Connecticut Post

Don’t penalize towns working hard on affordable housing

- By Alexis Harrison Alexis Harrison lives in Fairfield. This essay was her testimony before the General Assembly on state zoning proposals.

I have been involved with zoning and environmen­tal issues for most of my adult life, and I’ve never seen such an attack on our local zoning and land use as I have today by our General Assembly. I strongly believe these proposals, specifical­ly, HB 6107, will weaken the planning and zoning commission­s that our 169 towns and cities have had for decades.

Over the years, I’ve sat at dozens and dozens of zoning meetings as a neighborho­od and environmen­tal activist and I know firsthand how critical they are to residents and the people, whether it’s an applicant or a neighbor in opposition, who need their voices represente­d.

Zoning commission­s also serve as smaller versions of our Environmen­tal Protection Agency, which is critical when climate change has become the most pressing issue of our time. Decisions made by our local commission­s on zoning protect our natural resources; they protect public safety and they protect the unique nature of each community — whether it’s a small hamlet, a town or city.

There is nothing uniform about land; it is all unique and having a one-size-fits-all plan is unacceptab­le to me and it should be to you, too, as individual­s who represent distinct and different towns across our state. Dismantlin­g the rights of community decision making will not have a positive result for Connecticu­t.

In that spirit, I am greatly concerned with HB 6107, notably a section that calls for a working group:

“The Secretary of the Office of Policy and Management, or the secretary’s designee, shall convene and chair a working group to develop and recommend to the secretary guidelines and incentives for compliance .... ” and it goes on. The proposed “working group” is problemati­c — the working group membership does not represent all stakeholde­rs, most notably representa­tives from environmen­tal groups. Tackling climate change should be our biggest priority, and absence of that voice is an affront to Connecticu­t’s citizens.

It also appears that most of the new laws being proposed by our lawmakers in Hartford are focused on shifting population from cities to suburbs and towns rather than repopulati­ng cities. One such proposed law for example, seeks to expand the developmen­t of multifamil­y housing by making it “as-ofright” within a half-mile of commercial and transit areas (which would comprise very large portions of many towns).

Does creating more multifamil­y homes in the suburbs and renting them at full market value create opportunit­ies for the disadvanta­ged?

Why aren’t we empowering home ownership?

And how does 8-30g, our state’s affordable housing law play into these changes? Has that been discussed?

We can’t pass laws and ask questions later. That happens too often, and to the detriment of the people.

Before making fundamenta­l changes to laws that would affect the permanent changes to that most finite of resources — the land — all stakeholde­rs should be heard from, all unintended consequenc­es should be studied and considered and all state goals concerning our beleaguere­d cities should be addressed.

One thing that has struck me about this process is the lack of representa­tion of residents, which I don’t understand. I am disappoint­ed that my own state representa­tive hasn’t held a single virtual meeting or webinar on these issues. Where is that exchange of dialogue that you speak of? Where is the listening and learning?

I would also like to note that my town of Fairfield is working very hard to build more affordable housing. In fact, Fairfield just passed an accessory-dwelling unit regulation supported by housing advocates and the towns affordable housing committee, after months if discussion by our volunteer Town Plan & Zoning to vastly expand accessory dwelling units while reflecting the design standards of our town. But as Sen. Tony Hwang has pointed out, our ADU regulation­s must exactly match the new proposed law on ADUs, because “noncomplia­nt existing regulation shall become null and void.” The bill not only doesn’t recognize our town’s good faith efforts to expand and diversify housing options, but it burdens our volunteer lay commission with redoing what is done and further placing added state-mandated time constraint­s on the commission. In that same vein, in Fairfield, we already have had a great amount of multifamil­y housing being built near our transit areas which already require 10 percent of affordable units.

Our TPZ has approved them commensura­te with the unique aspects of our town’s infrastruc­ture, goals of pedestrian walkways, design standards, topography and impact on nearby built environmen­t. In short, we’re already doing it. The new laws would ignore the hard work being done. That’s unfair.

I also believe the new proposed laws would also not help with affordabil­ity — in Fairfield, just this month a multifamil­y developer informed our Town Plan & Zoning commission that non-affordable rents go for $3,000 a month.

I ask you today to put these proposals on hold. There is no immediate rush to push these proposals through during a time when residents are trying to return to normal life after a year of enduring a global pandemic, caring for family members, and educating their children during very stressful periods. Please table these proposals until you can convene in person, legislator­s can hold in-person community workshops with their constituen­ts in their districts to discuss the pros and cons of these laws and there is more transparen­cy with the process.

 ?? Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? A pair of riders exit an afternoon Metro-North train out of New York at the Fairfield Metro station in Fairfield.
Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media A pair of riders exit an afternoon Metro-North train out of New York at the Fairfield Metro station in Fairfield.

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