cherrytree group llc logo

Cherrytree Group LLC Blog

RSS Grab the Cherrytree Group Real Estate Blog feed

Get e-mail notifications of new blog posts! Enter email address below.


Delivered by FeedBurner

 

Massachusetts Ballot Questions, Question 2 Explained

Joseph Coupal - Monday, November 08, 2010

By Warren Kirshenbaum

In the recent election, Question 2 on the Massachusetts ballot asked whether voters should “repeal the law allowing developers of projects that include low- or moderate-income housing to apply for a single comprehensive permit from a city or town’s zoning board” The law in question is M.G.L. Chapter 40B, which is an expedited permitting statute. Chapter 40B creates an expedited permitting procedure for those developers that include an affordable component to their development. Specifically, in order to receive a permit under 40B, 25% of the housing units to be built must be considered affordable housing. The towns in the Commonwealth that are subject to 40B are those towns whose affordable housing stock does not exceed 10% of their total housing inventory. 40B subjects the Zoning Board to a streamlined procedure greatly reducing the time and cost of the permitting procedure, and limiting the ability of the town to deny the permit.

On Tuesday, November 2nd, Massachusetts voters, in a decisive victory of 58% to 42% voted not to repeal 40B.

This trend in the voting patterns comports with conversations that I had with people, in which it seemed that there was a lot of non-information, and even misinformation on this issue, and as this movement to repeal 40B could resurface again, I am hoping to shed some light on the issue in this post.

The main underlying issue that I sensed is the NIMBY one. Not in My Back Yard is understandable, and is a concern about falling property values and the denigration of a neighborhood when some of the housing is affordable. Declining property values is indeed a fallout of affordable housing, as the financing options discussed below are very favorable to developers or affordable buyers and, therefore, their properties. These affordability factors lower the market value of a single family home, or a multifamily property, and, therefore, affect the comps of other sellers in the area. This effect is a micro-economic effect, and a relatively minor one at that, as lower comps would affect a financing appraisal in small part, and the market value of a sale with even less consequence. In any event, 40B historically has mostly been used for multi-family construction, and 95% of the projects permitted under 40B are multi-family apartment complexes or condos.

Practically speaking, if a condo development were built near your home, whether it was affordable or market-rate your property value and property enjoyment would decline, so this is not an affordable housing, or 40B issue, as much as it is a land-use or urban planning issue.

Secondly, people I spoke to understood 40B to be a financing statute, and assumed that it gave developers funding to pursue their affordable housing projects. 40B is an expedited permitting statute that allows an override of municipal zoning authority to promote affordable housing. It is not a financing statute. There are forms of financing that are available to developers of affordable housing, such as the Federal Low Income Housing Tax Credit, HUD insured mortgages, tax-exempt bonds, Community Block Grants, and other state and federal sources of funding, and developers use these sources of funding once they are permitted, whether pursuant to 40B or otherwise. 40B is not a preamble to these sources of financing.

While realizing that concern over retaining a leafy suburban lifestyle, or holding on to a paper appraisal of a home value may be important to some in the micro-economic sense, it is not a positive economic trend in the big picture that justifies the repeal of a statute such as 40B. Consider this: a community is more than just our home values; it is a collection of individuals, families, homes, stores, houses of worship, and so forth. While we are happy when we see a fire truck scooting off to tame a brush fire near our neighbor’s yard, we would be foolish to attempt to exclude the possibility that the first responders on the fire-truck also be given the opportunity to live among us in our community by creating affordable options here, and not force them to be relegated to living in a far-off town for affordability reasons.

It should also be pointed out since its enactment, 40B has been credited with spurring upwards of 80% of the new development in Massachusetts, and there are several new developments, as well as many ongoing ones that would not have been built, or will not now be completed were 40B to be repealed, or if it didn’t exist in the first place. This construction has created jobs, spending, and economic activity that we rely on for our stability, and, particularly in our economic malaise, we can little afford to repeal a statute that has created such substantial growth and employment.

