Plan regional approach to meeting Greater Boston area housing needs
Mayors from across Greater
Boston came together last week to announce a new partnership to tackle
the issue of housing — a consistent concern for local residents —
through a regional approach. The Metropolitan Mayors Coalition of
Greater Boston, consisting of Mayor Martin Walsh and mayors of 14
surrounding cities and towns, said the new inter-city body would work
over the next six months to identify key goals for the group and
establish an overarching plan to increase the housing stock and address
other major housing concerns.
“This
is an incredible time in Boston’s history — the economy is thriving,”
Walsh said, addressing reporters at City Hall. “More people are putting
down roots and raising families here.”
It
is because of such growth, he said, that a concerted approach to
housing policy was needed — not just within city limits, but stretching
across the entire metropolitan area where the population is increasing.
He referenced the Greater Boston housing “report card” released last
month by the Boston Foundation and Northeastern University, pointing to
its call for a robust increase in the city’s housing supply in order to
accommodate the influx of people moving to the region for work.
The
announcement by the MMCGB follows in the footsteps of Boston’s citywide
plan, Imagine Boston 2030, which was released in July after a two-year
planning and public commentary period, and an earlier housing plan
released in 2014 that set a goal of 53,000 new housing units by 2030— a
goal Walsh said the city was on schedule to hit.
He
also said that the region was finally starting to see some rent
stabilization — an area of improvement that the regional mayors hope to
continue through the partnership. The Boston Foundation report card
found that while Boston metro rents did rise sharply in 2015, the region
has started to see some rent stabilization more recently, in
conjunction with an increase in housing construction. That same report
also found that, in particular, rents in the innermost core of the
Greater Boston region fell from 2016 to 2017 — not by much, but still,
it was the first time that this has happened since at least 2009.
Preventing displacement
Nevertheless,
for many Boston residents, particularly in working-class neighborhoods
that are experiencing an uptick in large-scale developments, those
changes in the average regional rent prices may not translate into
tangible benefits in their particular area. And with local activist
groups regularly sounding the alarm about economic displacement and racial equity in housing, such concerns remain tantamount.
Both
Walsh and Mayor Joseph Curtatone of Somerville referred to these issues
during the press conference. “We really want to give people an
authentic choice to stay in the community that they love,” Curtatone
said.
Walsh added that
the new coalition would have a key commitment to “keeping communities
diverse — so people who grew up in our communities can stay.” He called
this goal “a center point in this plan.”
The
mayors said the housing plan would aim to increase a variety of
different types of development, including “workforce,” senior,
affordable and transit-oriented housing, as well as help preserve the
current stock of housing, such as owner-occupied buildings. They also
noted other key goals for the coalition: reducing evictions, addressing
regional homelessness, cracking down on discrimination against both
renters and homebuyers, and tackling the issue of concentrated poverty.
Variety
Marc
Draisen, executive director of the Metropolitan Area Planning Council,
summed up the goal thusly: “We want enough housing of all types for all
people at different price points they can afford.”
While
the coalition consists of just Boston and 14 of its neighboring cities
and towns, a representative of the Baker administration was also in
attendance.
“Massachusetts
needs to deliver more housing, more quickly, and in more places,”
Undersecretary for Housing and Community Development Chrystal Kornegay
said in a statement. “By focusing on establishing a measurable regional
housing goal, and building concrete strategies to deliver on that goal,
this initiative will help advance a housing market that works for
everyone — from innovation economy employees to the service sector
workforce, and from young families to older adults.”
ON THE WEB Greater Boston Housing Report Card 2017: http://bit.ly/2Be746Y