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Showing Blogs: 11–20 of 31
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Dec 162011
The case for regional funding of public transit
MassInc’s recent report on new funding strategies for transportation makes the case for overhauling how we fund public transportation. Written by Ben Forman, Dan Darcy and James Emilio, the report warns that continuing to fund public transportation via sales tax revenues will ensure that the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) will continue to run up large deficits and will continue to get a disproportionate share of state revenues, thereby preventing Regional Transit Authorities from making the necessary investments they need to improve their public transportation systems.
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Nov 292011
McMorrow sees acute shortage in rental housing
Commonwealth Magazine Associate Editor Paul McMorrow reads the recent census data and sees evidence of an acute shortage of rental housing in Greater Boston. McMorrow wrote in a Nov. 22 Boston Globe op-ed piece:
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Oct 122011
Local director worries about housing cost/wage gap
In an opinion piece for the local paper, Plymouth's community development director, Bruce Arons, is worried about the lack of affordable housing given that wages have not kept up with the high cost of housing, -
Sep 272011
Using the courts to stall growth
Regular Boston Globe op-ed page contributor Paul McMorrow points out another example of how the courts are used to stall development when he writes about the Town of Holliston's three legal challenges to a development proposal to build 200 mixed-income condominiums. Holliston has lost all three but has managed to stop a development that first came before the town seven years ago.What irks McMorrow the most is that in many respects the development should be a no-brainer:
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Aug 022011
Land use proposals a good start
In testimony before the legislature this spring, MHP's Clark Ziegler said proposals to change the state's land use laws are a good start but don't go far enough to address the state's perpetual lack of housing production and corresponding slow growth. MHP's executive director advocates for a more comprehensive growth proposal that would include the creation of an office of state planning and the establishment of state and regional growth benchmarks that set clear expectations about how much housing is needed to sustain the state's economy. Ziegler testified:
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Jul 222011
Goodman: Zoning for housing big key to job growth
In his blog, Mike Goodman of UMass Dartmouth summarizes his response to questions by industry leaders about what policy changes would have the greatest impact on growing jobs in Massachusetts.
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Jun 302011
Zoning for backyard cottages taking hold in Seattle
The cottage home concept hasn't had much luck getting off the ground in Massachusetts but it is gaining momentum on the West Coast. Seattle's decision to expand a pilot programming allowing the construction of backyard rental cottages is paying dividends. Fifty-seven smaller homes have been permitted since the zoning policy was expanded from a few neighborhoods to across the city back in 2009. And one urban policy expert told Governing Magazine that permitting cottages is a good way for cities to increase density without radically changing neighborhoods.
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Dec 012010
How much more housing do we need to build?
We constantly hear that the state does not build enough housing and that results in high prices and loss of jobs. So, how much more housing do we need to build to keep and add more jobs here? The UMass Donahue Institute has tried to answer this question.
In a 56-page report commissioned by the Foundation for Growth and the Massachusetts Housing Partnership, UMass estimates that if current trends continue, we'll grow at a rate of 2.7 percent and add 87,000 jobs to the economy. Housing construction between 2010 and 2020 is expected to add 170,000 new homes. This would create a statewide shortage of almost 30,000 units (46,000 in Metro Boston with overbuilding in other parts of the state). The shortages are based on the vacancy rates necessary to have a stable, healthy market.
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Jul 262010
Recovery barriers in place
Remember our Recipe for Growth analysis of 242 metro areas? In this study, economist Ed Moscovitch found statistical evidence that production of new housing was a pre-requisite for job growth. In other words, cities that enjoyed economic growth early in the century had a flurry of building activity in preceding years.
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Jul 092010
Smith: Cities can tell us what kind of housing we need
David Smith is excited about the Brookings Institution's new report, The State of Metropolitan America. In an excellent summary of the 100-plus page data rich report, Smith says it redefines the United States as a United Nation of Cities and says it is useful in anticipating the types of housing that will be needed to ensure that cities continue as the main engine of our economic growth.

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In his blog,
The cottage home concept hasn't had much luck getting off the ground 
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David Smith is excited
Written by Ben Forman, Dan Darcy and James Emilio, the report warns that continuing to fund public transportation via sales tax revenues will ensure that the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) will continue to run up large deficits and will continue to get a disproportionate share of state revenues, thereby preventing Regional Transit Authorities from making the necessary investments they need to improve their public transportation systems.
The report proposes that a regional payroll tax or a tax on miles driven would enable the MBTA to close its operating deficit and make necessary improvements while generating increased revenues so that Gateway Cities could invest more funds in public transportation.
Right now, the report argues, increased spending for transportation is a non-starter because much of the state resents the fact that most of public transit dollars go to Boston. The report says shifting to a regional approach would be better.
The report warns that failing to address how to adequately fund transportation could stunt our economic growth and recovery. The report notes that between 1980 and 2010, per capita income in Greater Boston grew 1.8 times faster than in metro areas nationally. And while Boston is the nation’s 10th largest metro area, the region has the nation’s fifth largest transit system, measured by ridership.
With a regional approach to funding, the report argues that the MBTA would have the resources to keep pace with economic growth and Gateway Cities would have the assets to support its own economic growth.
An executive summary and the full report can be found on the MassInc web site.
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