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Massachusetts Housing Secretary says uncertainty may scare away investors

Massachusetts Housing Secretary says uncertainty may scare away investors

Yahoo12-03-2025
BOSTON (SHNS) – State government leaders in Massachusetts are trying to instigate a building boom to address a housing shortage marked by high rents and sale prices, but a top housing official is now warning that headwinds from Washington could threaten their efforts.
'The equity that's often needed to facilitate a deal doesn't like uncertainty, and we are in the midst of lots of uncertainty,' Housing and Livable Communities Secretary Ed Augustus said in Lee on Wednesday during a policy talk with local experts hosted by the Berkshire Edge.
He added, 'If you come in and want to fund a project, and you look at what the [financial estimate] says, but you're going to actually go in the ground 18 months from now, how could you guarantee that those are the prices that you're going to have, given this uncertainty?'
It's an argument Augustus also made earlier in the week, testifying before lawmakers in Gloucester on Monday about Gov. Maura Healey's fiscal year 2026 budget proposal.
'What developers tell me is equity, which they are usually pursuing in order to get the financing to build a unit, equity doesn't like uncertainty. And the idea that this project may cost 10 or 15 or 20% more than they're projecting, it doesn't often attract that investment,' Augustus said on Monday.
The administration has long pointed to a goal of increasing the statewide supply of year-round housing by 222,000 units over the next decade — a 7% increase in supply.
As production slowed over the past few decades, the share of homes available for sale or rent in Massachusetts has shrunk to 1.6%, and costs have skyrocketed.
Programs focused on keeping low-income residents housed are struggling to keep up with housing inflation. The Massachusetts Rental Voucher Program has seen large increases in spending, without making a significant bump in the 160,000-person waitlist of people who need help paying rent.
'We're putting significant additional dollars into the voucher program, but not necessarily getting more vouchers. We're just having to pay higher rents for the vouchers that have already been leased so that we don't lose any of those units and have people fall into homelessness. So again, some of it is just, you're paying a lot more, but you're not necessarily getting more. You're trying to keep what you've got,' Augustus said Wednesday.
The governor and Legislature passed a law last year that authorizes $5.16 billion in long-term bonding, mostly focused on production of new units. State officials are trying to put some of that money, and new production-oriented policies, to work in a state where building remains mostly under the oversight of local zoning rules.
The state housing secretariat estimates that the law will lead to the creation of over 45,000 new units and the preservation of 27,000.
The law was signed in August, three months before the election, and Healey and Augustus have both warned recently that policies coming down from President Donald Trump could threaten the planned production boom.
In addition to seeing a pullback of investors, the housing secretary warned Wednesday about Trump's tariffs on lumber making it more expensive to build housing.
'When you get most of your lumber from Canada, and that's subject to a 25% tariff, that is driving up the costs,' he said.
Trump's promised tariffs on Canadian lumber are scheduled to start on April 2. The 25% tariff on softwood lumber used in most home building would be on top of the existing 14.5% lumber tariffs previously imposed by the U.S. Department of Commerce, according to the National Association of Home Builders.
At a National League of Cities Conference, Vice President JD Vance spoke Monday about the national housing crisis, calling it 'not acceptable or sustainable' that the average income it takes to buy a new house is nearly two times the average salary of a typical American family.
'We want Americans to be able to afford the American dream of homeownership because we know that when people own their homes, it makes them a stakeholder. It makes them a stakeholder in their neighborhoods, in their cities, and ultimately, of course, in this country that all of us love so much,' Vance said.
He pointed at the Biden administration, saying the cost of a median-price home more than doubled under former President Joe Biden. He mentioned how lower energy costs could aid housing development, and lamented how immigrants living in the country illegally are increasing the demand for limited housing.
In addition to urging people to be 'a little bit smarter about our local zoning rules,' Vance said the administration is working towards cutting red tape at the Office of Housing and Urban Development that 'hike costs and shift the decision-making from local governments to Washington, D.C.'
'I'm hard-pressed to think of a time in my 40 years of life where it's been so hard for normal American citizens to afford a home,' Vance said. 'Even renting a home has become a challenge or, worse yet, fallen completely out of reach for so many of our families.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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‘I'm really worried.' With the state's hotel shelter system closing, families struggle to find places to live
‘I'm really worried.' With the state's hotel shelter system closing, families struggle to find places to live

Boston Globe

time3 days ago

  • Boston Globe

‘I'm really worried.' With the state's hotel shelter system closing, families struggle to find places to live

