MILES PARKS, HOST:
Housing policy is a complicated issue. Costs keep climbing across the country, which has many states scrambling to find ways to bring in more affordable homes. Connecticut, with a very tight real estate market, has a new housing law after a struggle over how much the state could tell cities and towns what to do. Molly Ingram of WSHU Public Radio reports.
MOLLY INGRAM, BYLINE: Connecticut has the tightest housing market in the United States, with a low vacancy rate and expensive homes, according to the consulting firm ECOnorthwest. The Democratic-controlled legislature this year voted to make cities create more housing, with a bill that would have required them to plan and zone for a certain number of units. But local officials pushed back, especially from suburban areas where people feared a burst of new apartment buildings in their neighborhoods. At the last minute in June, Governor Ned Lamont, a Democrat, vetoed it.
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NED LAMONT: I think for the housing to continue growing successfully, it has to be led by our towns. It has to be led by our first selectmen. It has to be led by our mayors. I just don't think it works if it's us against them.
INGRAM: Lamont is running for reelection, and in the wealthier parts of the state, Republicans and Democrats alike saw the political blowback that could come from a bill that promoted affordable housing in places that didn't have the infrastructure or the appetite for it. Jason Ward co-directs the nonprofit RAND Center on Housing and Homelessness. He says this has been a recurring battle as states face the housing shortage with homeowners holding more political clout.
JASON WARD: There's the people who are already there and own housing, and then there's the people who would like to be there and would like to have access to housing. Only the former of those two groups really gets to have a say-so, gets to browbeat lawmakers, gets to threaten them with, you know, potentially voting them out of office or things like this.
INGRAM: So Lamont, lawmakers, municipal leaders and advocates worked for five months to come up with a new bill that works through incentives for local governments. It requires towns and cities to create their own housing plans and rewards them with grants as they implement them. It also includes things from the first bill, like easing parking space requirements for new apartments, expanding fair rent commissions and encouraging housing near public transit. It also makes it harder for neighbors to block development. Jason Ward with RAND says it's a step, though it doesn't mandate affordable housing as strictly as laws in New Jersey or California.
WARD: I would say this is a relatively modest package, based on what has been happening in other - some other places around the country.
INGRAM: But it was good enough for Connecticut governor Ned Lamont and local officials to hold a ceremonial bill signing at a Norwalk apartment complex this month. It takes effect on January 1.
For NPR News, I'm Molly Ingram in Fairfield, Connecticut.
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