Low-cost housing wins

Court orders new plans for units

 

By GREGORY J. VOLPE, Home News Tribune Online, January 27, 2007

 

TRENTON -- An appellate court decision released Thursday gives the state Department of Community Affairs six months to devise a new plan for municipalities to fulfill their court-ordered mandates for affordable housing.

Affordable housing advocates, who challenged the constitutionality of the Council on Affordable Housing's most recent rules, claimed victory and called on Gov. Jon S. Corzine and Department of Community Affairs Commissioner Susan Bass Levin to come up with a plan that sets forth a reasonable number of affordable units.

"The court found that Commissioner Levin and COAH manipulated the needs figures so that they were so low to be unrealistic, unconstitutional and contrary to any real, reasonable, rational basis," said Peter J. O'Connor, executive director of the Fair Share Housing Center, which brought one of four lawsuits challenging the state's affordable housing plan.

Levin issued a statement saying she was "deeply concerned" with parts of the decision that could limit construction of new affordable units, but noted the court found COAH's approach to affordable housing — tying obligation to new construction — was constitutional.

"Sound planning and environmental policy is the foundation for the growth-share approach — that towns should plan comprehensively to include affordable housing as they grow and develop," Levin said.

On that, the court said, "Growth share methodology can be valid only if COAH has data from which it can reasonably conclude that the allocation formula can result in satisfaction of the statewide need."

Franklin Mayor Brian Levine, whose township was required to institute a plan to build more than 700 affordable units under the old rules, said the original concept was a good idea, but it was poorly carried out.

Levine cited his own township's situation where members of the council were accused of colluding with a developer to build the affordable homes in the wildly unpopular Bennetts Lane development, which would have included more than 600 houses just off Route 27.

"I hope this gives us a chance to redo our plan, which was a fiasco and put money into the hands of large contributors to the town," Levine said.  "In our case, this can eliminate the sleaze factor."

The New Jersey State League of Municipalities called the decision a boon to developers and bane to those who need affordable housing.

"It's a windfall for the developer and it's a step backwards for affordable housing," said William Dressel Jr., the league's executive director.  "It was a pro-developer decision, and we're very upset because it's now placed 100-plus plans that are before COAH in limbo."

But the New Jersey Builders Association and housing advocates said the rules were prohibitive for building new units.

"We really haven't lost anything because we really weren't getting anything," said Paul Chrystie, executive director of the Coalition for Affordable Housing and the Environment.

Added Stephen M. Eisdorfer, the lawyer for the builders, "This is an instance where the builders and advocates of low-income housing were fully aligned," he said.  "We weren't going to be able to build it, and they weren't going to be able to live in it."

The decision means that more than 260 municipalities' affordable housing plans must be scrapped until new rules are adopted.

The court also struck down a rule that permits municipalities to dedicate half of their affordable units to senior citizens, ruling it discriminatory against families with children.

The court did not squash the use of regional contribution agreements, or RCAs, in which a town pays another — usually urban — to take some of its obligation, despite claims that these arrangements exclude the poor from the suburbs.

Contributing: Staff Writer David Stegon

 

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