HomeMy WebLinkAboutFact Sheet on Chapter 40B 2011 updateFact Sheet on Chapter 40B
The State’s Affordable Housing Zoning Law
Prepared by Citizens’ Housing and Planning Association
Updated--October 2011
What is Chapter 40B?
Chapter 40B is a state statute that enables local Zoning Boards of Appeals (ZBAs) to approve affordable
housing developments under flexible rules if at least 20-25% of the units have long-term affordability
restrictions. Also known as the Comprehensive Permit Law, Chapter 40B was enacted in 1969 to help
address the shortage of affordable housing statewide by reducing unnecessary barriers created by local
approval processes, local zoning, and other restrictions.
The goal of Chapter 40B is to encourage the production of affordable housing in all cities and towns
throughout the Commonwealth and many communities have used it to negotiate the approval of quality
affordable housing developments. The program is controversial, however, because the developer (a public
agency, nonprofit organization or limited-dividend company) has the right to appeal an adverse local
decision to the State in communities with little affordable housing (less than 10% of its year-round
housing or 1.5% of its land area). Communities that have not yet met one of these thresholds can also
receive one- or two-year exemptions from state appeals by adopting a housing production plan and
meeting short-term production goals. As of July 2011, 47 cities and towns are appeal-proof – 39 because
they have met the 10% goal, at least three more because they have met the land area standard, and another
five with two-year exemptions. Communities above the 10% or 1.5% threshold can still accept 40B
development proposals at their choice.
Since its inception, Chapter 40B has been responsible for the production of affordable housing
developments that in most cases could not have been built under traditional zoning approaches. These
include church-sponsored housing for the elderly, single-family subdivisions that include affordable units
for town residents, adaptive reuse projects involving mills, schools and other properties, multifamily rental
housing developments, and mixed-income condominium or townhouse developments.
What Has Chapter 40B Accomplished?
Since the early 1970s, Chapter 40B has been used to produce over 60,000 units in almost 1,200
developments (built or in construction), including over 42,000 rental units and about 18,000 ownership
units. Over half (over 32,500 units) are reserved for households with incomes below 80% of the area
median. The level of production is higher than any other single housing program available in the
Commonwealth.
There has been significant progress in meeting affordable housing needs at the local level in recent years
and much of this (as well as progress in meeting housing demand generally) is due to Chapter 40B:
Between 2002-2006, approximately 34% of all housing production in Greater Boston (excluding
the City of Boston) was directly attributable to Chapter 40B, including nearly 80% of all rental
housing production.
Between 1997 and 2010, 78% of all new affordable housing units in rural and suburban
communities (excluding group home beds and homeowner rehab loans) was the direct result of
40B. In eastern Massachusetts rural and suburban communities, the figure was 80%.
Currently, 39 communities are at or above the 10% threshold, up from 27 in 2001, and several
more are expected to reach 10% this year when the Subsidized Housing Inventory is updated.
Some towns that have recently exceeded the 10% threshold include: Bedford, Burlington,
Chicopee, Concord, Dedham, Framingham, Georgetown, Hadley, Holbrook, Lexington,
Mansfield, Montague, Northborough, Randolph, Stockbridge and Stoughton.
Another 38 communities are at 8% or 9% - up from 17 in 2001. They include: Andover, Ayer,
Bellingham, Berlin, Billerica, Brookline, Canton, Chester, Clinton, Danvers, Fitchburg,
Foxborough, Franklin, Hanover, Haverhill, Hudson, Leominster, Marlborough, Maynard,
Methuen, Natick, North Reading, Orleans, Peabody, Pembroke, Pittsfield, Quincy, Raynham,
Revere, Somerville, Tewksbury, Ware, Webster, Wenham, Westborough, Westwood, Wilmington,
and Winchendon. Sixty one (61) more communities at 6% or 7%, up from 52 in 2001.
At present, 109 municipalities are within 100 units to reaching the 10% threshold.
Chapter 40B has encouraged many cities and towns to form affordable housing committees to plan
and implement a local strategy to build affordable housing in their community. Since 2003, over
100 communities have developed affordable housing plans under DHCD’s housing production
plan regulations and six currently have two-year exemptions from Chapter 40B appeals as a result
of meeting one- or two-year interim housing production goals.
Who is Served by Chapter 40B Housing Developments?
In most cases today, Chapter 40B developments are communities with market rate and affordable homes,
apartments or condominiums. The market rate units often serve middle-income singles, seniors and
families who make between 100% and 150% of the area median income.
