Inclusionary housing: Difference between revisions

From HousingWiki
Content added Content deleted
imported>Eaymer
No edit summary
imported>Eaymer
No edit summary
Line 11: Line 11:


New York City Council approved a mandatory inclusionary housing program in 2016. The approved measures were designed to take into account a situation in which the City's population had grown by one million people since 1990, along with steadily rising housing costs and large numbers of residents on waiting and lottery lists for public housing and private affordable units (New York City Council 2016). Unlike Boston's strategy, New York's inclusionary housing scheme specifically targets lower income residents with a Deep Affordability Option that requires higher percentages of building floor areas to be set aside for residents making an average of 40 percent of the AMI (New York City Council 2016). "The Department of City Planning and the Department of Housing Preservation and Development have stated that the central goals of the proposal are to create more economically diverse communities across New York City and to ensure that a share of new housing in growing communities is affordable" (New York City Council 2016). The policy is applied to areas rezoned to allow the construction of more residences than currently allowed (New York City Council 2016). Areas under consideration at this writing include  "[http://www.nyc.gov/html/dcp/html/east_new_york/index.shtml East New York] in Brooklyn; [http://www.nycedc.com/project/inwood-nyc-neighborhood-study Inwood] and [http://www.eastharlemplan.nyc/ East Harlem] in Manhattan; [http://www.nyc.gov/html/dcp/html/flushing-west/index.shtml Flushing West ]and [http://www.nyc.gov/html/dcp/html/long-island-city-core/index.shtml Long Island City] in Queens; the [http://www.nyc.gov/html/dcp/html/jerome_ave/index.shtml Jerome Avenue corridor] in the Bronx; and [http://www.nyc.gov/html/dcp/html/bay-street-corridor/index.shtml Bay Street] in Staten Island" (New York City Council 2016). In addition to the program being applied to areas of rezoning, it would also apply to private rezoning applications that involve an increase in density (e.g. in a situation where a developer was applying to build a residential structure with more units than currently allowed) (New York City Council 2016).
New York City Council approved a mandatory inclusionary housing program in 2016. The approved measures were designed to take into account a situation in which the City's population had grown by one million people since 1990, along with steadily rising housing costs and large numbers of residents on waiting and lottery lists for public housing and private affordable units (New York City Council 2016). Unlike Boston's strategy, New York's inclusionary housing scheme specifically targets lower income residents with a Deep Affordability Option that requires higher percentages of building floor areas to be set aside for residents making an average of 40 percent of the AMI (New York City Council 2016). "The Department of City Planning and the Department of Housing Preservation and Development have stated that the central goals of the proposal are to create more economically diverse communities across New York City and to ensure that a share of new housing in growing communities is affordable" (New York City Council 2016). The policy is applied to areas rezoned to allow the construction of more residences than currently allowed (New York City Council 2016). Areas under consideration at this writing include  "[http://www.nyc.gov/html/dcp/html/east_new_york/index.shtml East New York] in Brooklyn; [http://www.nycedc.com/project/inwood-nyc-neighborhood-study Inwood] and [http://www.eastharlemplan.nyc/ East Harlem] in Manhattan; [http://www.nyc.gov/html/dcp/html/flushing-west/index.shtml Flushing West ]and [http://www.nyc.gov/html/dcp/html/long-island-city-core/index.shtml Long Island City] in Queens; the [http://www.nyc.gov/html/dcp/html/jerome_ave/index.shtml Jerome Avenue corridor] in the Bronx; and [http://www.nyc.gov/html/dcp/html/bay-street-corridor/index.shtml Bay Street] in Staten Island" (New York City Council 2016). In addition to the program being applied to areas of rezoning, it would also apply to private rezoning applications that involve an increase in density (e.g. in a situation where a developer was applying to build a residential structure with more units than currently allowed) (New York City Council 2016).

