FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: DeWayne.Lehman@umb.edu
Subsidized Housing at Risk of Loss, New UMass Boston Study Says
(Boston – May 4, 2009) – Over the next decade, close to 17,000 units in 130 federally and state-financed developments in Massachusetts could be lost as affordable housing as they reach the end of their 40-year subsidized mortgage terms, according to a new report released by the Center for Social Policy (CSP) in the McCormack Graduate School at the University of Massachusetts Boston.
According to the report’s author, Emily Achtenberg, who is a nationally recognized expert on the problem, “The maturing mortgage crisis represents the latest challenge to the privately owned subsidized housing stock, its lower income residents, and the communities where these developments are located.”
To address this challenge, Achtenberg urges passage of state legislation introduced by Senator Susan Tucker and Representative Brian Honan, and supported by an array of housing advocacy groups, that would provide the state Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) or its designee with the first right to offer to purchase a subsidized property when the owner seeks to sell it, and would also provide strong protections for the tenants of such properties. The Joint Committee on Housing will hold a hearing on the bill on Tuesday, May 5.
Since 1987, about 6,700 net affordable units have been lost as owners have prepaid their subsidized mortgages or opted out of their rental subsidy contracts. While Massachusetts has had a strong track record in subsidized housing preservation, recent experiences with maturing mortgage properties – including the loss of more than 800 affordable units at three Boston developments – suggest that new approaches are needed, according to Achtenberg.
The study reveals some of the characteristics of this housing that pose special challenges for preservation and tenant protection, as well as the unique benefits that make these developments especially worth preserving. For example, many maturing mortgage properties are located in strong market neighborhoods where they are vulnerable to conversion pressures. Outside the major cities, the loss of an existing subsidized property will often put the municipality out of compliance with Chapter 40B.
The study was produced for CSP and the Boston Tenant Coalition and was funded in part by the Hyams Foundation. The full report and executive summary are available at: http://www.mccormack.umb.edu/centers/csp/our_briefs.php. For more information, contact Emily Achtenberg, ejpa@aol.com or 617-524-3982 / 617-365-3775, or Kathy Brown, Boston Tenant Coalition, Kathy@bostontenant.org or 617-423-8609 / 617-851-0542.
About UMass Boston
With a growing reputation for innovative research addressing complex urban issues, the University of Massachusetts Boston, metropolitan Boston’s only public university, offers its diverse student population both an intimate learning environment and the rich experience of a great American city. UMass Boston’s seven colleges and graduate schools serve more than 14,000 students while engaging local, national, and international constituents through academic programs, research centers, and public service activities. To learn more about UMass Boston, visit www.umb.edu.
Noteworthy News
Françoise Carré Discusses President Obama's Jobs Summit on NECN
Watch the video
Through funding from the Hyams Foundation and the Sociological Initiatives Fund, the Center for Social Policy contributed to this CHAPA Briefing Paper, authored by Ann Verrilli: The Massachusetts Rental Voucher Program: Maintaining the State’s Primary Homeless Prevention Tool, June
October 28, 2009
View Statement
Revenue Committee’s Subcommittee on Tax Expenditure Budgets:
Randy Albelda's testimony on Understanding and Reforming Tax Expenditures to the Massachusetts Legislature's Committee on Revenue.
October 28, 2009
View Statement
"Connecting Vulnerable Job Seekers with Employers." 2009.
Françoise Carré. Diversity Executive.com. September 13.
Mott Foundation Facebook
Creative Economy Initiative:
Counting On Care Work:
Human Infrastructure in Massachusetts by Randy Albelda, Mignon Duffy and Nancy Folbre
Executive Summary Full Report
FEATURED VIDEO from Reshaping Poverty Policy Conference
Youth Voices
Progressive Planning: The Magazine of Planners Network article:
Unaffordable "Affordable" Housing: Challenging the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Area Median Income
by Michael E. Stone
Citizen Lobbyists Speaking OUT for Real Health Care Reform.
Visit Clout website
****************************************************
Reshaping Poverty Policy
Event Website
****************************************************