'I'm really worried,' Amparo, 37, said in Spanish in an interview on Monday. The change, she says, 'is a big burden.' She doesn't have a full-time job, so for the time being, she can't afford rent, even though a state program could subsidize some of the costs, she said. Her children are ages 15, 10, and 9, one of whom has special needs. 'At the hotel, we knew the system, and life was a little easier,' she said. Now, one question runs through her mind often as her family is shuffled from one place to another. 'Will we keep being able to be in a shelter or have to go to the street?' On Monday, as the state moved another step closer to fully shuttering its hotel shelter system — which at its peak last year saw more than 128 hotels open — a number of these facilities across Greater Boston appeared largely desolate. The number of families requesting housing in the state's shelter system has dropped dramatically from a year ago. The Emergency Assistance shelter system was sheltering about 7,500 homeless families at its height last year, but as of last week, 3,740 families were housed in the system, according to state data. Advertisement Ed Augustus, secretary of the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities, said in a statement last week that, 'Now, costs are going down, we are closing all hotels, and the number of families in EA shelter is below the level when we first took office.' Advertisement He acknowledged the Healey administration 'inherited a surge in families and an Emergency Shelter System that was not equipped to handle it.' In Danvers, the parking lot of a Motel 6, once bustling with residents, was nearly empty, with just a few workers moving boxes and mattresses. In Chelsea, at the former soldiers' home, which was converted to a temporary shelter more than a year ago, barely a handful of families were coming out of the building. In Peabody, a former Holiday Inn which previously housed dozens of families, including Amparo and her children, showed no signs of the families who had lived there just a few days earlier. The closure of these hotel shelters has raised questions about where exactly families will be living — and if the available housing options provide a sustainable future for their families. On Monday, 11 hotel shelters closed, a spokesperson for the housing office said, and in total, 24 hotel shelter programs have closed this month. As of July 1, only four hotel shelters will remain, and all hotel shelters will be closed by July 31, according to the state. 'Providers and on-site case managers have been working closely with all impacted families to help them identify secure housing before the closing date,' the spokesperson said. Governor Maura Healey had planned to phase out the use of hotel shelters by the end of the year, but she Advertisement Advocates and the state have been looking to relocate many of the families through Andrea Park, an advocacy director at the Massachusetts Law Reform Institute, said that some housing providers were 'really caught off guard' by how quickly the timing was changing. 'For providers, it's extremely difficult to try to provide a meaningful opportunity to set families up for success, under an artificial time deadline,' Park said. 'We are concerned about families who are being set up to fail.' In Revere, rumors about shelters closing were swirling at the former Quality Inn, which appeared to still be in use as a family shelter on Monday. Some residents said they were concerned about what the other hotel closures could mean for them. 'It's scary, not knowing,' said Alandra Abreu as she pushed her 1-year-old in a stroller in the parking lot. 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Bill targets 'glaring loophole' in abuser registry law
Bill targets 'glaring loophole' in abuser registry law

Yahoo

time12-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Bill targets 'glaring loophole' in abuser registry law

BOSTON (SHNS) – As disability advocates again push to strengthen abuse protections through a string of refiled bills, the general counsel of an independent state agency charged with handling allegations and investigations says there was no pushback to previous legislative efforts. The latest proposals, intended to improve operations at the Disabled Persons Protection Commission, would also expand the scope of Nicky's Law, which created a state registry of certain providers who abused individuals ages 18-59 with intellectual and developmental disabilities. 'We did not have any opposition last session, and we have reached out to stakeholders. Anybody that has any questions around this bill, we're like, 'Please call us, we'll speak to you about it.' We've heard nothing,' Julie Howley Westwater, general counsel at the DPPC, told the News Service Tuesday. Referencing the Department of Children and Families and the Executive Office of Aging and Independence, she added, 'There were initially some questions around the confidentiality provision and there was some concern that, does that mean we're not going to share records when we should? We clarified that and said, 'No, we want the same protection of records as DCF and AGE.'' The Joint Committee on Children, Families and Persons with Disabilities favorably reported out redrafted legislation last session on Feb. 15, but the House Ways and Means Committee did not advance it. 'It's so frustrating for us because we feel like this really is a bill that will protect a lot of people with disabilities, and it's not going to cost any additional money to do that,' Westwater said. The DPPC faced scrutiny last year after the Massachusetts Coalition of Families and Advocates sounded the alarm about abusive providers potentially slipping through the cracks on the registry and continuing to care for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Providers can petition for their cases to be reviewed after officials make initial determinations that their conduct constituted abuse. Pending bills from Reps. Sean Garballey and Simon Cataldo and Sen. John Keenan (H 243 / S 139) would update and accelerate the DPPC's process for referring reports of alleged abuse to agencies within the Executive Office of Health and Human Services in situations with an 'imminent risk of substantial harm to the person with a disability,' according to a commission summary. The bills streamline how reports are filed in non-emergency situations, codify that privileged and confidential information within DPPC reports are not public records, and remove terms limits for DPPC commissioners. 'For several consecutive sessions, this legislation has received a favorable report from the committee, and I respectfully request that you do so again so that we build on that momentum,' Keenan told the committee during a hearing Tuesday. DPPC fields more than 15,000 abuse reports each year, said DPPC Executive Director Nancy Alterio. 'In every case, DPPC seeks a positive and just outcome, whether that be additional supports for the victim, removal of the abuser from serving this population, or at the very least preventing similar circumstances from occurring in the future,' Alterio said. 'Changes in this bill, while seemingly small, will improve vital areas of the DPPC's operations, require no additional appropriation, has been duly vetted and debated, and will enhance the safety of persons with disabilities throughout the commonwealth, so that we can provide the best possible response for every one of the 15,000 citizens who reach out the DPPC for assistance.' Echoing a narrower proposal from Sen. Michael Moore (S 165), the DPPC reforms bills would also broaden the abuser registry to enable MassHealth day habilitation program providers to consult the database. For now, the registry only installs guardrails around individuals who receive care from the Department of Development Services. Providers whose names appear on the registry are barred from working for DDS or DDS-contracted employers for five years. 'We have a glaring loophole in the law. This exclusion allows numerous abusive care providers to keep working with the vulnerable population,' Moore said. 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All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Coalition: Lack of press shield law makes Mass. an outlier
Coalition: Lack of press shield law makes Mass. an outlier

