grants to the list of those that noncompliant towns would be disqualified from. Last I saw, that number was around 20 or so, and, I believe, included those funding things like schools and libraries. She also sicced the AG on non-compliant towns, threatening to remove local control of zoning within their borders. All this taking place in an atmosphere of increasingly threatening and authoritarian rhetoric emanating from the governor and her supporters regarding this law and its implementation.

You'll notice that the issuer of that letter, the Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development, no longer exists. It was replaced under the Healey administration by the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities, which has a different and expanded mission. Also note that the "final guidelines" mentioned in the letter have changed at least four times since that letter. Final, indeed.

My point is, Healey has transformed this law into something far larger and more impactful than it was originally intended to be under Baker, and her administration continues to shape it to best serve its agenda. When it was enacted, no one dreamed this little law would be used the way that Healey is using it today. To pretend this was the intention all along is just dishonest.

It's a little bit difficult to tell exactly what your specific objections to the requirements are Bean, but it's pretty clear that you think Healey misappropriated and vastly expanded the law. I disagree for a few reasons.

Was the law unfairly expanded? The law requires, and I'm quoting directly from the law, municipalities to adopt "a zoning ordinance or by-law that provides for at least 1 district of reasonable size in which multi-family housing is permitted as of right; provided, however, that such multi-family housing shall be without age restrictions and shall be suitable for families with children. For the purposes of this section, a district of reasonable size shall: (i) have a minimum gross density of 15 units per acre... and (ii) be located not more than 0.5 miles from a commuter rail station, subway station, ferry terminal or bus station, if applicable." The MBTA Communities regulations enforce exactly this. If the law simply said municipalities shall encourage more housing opportunities, then I would agree with you that the law was unfairly expanded and/or misappropriated. But the intent of the law is very clear.

Importantly, the law says communities SHALL do this. Shall is a very important statutory word. It means obligations are mandatory. The Legislature and Gov. Baker could have instead said communities may do this or lose certain grant funding opportunities. They did not choose to do that.

Will the requirements radically change communities? I would argue not. Let's take one example - say Andover. Andover has 32 square miles or 20,480 acres of land. The Regulations require Andover to zone an area equivalent of 0.2% of its land area, or 50 acres, where multi-family housing is a permitted use. If anything, I would argue that regulators under-estimated what a district of a reasonable size constituted.

Back in the 1980s, the New Hampshire Supreme Court required municipalities to zone for multi-family housing. "Towns may not refuse to confront the future by building a moat around themselves and pulling up the drawbridge..." Have New Hampshire towns radically changed since that decision went into effect 35 years ago?

Will the requirements make a big dent in housing supply/affordability? Unfortunately not. It's been widely reported that the fear and promise of the law in actually producing measurably new housing units is overblown. Many communities have adopted a "paper compliance" model to minimize the number of new housing units that will be built. An MBTA Communities Reality Check:
For a number of reasons, I just don't understand all the animus towards this law.
 

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