The Citizens Housing and Planning Association (“CHAPA”), a prominent Massachusetts non-profit that plays a decisive role in encouraging the production and preservation of affordable housing claimed that this vote evidenced the largest victory margin of any ballot campaign. CHAPA claimed that, “over 1.2 million voters and 80% of cities and towns affirmed their support for protecting the affordable housing law for seniors and working families in urban, suburban, and rural communities all across the state.” While this is true, an analysis of the voting results shows that the larger urban centers voted strongly in favor of not repealing 40B, constituting the largest slice of the 16% victory margin, while the voting in many towns was closer than this 16% victory margin suggests. Many towns actually voted in favor of repeal. Cities and towns such as Worcester, Somerville, Quincy, Arlington, Boston, Brockton, Lawrence, New Bedford and Cambridge opposed repealing 40B in large numbers, and they were joined by the suburban bastions of Newton, Needham, Lexington, Brookline, and Milton, which all together carried the NO vote on this question. Significantly, however, there were also several towns that voted to repeal 40B, such as Abington, Amesbury, Billerica, Bridgewater, Sudbury, Stoughton, Wilmington, Westford, Chelmsford, Tewksbury, Walpole, and Canton.


Recent Posts


Tags

tax credit syndication Chapter 40B vote results renewable energy projects wind farm development investments in solar energy commercial real estate owners Kirshenbaum Law, Cherry Tree, LLC, Real Estate, MA credit for income producing properties laws of Brownfields community development financial institutions Massachusetts brownfields tax credit Former Getty owners community development entity biomass power CHAPA solar energy properties new markets tax credit program development of the renewable energy industry HUD insured mortgages solar energy array projects multi-family apartments Chapter 40B explained destructive oil spill historic tax credit motion picture tax credits multitude of renewable resources QECBs tax incentives and credits value-added services more control over financing costs largest accidental marine oil spill Massachusetts Contingency Plan geothermal power solarize Massachusetts residential real estate brownfields tax credits urban redevelpment green energy projects LIHTC tax credits business business capital fuel cell initiatives finance preservation of historic buildings real estate lawyer, MA Historic rehabilitation tax credits, MA SRECs investment objectives polluted sites tax credit, New Bedford Massachusetts REITs, Boston multi-family housing, MA making money with commercial real estate Brownfields Act, MA commercial tax credits, Lowell office space solar initiatives commercial real estate lawyer SREC capital line funding borrow money buy commercial real estate, MA commercial building tax deductions marine and hydrokinetic, solar financing asset stripping develop renewable energy systems capitalism private equity' midterm elections commercial tax credits, New Bedford solar farms tax credit to spur redevelopment San Jose small residential properties heat and power LIHTCs NYC tax credits solar power distressed asset investment fund tax credit broker building improvements REITS renewable energy jobs deduction for energy efficient buildings economically distressed areas solar investment tax credit tax credit investments banking real estate deals monstrous oil spill fuel cells thayer morgan interivew wind power Massachusetts gas station owners distressed asset investment offshore wind Brownfields credits brownfields projects, MA capital requirements workforce development rehabilitation EB-5 Regional centers deepwater horizon oil spill brownfields tax credit, MA development in Massachusetts commercial tax credits, Fall River Massachusetts Brownfields Tax Credits low-income housing tax credits American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 - Section 1603 Gulf Coast victimized negative environmental effect federal and state tax credits tax advantages San Francisco investment into business Quincy, MA commercial real estate investment boycotting BP gas stations tax credits global energy demand sydicator of tax credits solar renewable energy credits renewable energy certificates sale of a tax credit economy independent gas station owners tax breaks monetizing your tax credits business investment news credits Summertime Economy in Boston transfer of tax credits real estate projects tax planning strategies wind farm tax credit renewable energy tax break Massachusetts Ballot Questions, Question 2 Explained federal government brownfields tax credit, CT residential properties commercial tax credits restoration projects commercial energy tax deductions federal low income housing tax credit tax advantaged development invest in commercial real estate Louisianna wind power technology cost of producing renewable energy renewable energy facility new normal new market tax credits Brownfields Tax Credits, MA renewable energy expensive to produce green energy Brownfields sites brownfields redevelopment, CT visas for buying homes Martha's Vineyard non-bank resources for capital funding market rate housing tax credit, MA Chicago tax incentive deals commercial historic rehabilitation tax credit examine tax credits EPA brownfields grant money developers, Boston, MA brownfield redevelopment, CT historic preservation tax credit investing in surface parking lots energy systems new housing developments expiring tax credits qualified energy conservation bonds contractors, Boston, MA Housing Development Incentive Program economics of environmental projects clean energy REIT sources of funding commercial buildings free up capital developing real estate, MA private sector investment solar pilot program new market tax credit MGL Ch 21E solar energy markets investors in renewable energy RECs energy efficient tax deductions tax credits for gateway cities, New Bedford