Yahoo

time12-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Coalition: Lack of press shield law makes Mass. an outlier

BOSTON (SHNS) – Massachusetts is one of just nine states without a 'press shield law' that a media advocacy coalition says would to protect journalists from being required to disclose their confidential sources and other sensitive information in court. Coalition members including the Massachusetts Broadcasters Association, Massachusetts Newspaper Publishers Association and Boston Globe Media say they're making a stronger push this session for a bill (S 1253, H 1738) that would provide 'clear safeguards' for confidential sources and sensitive material so that journalists can fulfill their 'constitutionally protected watchdog role.' 'It is absolutely obvious that we are in a time where we need to pay attention to the shortfall and failure, to date, of Massachusetts to actually pass a press shield law that we so desperately need, given what is happening in the national sphere,' longtime bill sponsor Sen. Becca Rausch said on Wednesday. No version of the bill has ever cleared the Judiciary Committee. Organizers said the bill has been proposed for around 15 years, but that they tracked the concept back to the 1970s. The bill is modeled after the federal Press Act, which the U.S. House passed unanimously in 2024. According to Bob Ambrogi, executive director of the Massachusetts Newspaper Publishers Association, one of the reasons the coalition chose the federal bill as its model was because it had been 'vetted by pretty much every major news organization in the country' and leading media lawyers. If passed, journalists would not have to name sources or disclose confidential newsgathering information unless the disclosure is necessary to prevent 'an act of terrorism' or 'a threat of imminent violence, bodily harm, or death.' Unless a court finds similar threats, state officials would not be able to force third-party email or phone providers to disclose sensitive records, and journalists and news organizations would be notified before their records are sought by state officials. Organizers referenced Massachusetts cases in which journalists were challenged when protecting their anonymous sources, namely a 2022 case between the Berkshire Eagle and the Springfield Diocese and another case involving the Boston Globe, Dana Farber Cancer Institute and a physician at the hospital. Chief Operating Officer and General Counsel of Boston Globe Media Dan Krockmalnic said the Globe has filed more than a dozen motions in the last few years to fight subpoenas for information about reporters and sources. The financial burden and time-consuming nature of those kinds of cases, House bill sponsor Rep. Rich Haggerty said, puts local news specifically at a disadvantage. 'Every single time we see a local news organization challenged, spending resources and money on protecting what should be a First Amendment right already protected — and this law would help that — we know they're not spending those resources on informing our communities,' Haggerty said. Past opposition includes law enforcement, which media lawyer Jon Albano said was concerned that its ability to investigate a crime that has been in the news could be stymied if they aren't able to subpoena a reporter to find out who they've spoken with. 'In general, there's probably some other way they can figure out how to get to that source or get to that information, but it's kind of a shortcut to subpoena the reporter and say, 'Where did you get this information?'' Albano said. While concerns have existed in the past about shield laws potentially unduly protecting sources in criminal investigations, 41 states and Washington, D.C. have a press shield law, Krockmalnic said. 'The sky has not fallen anywhere there. It will not fall here. And we know that authorities in those jurisdictions regularly and successfully prosecute crimes that are reported on by the press despite the existence of a robust shield law,' Krockmalnic said. 'But here in Massachusetts, sources provide their information at their own peril. They know that their names and information that they provide can be demanded by the government or by private litigants and must rely on the press's ability and funds to fight on their behalf to try to convince the court that we deserve protection.' The bill defines a 'covered journalist' as 'a person who regularly and credibly gathers, prepares, collects, photographs, records, writes, edits, reports, investigates, or publishes news or information in a professional manner that concerns local, national, or international events or other matters of public interest for dissemination to the public.' 'It is our intention to not overly constrain how a journalist or journalism or the act of newsgathering is defined in legislation,' Krockmalnic said. 'If you are plausibly engaged in the act of newsgathering, then the law should apply to you.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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