THE STATE IS moving to cut Westwood off from several sources of funding – the first municipality to be penalized for submitting a zoning roadmap that doesn’t comply with the requirements of the MBTA Communities Act.
Passed during the Baker administration and now championed by Gov. Maura Healey, the MBTA law tries to tackle the statewide housing shortage by requiring cities and towns within a certain distance from public transit to zone for more multi-family housing.
Westwood’s initial plan “claimed in a conclusory fashion that Westwood’s zoning bylaws already comply” with the MBTA Communities Act requirements “and the town will take no further action to amend its zoning bylaws, or to demonstrate that the existing bylaws comply,” the state Department of Housing and Community Development wrote in a letter to the town on April 19.
This puts Westwood at risk of losing out on a number of funding sources, including the Housing Choice Initiative, the Local Capital Projects Fund, and the MassWorks infrastructure program. The Department of Housing and Community Development said it is informing these funding programs that Westwood is not in compliance.
Town Administrator Christopher Coleman said Friday morning that the town has no comment at this time.
Westwood is roughly 12 miles southwest of Boston, home to about 16,200 residents in 5,800 units of housing. It also has two MBTA commuter rail stations – the Route 128 station and the Islington station – which places it squarely in the “commuter rail community” category of the new zoning requirements.
The town has until the end of 2024 to adopt a new and compliant zoning district “of reasonable size” anywhere within half a mile of its commuter rail stations. The district has to cover 50 acres and zone for 870 multi-family units, though the units do not have to be built.
“This law is not a housing production mandate,” state housing and economic development officials wrote in late 2022 as the requirements were rolled out. “It is all about setting the table for more transit-oriented housing in the years and decades ahead—which is not just good housing policy, but good climate and transportation policy, too.”
Expecting resistance from some regions, the state built in checkpoints to determine interim compliance. Communities had to submit action plans to the state by the end of January, explaining how they expected to meet those new requirements.
Almost all of the 177 municipalities have submitted plans, but a handful of towns dragged their feet, objecting to what they feel is a heavy-handed approach to encouraging density that is not flexible enough to local needs, limitations, and active planning. Middleborough, Holden, and Berkley are the final three holdouts.
Westwood, however, did submit a plan right on time on January 31. In the document, town officials asserted that existing zoning districts would likely comply with the MBTA requirements if the district boundaries were expanded. A recent zoning change in Westwood would create a new multi-family residential overlay district of about 16.5 acres within half a mile of its MBTA stations. The town does not know how many units would be created under the zoning change, but expects to file for a special permit application to allow density greater than 15 units per acre.
The 16.5-acre area already houses 450 units, Westwood officials wrote in their plan. If the special permit leads to another 150 potential units, the zone will more than double the MBTA Communities Act 15-units-per-acre density requirement. However, those projections are still well below the total 870-unit requirement the state assigned to Westwood.
Westwood’s interim plan insists that its existing zoning efforts should pretty much suffice, perhaps with some expansion.
“The town has asserted this position despite knowing … that its existing multi-family district is not of a ‘reasonable size’ as defined in DHCD’s compliance guidelines,” the housing department wrote in the letter. “The town declined an opportunity to amend its action plan to state an intent to comply with the DCHD guidelines.”
Like other cities and towns balking at the requirements, Westwood argues that the state should allow more flexibility for towns that feel they are already trying to responsibly build new housing.
“DHCD might consider revising its guidelines to apply the ‘Bird in Hand’ adage, and alter its requirements to allow municipalities that actually accomplish the construction of multi-family housing units, rather than merely the theoretic possibility of such units, to achieve compliance on a sliding scale,” Westwood’s action plan submission concluded.
JENNIFER SMITH
NEW STORIES FROM COMMONWEALTH MAGAZINE
Trial will go on: The Supreme Judicial Court overturned a lower court ruling and allowed the prosecution of two former top officials at the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home on charges of negligence in connection with the COVID-era deaths of veterans. Two justices dissented, saying a trial is merely an “attempt to assign blame in hindsight.” Read more.
Track replacement: The MBTA is replacing a lot of track to address slow zones that cover a quarter of the subway system, according to repair plans scheduled for May. Read more.
OPINION
Democracy in peril: Elizabeth Kilcoyne, who served a campaign manager for Rep. Kristin Kassner of Hamilton, says democracy was in peril when Krassner’s one-vote victory was challenged based on “human error” and her swearing-in delayed for a month by House leaders. Read more.
STORIES FROM ELSEWHERE AROUND THE WEB
BEACON HILL
A Massachusetts LGBTQ youth commission releases a 300-page report calling for new policies and training to deal with discrimination and harassment. (State House News Service)
MUNICIPAL MATTERS
The Peabody City Council approves an 80-acre open space purchase to prevent the property from being developed. (Daily Item)
The New Bedford City Council failed to override Mayor Jon Mitchell’s veto of a non-binding measure that would put rent stabilization on the local ballot this November. (New Bedford Standard-Times)
WASHINGTON/NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL
The 21-year-old National Guard airman from Dighton charged with leaking national security information spoke excitedly about violence and was twice denied a gun permit by local police. (Boston Globe)
Yes, there are nuclear threats from North Korea and other matters to discuss, but the buzz around the US visit of South Korean president Yoon Suk Yeol is all about the rendition of “American Pie” he delivered at a White House state dinner on Wednesday. (NBC News)
BUSINESS/ECONOMY
Fifty-one people died in workplace fatalities in Massachusetts last year, according to a report from the Massachusetts Coalition for Occupational Safety and Health and the Massachusetts AFL-CIO, which singled out the new cannabis industry for not adequately protecting workers. (Boston Globe)
EDUCATION
Boston Public Schools leaders outline plans for two sets of school mergers in the face of falling district enrollment – and face pushback on what is invariably a wrenching topic. (Boston Globe)
Worcester educators seeking a new contract rallied outside City Hall ahead of next week’s collective bargaining session. The union is pushing for higher wages and guaranteed prep periods for teachers among its demands. (Worcester Telegram)
CRIMINAL JUSTICE/COURTS
Prosecutors say Brian Walshe of Cohasset, who is accused of killing his wife, suspected she was having an affair. (Associated Press)
MEDIA
A third correction was added to a recent Boston Globe story on MBTA employees working remotely. In each case, employees alleged to be working remotely were actually coming into work from a residence in Boston.
Yawu Miller, senior editor at the Bay State Banner, is leaving the newspaper where he has worked most of his life and, in an article for the Banner, reflects on the changes he has seen. (Bay State Banner)