private equity offerings, ma distressed asset investment fund, ma green standards NIMBY not in my back yard tax deductions gasoline market manipulation geothermal wind energy credits small business secure capital private sector investments 40B credited with spurring upwards of 80% new development renewable energy environmental projects real estate investments investments real estate Rhode Island energy tax credit commercial tax credits, MA partial equity participation depressed and booming markets build a wind farm economic slump investing in apartments, MA Business Financing wholesale energy energy production tax deductions rownfields Act real estate properties real estate investment trusts, Boston investing in commercial real estate Massachusetts state tax credits wholesale acquisitions capital finance hydro electric power low income housing tax credits Massachusetts tax credits landfill gas facility hedging transactions Boston capital foreign investors Quincy Broad Medows Salt Marsh solar facilities renewable energy incentives preservation of mills renewable resources borrowing by small businesses wind subsidies cleantech debt-service massachusetts non-profit small business loans commercial properties gasoline price fixing the difference between tax credits and tax deductions invest Brownfields programs infrastructure investment list of brownfields sites Plymouth, MA outsourcing investing in surface lots Austin Housing Development Incentive Program, MA Broad Medows Salt Marsh oil spill Brownfields Act, economically distressed areas, Massachusetts Brownfields Tax Credits, Massachusetts Contingency Plan, MGL Ch 21E, RAO, remedy operation status, renewable energy, sale of tax credits, tax advantaged development, tax credit syndication, tra Cape Wind cherrytree group llc private equity offerings venture development capital MA capital funding distressed asset sales sustainable technology permitting procedure Commercial Real Estate Loan Amortization Periods new market commercial real estate in MA investing in apartment projects, MA Historic rehabilitation tax credits wind solar installations solar energy development Kirshenbaum Real Estate developing real estate in MA real estate investment trusts non-renewable energy sources private equity offerings community block grants solar investment tax private equity, MA how REITs works business solar investment tax credit obtaining capital financial incentives to develop real estate in MA solar power development alternative funding sources expensive to produce 1603 Grant cleantech cities brownfields redevelopment, MA american symphony orchestra investing in real estate in MA solar power initiative gas station loss of income real estate development tax incentives historic and low income housing commercial leases credit line funding microturbines solar energy production equity investments loaning money to consumers money lending commercial real estate new markets brownfields laws buy real estate, MA new energy technologies alternate funding brownfields REIT industry brownfields tax credit tenant representative raising capital, MA real estate business asset american recovery and reinvestment act clean technology declining property values commercial tax credit attorney federal tax credits Tax Credit affordable housing solar energy federal tax Credit portability of tax credits biodiesel equity foreign investment income tax credit economic development bill, MA Warren Kirshenbaum commercial real estate attorney real estate lawyer solar ITC capped landfills citizens housing and planning association historic building tax credit, New Bedford Commonwealth Solar Rebate Program commercial real estate investments The Transactional Law Group - MA EB-5 real estate strategy business loans new york pops private investments renewable energy development recession build green invest in real estate energy efficient property devastating environmental damage foreign capital NMTC solar system sale of tax credits EB-5 Green Card Program federal energy regulatory commission tax credit sydication wind tax credit trash facility tax credits to fix up historic buildings Brownfields sites, MA hydro power real estate attorney brownfields, MA 1603 Treasury Grant cleantech capitals FERC investing in parking lots energy companies tax credits to help economy investing in commercial real estate, Boston low-income neighborhoods large capital projects equity requirements energy tax credits renewable energy program community development hydro energy production tax-excempt bonds venture capital tax credits on brownsfields thayer morgan informational technology RI RAO downturn tax credit programs, New Bedford economic growth brownfields, CT new markets tax credits capital raising questions, MA real estate attorney, ma methods of renewable energy production solar capacity Federal Historic Rehabilitation Tax Credit solar projects BP Gas station owners Cape Cod renewable energy industry construction commercial tax credit multi-family construction construction jobs real estate investment, Boston investment tax credits MA traditional funding weak economy renewable energy credits visas for imigrants Transactional Law Group distressed assets sale of renewable energy credits The Cherrytree Group Seattle REIT investments invest in development projects LIHTC new markets investments renewable energy tax credits BP oil spill tax credit consultant financing solar installations distressed asset investing remedy operation status biomass facilities private equity real estate, Boston

Archive

Disclaimer

This Blog is made available by the lawyer publisher for educational purposes only as well as to give you general information and a general understanding of the law, not to provide specific legal advice. By using this blog site you understand that there is no attorney client relationship between you and the Blog publisher. The Blog should not be used as a substitute for competent legal advice from a licensed professional attorney in your state.