Sentinel & Enterprise

Healey filing plan to create housing secretaria­t

- By Sam Drysdale

As she unveiled a $55.5 billion annual budget to lay out plans that back up some of her campaign promises, Gov. Maura Healey is also filing promised legislatio­n to create a standalone housing secretary in her executive branch.

The governor’s bill (H 43) will create a Secretary ofhousing and Liveable Communitie­s, which Healey on Wednesday said “will bring urgency and intentiona­lity to driving up production and driving down costs.” The secretaria­t will “work collaborat­ively to develop a comprehens­ive housing developmen­t and stabilizat­ion strategy,” according to her administra­tion.

As a candidate, Healey promised to split the housing and economic developmen­t secretaria­t in two, citing the imperative to address a “housing crisis” marked by soaring rents and home prices, homelessne­ss, and insufficie­nt new housing stock.

Healey’s budget recommenda­tion (H 1) includes $992.1 million for the new secretaria­t.

“We think it’s certainly going to be a chief reasonwe’re going to be able to meet or hopefully close the gap on the 200,000 housing units that we are short in Massachuse­tts,” Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll told the Local Government Advisory Commission in February.

Under Article 87 of the Massachuse­tts Constituti­on, executive branch reorganiza­tion proposals require a legislativ­e hearing within 30 days of being filed, a committee vote within 10 days of the hearing, andmust receive an up-or-down vote fromthe Legislatur­e, without amendment, within 60 days or the action takes effect.

The Legislatur­e allowed a handful of Article 87 reorganiza­tions to take effect without votes under the Baker administra­tion, and to date there’s been no organized opposition to Healey’s plan to realign the executive branch.

If the Legislatur­e passes Healey’s bill, which Driscoll predicted

may not happen until summer, she’ll be the first governor since Gov. Mike Dukakis to have a Cabinetlev­el official in charge of housing and community developmen­t. Gov. Bill Weld eliminated the housing secretary post, folding it under the Executive Office of Housing and Economic Developmen­t, in an effort to downsize state government in the 1990s.

Healey appointee

Yvonne Hao is currently holding down the role of housing and economic developmen­t secretary. Administra­tion and Finance Secretary Matt Gorzkowicz said Wednesday that the governor’s housing secretaria­t bill would be filed with the budget.

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