BOSTON—Mayor Martin Walsh signed an executive order last week that increases affordable housing requirements in new multi-family projects and hikes fees for those builders who either choose not to include the units in their projects or build them elsewhere.
"For our city to continue to grow and thrive, we have to do everything in our power to make sure that people who want to work to make Boston better can afford to live here," says Mayor Walsh. "The Inclusionary Development Policy is a critical tool for creating and maintaining affordable living in our city. I am pleased that the team working on this issue has created a balanced policy that helps ensure that our city's most vulnerable benefit from the strong real estate market, while preserving developers' ability to create the housing we need across all income levels."
The IDP covers residential developments with 10 or more units that will either be developed on property owned by the City of Boston, or that will require relief from the Boston Zoning Code. Under IDP, developers of these projects are required to either build affordable units on-site; build or acquire affordable units in an off-site location, or, with BRA approval, provide a contribution to the Inclusionary Development Fund. The executive order signed by Mayor Walsh requires additional units or fees to be paid by developers that are building projects in most areas of the city that fall under the IDP regulations.
The executive order creates three separate zones (zones A, B and C) in the City of Boston. Zone A includes the downtown neighborhoods and waterfront areas; Zone B covers Allston, Brighton, Charlestown, Jamaica Plain, Mission Hill, and part of South Boston. Zone C encompasses Dorchester, East Boston, Hyde Park, Mattapan, Roslindale, Roxbury, and West Roxbury.
While the city's preference is for units created through IDP to remain on-site, in some cases developers are permitted to fulfill their IDP obligations by either making a cash-in-lieu payment into the city' Inclusionary Development Fund, or developing the affordable units near the planned market-rate development. These allowances would generally be given if the cash-in-lieu payment or off-site option would yield a significantly higher number of affordable units, city officials state.
The executive order increases the cash in lieu payments with the exception of Zone C. The new contribution limits increases from $200,000 per unit to $300,000 in Zone B and from $200,000 to $380,000 in Zone A.
In addition, in Zones A and B, developers seeking to build their units off-site will be required to increase the number of affordable units from 15% of the total to 18% of the total units in their development.
Ann Sobolewski, a partner with the Boston-based law firm Posternak Blankstein & Lund LLP, praised the stricter affordable housing regulations, particularly for new projects in the downtown/waterfront district. Sobolewski, who practices in the environmental, land use, real estate area for the law firm, says, "I think the modifications he proposed are a great incentive to actually get some (affordable) units constructed. By changing the amount of money people have to pay in to avoid constructing units and by increasing the number of units they would have to pay in for, I think he is making it more likely that affordable units will be constructed in parts of the city that are currently not having them constructed."
She specifically cited the downtown and waterfront areas (Zone A) where if a developer choses to build affordable units at the development, the standard 15% affordable percentage applies. However, if you chose to opt out, the fee would be based on an 18% rate and would now cost $380,000 instead of $200,000.
Sobolewski adds that she believes the higher fees and affordable housing percentages for units built off site "could very well be a driver to get more (affordable) units in the downtown area and waterfront."
The tighter regulations and higher fees should not be a major impediment to multifamily construction in Boston, she believes. "Development continues to roll along and Boston remains a city that is ripe for new kinds of industry and if you look at the fact that the Millennial generation wants to live where it works, having a mix of office and housing units will continue to happen in the city," Sobolewski says.
The IDP Fund, since its inception in 2000, has created 1,496 new affordable housing units under the on-site and off-site components, with another 551 affordable units currently under construction. In addition, more than $100 million has been raised for affordable housing; $70 million from the fund has been disbursed to date. These funds have helped create 1,597 new units of affordable housing, according to figures released by the city.
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