Alternative take - the MBTA Communities law has so many holes in it, it's insanely easy to implement it without actually allowing any measurable new housing. Just zone new development, or condos (where the developer would have to buy every owner out to redevelop it) for multi-family and voila, you have MBTA zoning without actually encouraging any housing. And at the end of the day, MIlton has to zone a grand total of 50 acres for multi-family. Milton has 8,448 acres, that is 0.5 percent of its land area. The MBTA Communities Law is unnecessarily complicated, but it is not especially effective at encouraging housing.
New Hampshire is considering simpler reforms - and overrides of local zoning - that I think would be more effective at building housing (and those efforts are led by Republicans!)
The New Hampshire legislature is considering dozens of policies aimed at making housing more affordable, a priority for first-year Gov. Kelly Ayotte. Some policies are gaining bipartisan support, but debates over local control still rage.
www.governing.com
Housing crisis sparks bipartisan interest in efforts to override local zoning codes