Boston Herald

Dems targeting suburban homeowners

- By Betsy McCaughey Betsy McCaughey is a former lieutenant governor of New York and chairman of the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths.

If you’ve worked hard to afford a suburban house with a patch of lawn where your kids can play, you’re under attack.

The Biden administra­tion and Democrats in New York, Connecticu­t and other states are fighting local zoning laws in order to build high-rise apartment buildings with “affordable” units in tree-lined, single-family neighborho­ods. All in the name of equity, meaning everyone can live in a tranquil suburb, whether they’ve earned the money to pay for it or not.

The Biden administra­tion announced Jan. 19 that it will require all towns across the U.S. to submit “Equity Plans” showing how they will make it possible for low-income people to live there by providing affordable housing, transporta­tion and other resources.

Towns that don’t meet the cookie-cutter requiremen­t for economic diversity will lose federal funding.

A new law enacted in Massachuse­tts last year mandates that 175 communitie­s serviced by the MBTA have at least one zone where multi-family housing is allowed by right.

No one’s denying there’s a housing shortage. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is pushing some reasonable proposals such as allowing mother-in-law apartments and relaxing environmen­tal restrictio­ns on residentia­l building.

But Hochul’s biggest proposal, the Housing Compact, is another misguided attack on local control and single-family zoning.

It will compel each town and village in the New York metro area to increase its housing stock to meet a uniform, state-imposed target and rezone for high-density housing — apartment buildings — within a half-mile of every MTA train stop.

Say goodbye to quaint downtowns lined with two-story buildings and older houses.

If a town in New York fails to meet state targets, the Compact will allow developers to build big in defiance of local zoning boards in almost all cases.

Opponents of singlefami­ly zoning are also playing the race card. ERASE Racism President Laura Harding says she’s fighting for a Long Island “free of structural racism and de facto segregatio­n.” The same phony pretext is being trotted out everywhere.

Racial discrimina­tion is abhorrent and should be prosecuted. But as a Brookings

Institutio­n analysis of the 2020 census shows, race isn’t a barrier to suburban living. Blacks are moving to the suburbs at a faster pace than whites. Anybody can be suburban. It just takes money — especially in Connecticu­t. In 2017, developer Arnold Karp purchased a colonial house on tree-lined Weed St. in small, ultra-wealthy New Canaan. There are no commercial or multifamil­y buildings on the street. He now wants to build a fivestory, 102-unit apartment complex with 30% set aside for affordable housing.

Weed Street is only a 10-minute drive, or a 17-minute local train ride, to Stamford, a midsize city where the quantity of affordable housing (nearly 16%) exceeds state guidelines.

Ensuring a supply of affordable housing within a region is more reasonable than demanding every town alter its character.

Local officials explain that New Canaan’s six-person fire department doesn’t even have hoses or trucks to fight a fire in a building as big as Karp’s design.

Weed St. neighbor Chris DeMuth Jr. warns Karp’s plan “is to cram over 300 people into a lot currently occupied by a single-family home.”

“If they destroy Weed Street, they could come for your neighborho­od next,” says a flier DeMuth circulated to his neighbors.

In fact, Connecticu­t’s Senate Democrats announced they’re making housing equity “in every community in the state” a top priority.

Democrats seem to believe everyone has a right to the same lifestyle, whether they’ve earned enough to pay the tab or not.

 ?? ?? The Biden administra­tion and Democrats in several states are fighting local zoning laws in order to build high-rise apartment buildings with “affordable” units in tree-lined, single-family neighborho­ods.
The Biden administra­tion and Democrats in several states are fighting local zoning laws in order to build high-rise apartment buildings with “affordable” units in tree-lined, single-family neighborho­ods.

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