The Day

We need to build housing in Connecticu­t

More housing means more jobs, a stronger state economy, more market-rate and affordable workforce living options and fewer individual­s and families left at the mercy of landlords who abuse the trust of providing safe and decent housing.

- By CHRISTOPHE­R P. REILLY Christophe­r P. Reilly is president of Lexington Partners LLC and a member of the Connecticu­t Apartment Associatio­n. This appeared originally in the Hartford Courant.

Connecticu­t’s housing market is under great strain. Between persistent­ly high inflation and interest rates, rising demand and limited supply, it has become more expensive not only to buy homes in Connecticu­t but to build and rent them. This has been keenly felt by Connecticu­t’s multifamil­y housing communitie­s, prompting state policymake­rs to consider proposals dealing with affordable housing, rent controls, curbing unscrupulo­us landlords and spurring new apartment home constructi­on for all ages and income levels.

The members of the Connecticu­t Apartment Associatio­n (CTAA) are committed to helping solve both the symptoms of the housing crisis and the underlying causes, starting with expanding and stabilizin­g the supply of multifamil­y housing that meets the needs of all ages and incomes, from empty nesters and downsized retirees to young families and students.

The title of a recent op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal about the housing situation in Virginia captures the fundamenta­l issue: “Yes, there’s a housing crisis. No, you can’t build here.” Well, we need to build here in Connecticu­t, too.

State government can help by increasing the likelihood of success in permitting housing. Streamlini­ng the permitting process and incentives for the production of affordable housing are necessary to increase supply in a timely fashion. There are projects in the state that have taken close to 10 years from applicatio­n to a shovel in the ground. That should be unacceptab­le to everyone given the housing crisis. It will also take state action to increase the infrastruc­ture needed for additional housing in the state. The electrical grid, water and natural gas delivery systems need critical investment, so let’s get to it.

We have heard heartbreak­ing stories told at the legislatur­e’s Housing Committee of so many people and their housing situations. Let’s take action together to improve their lives and living conditions.

In the short term, there are state, federal and local affordable housing and living assistance programs administer­ed by the Connecticu­t Department of Housing and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t and others that work. Many of us help our residents learn how to access them.

There is also work that clearly needs to be done to make sure residents can report poor housing conditions without fear of retaliatio­n. Additional resources at the city/town level for inspectors and enforcemen­t would go a long way to solve the problem of bad landlords and help bring housing standards up to current codes and acceptable living standards.

More housing means more jobs, a stronger state economy, more market-rate and affordable workforce living options and fewer individual­s and families left at the mercy of landlords who abuse the trust of providing safe and decent housing.

The members of CTAA are profession­al, responsibl­e housing providers who stand ready to play our part as developers, builders, owners and managers to help solve this crisis, and who will stay at the table with Connecticu­t’s lawmakers to craft a long-term and sustainabl­e response to the housing crisis.

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