== Critiques of Inclusionary Zoning ==

 


= References =
= References =


Zhorov, I. (2016). Ideas Worth Stealing: Inclusionary zoning to grow affordable housing.''Keystone Crossroads''. Retrieved from&nbsp;<br/> http://crossroads.newsworks.org/index.php/local/keystone-crossroads/91987-ideas-worth-stealing-inclusionary-zoning-to-grow-affordable-housing-
Zhorov, I. (2016). Ideas Worth Stealing: Inclusionary zoning to grow affordable housing.''Keystone Crossroads''. Retrieved from&nbsp;<br/> [http://crossroads.newsworks.org/index.php/local/keystone-crossroads/91987-ideas-worth-stealing-inclusionary-zoning-to-grow-affordable-housing- http://crossroads.newsworks.org/index.php/local/keystone-crossroads/91987-ideas-worth-stealing-inclusionary-zoning-to-grow-affordable-housing-]


New York City Council. (2016).&nbsp;Mandatory Inclusionary Housing. Retrieved from&nbsp;http://labs.council.nyc/land-use/plans/mih-zqa/mih/
New York City Council. (2016).&nbsp;Mandatory Inclusionary Housing. Retrieved from&nbsp;[http://labs.council.nyc/land-use/plans/mih-zqa/mih/ http://labs.council.nyc/land-use/plans/mih-zqa/mih/]

Revision as of 01:15, 1 November 2016

Cases

Boston

Boston's Inclusionary Development Policy, introduced in 2000, requires any residential development that includes ten or more units and that receives financing from the city, is on city property, or needs an exception to current zoning regulations to designate fifteen percent of its market rate units as affordable housing (Zhorov 2016). Rather than adhering to these base stipulations, developers have the option, in some cases,make a monetary contribution for as much as $380,000 per unit (depending on where the proposed development is located) to a fund for affordable housing or to build affordable housing units off-site at an increased ratio (up to 18 percent of the total) (Zhorov 2016). 

Boston's inclusionary strategy is aimed at providing affordable housing for middle-income earners in attractive areas of the city from which they would otherwise be shut out (Zhorov 2016). The plan reserves housing spots for residents making up to 100 percent of the Area Median Income (AMI) as well as a certain number of units for people making 70 percent or less of the AMI (Zhorov 2016). 

New York City

New York City Council approved a mandatory inclusionary housing program in 2016. The approved measures were designed to take into account a situation in which the City's population had grown by one million people since 1990, along with steadily rising housing costs and large numbers of residents on waiting and lottery lists for public housing and private affordable units (New York City Council 2016). Unlike Boston's strategy, New York's inclusionary housing scheme specifically targets lower income residents with a Deep Affordability Option that requires higher percentages of building floor areas to be set aside for residents making an average of 40 percent of the AMI (New York City Council 2016). "The Department of City Planning and the Department of Housing Preservation and Development have stated that the central goals of the proposal are to create more economically diverse communities across New York City and to ensure that a share of new housing in growing communities is affordable" (New York City Council 2016). The policy is applied to areas rezoned to allow the construction of more residences than currently allowed (New York City Council 2016). Areas under consideration at this writing include  "East New York in Brooklyn; Inwood and East Harlem in Manhattan; Flushing West and Long Island City in Queens; the Jerome Avenue corridor in the Bronx; and Bay Street in Staten Island" (New York City Council 2016). In addition to the program being applied to areas of rezoning, it would also apply to private rezoning applications that involve an increase in density (e.g. in a situation where a developer was applying to build a residential structure with more units than currently allowed) (New York City Council 2016).

Critiques of Inclusionary Zoning

 

References

Zhorov, I. (2016). Ideas Worth Stealing: Inclusionary zoning to grow affordable housing.Keystone Crossroads. Retrieved from 
http://crossroads.newsworks.org/index.php/local/keystone-crossroads/91987-ideas-worth-stealing-inclusionary-zoning-to-grow-affordable-housing-

New York City Council. (2016). Mandatory Inclusionary Housing. Retrieved from http://labs.council.nyc/land-use/plans/mih-zqa/mih/