Baltimore Sun

Olszewski backs down from council fight

Baltimore County exec in dispute over developmen­t

- By Lia Russell

Baltimore County Executive Johnny Olszewski Jr. suffered another setback last week in a long-simmering conflict between his administra­tion and the County Council over how the county should strategize housing production.

In a letter sent Wednesday to the council, Olszewski reneged on a threat to veto a bill that he previously said would have given developers “too much of a blank slate” to disregard otherwise mandatory design standards.

The council passed that bill March 18, which allows for the constructi­on of up to 220 two-unit town house condos, or “stacked townhomes,” if they meet certain criteria, like being located in a mixed business and residentia­l district, and are within the Liberty West area in northweste­rn Baltimore County. It is sponsored by Councilman Julian Jones, a Woodstock Democrat.

The vote passed 6-0; Republican Councilman Todd Crandell of Dundalk was absent.

The council and Olszewski have sparred in recent months over the administra­tion’s attempts to spur more housing production by modifying zoning regulation­s, which council members have seen as underminin­g their landuse authority. The legislativ­e body recently passed a master plan after four years of delay and months of debate over whether to include specific developmen­t areas that the planning department said would allow the county to repurpose underused, aging strip malls and shopping centers for housing.

Olszewski said in the Wednesday letter that he would allow Jones’ bill to pass without his signature despite expressing reservatio­ns about it in a different letter he sent last month, where he announced his veto of a separate zoning bill from Republican Councilman Wade Kach of Timonium. The council overrode that veto earlier this month.

Jones’ bill allows “a project to be approved by limited exemption, removing the opportunit­y for a community input meeting,” Olszewski wrote in a Wednesday letter. “While we acknowledg­e that similar laws have been enacted in the past, we believe it is time for Baltimore County to curb such practices.”

The bill targets a cluster of lots on Liberty Road and Owings Mills Boulevard in Randallsto­wn owned by developer Jay Attar, according to Jones, who called the bill a “win for affordable housing.”

Jones said Attar previously had approval to build high-rise apartments, but he negotiated a deal for Attar to build affordably priced town houses in exchange for exempting Attar from paying impact fees, which have generated almost no money for the county.

Attar said Friday that he initially bought the property with the intention of building midrise apartments, for which the land was already zoned, but due to “market shifts, we determined stacked townhomes was a more appropriat­e project.”

“The reason for the bill is because the county regulation­s haven’t caught up to this particular style of housing,” Jones said of the stacked town house concept during a Friday interview.

Attar and his company, Attar Enterprise­s, are frequent donors to Democratic politician­s. He donated $1,000 to Jones in September 2022.

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