The affordable apartments/condominium and homes are reserved for seniors or families who make less
than 80% of median household income for the area and generally are priced at 70% of median or below.
Most of the residents in the affordable apartments and homes earn less than $50,000 per year. Typical
occupations include: health care (nurses, medical assistants, therapists, dental assistants); educators
(teachers, counselors); retail employees; construction trades (carpenters, plumbers, electricians); office
management and administrative staff; financial services (bookkeepers, payroll managers, accounting);
human services; and other occupations critical to our state’s workforce. Additionally, a significant portion
of the homeowners are retirees. Below are the guidelines for the Greater Boston area:
Income Limits for Affordable Units in Greater Boston
2011 Median Income for a Family of 4 - $96,500
1
Person
2
Person
3
Person
4
Person
5
Person
80% of Area Median Income Limits $44,950 $51,400 $57,800 $64,200 $69,350
How Does a Development Qualify Under Chapter 40B?
To qualify for Chapter 40B, a development proposal must first receive a letter of project eligibility under a
state or federal housing program, such as MassHousing, MassDevelopment, the Department of Housing
and Community Development, or the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. At least 25%
of the units must be affordable to lower income households who earn no more than 80% of the area
median income (Alternatively, for rental housing, the project can provide 20% of the units to households
below 50% of median income.) Towns are allowed to establish a local preference for residents (currently,
up to 70% of the units can be for local preference). Developers (whether for-profit or nonprofit) must also
agree to restrict their profit to a maximum of 20% in for-sale developments and 10% per year for rental
developments (unless indicated otherwise in the subsidy program or the comprehensive permit).
After a project has been determined to be eligible, the developer can submit an application for a
comprehensive permit to the local Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA). The ZBA is empowered to grant all
local approvals necessary for the project after consulting with other relevant boards, such as the Planning
Board, and the Board of Health. This results in a more streamlined review process at the zoning board,
although it typically involves a number of hearing sessions. State regulations, such as the Wetlands
Protection Act, Title 5, and all building codes, remain fully in effect under the comprehensive permit.
Therefore, the local Conservation Commission will review the project regarding compliance with the
state’s Wetlands Protection Act.
In addition to the streamlined process, the Zoning Board of Appeals is authorized to apply more flexible
standards than the strict local zoning by-law requirements. For example, a local zoning code may require
two acres of land for each house or prohibit multifamily housing entirely. Under Chapter 40B, the
developer can request and the Zoning Board of Appeals can approve a project with greater density,
thereby making it financially feasible to develop affordable housing.
How Does the Local Review Process Work?
A developer acting under Chapter 40B submits a single application to the Zoning Board of Appeals. The
zoning board notifies the applicable local boards and requests their recommendations. Within thirty days
of the receipt of the application, the zoning board begins a public hearing, which lasts up to six months.
The zoning board must issue a decision within forty days after ending the public hearing. The zoning
board may approve the application as submitted, it can approve the project with conditions or changes, or
it can deny the application altogether. If the board denies the application or imposes “uneconomic”
conditions, the developer may appeal the decision to the Housing Appeals Committee if the project is in a
community that is below 10%. The developer must still obtain various permits required by state statutes,
such as wetlands protection, state highway access permits, and a local building permit.
Do Communities Have Control Over the Proposed Development?
Zoning boards and other town officials often work with developers to modify the project. Furthermore,
the zoning board may include conditions and requirements on any aspect of the project such as height,
density, site plan, utility improvements, or long-term affordability--provided these conditions do not make
the development economically unfeasible.
Over the past several years, the Massachusetts Housing Partnership has provided extensive technical
assistance and support to more than 100 local ZBAs to help them with project review and negotiations
with developers. Zoning Boards can also require developers to pay fees to help fund review of the
application.
How Does the Appeals Process Work?
If the ZBA rejects the affordable housing development or imposes conditions which the developer believes
will make the project uneconomic, the developer may be able to appeal the decision to the State Housing
Appeals Committee (HAC), which can overrule the local decision unless the proposed development
presents serious health or safety concerns that cannot be mitigated. This right of appeal is only available
in communities where less than 10% of the year-round housing meets the statute’s definition of low and
moderate income housing or where low and moderate income housing exists on sites comprising less than
1.5% of the municipality’s total land area zoned for residential, commercial, or industrial use.
The combination of flexible rules and a right of appeal has meant that the vast majority of Chapter 40B
proposals are negotiated at the local level and approved by the local board of appeals. Issues such as
density, buffer zones, conservation areas, and infrastructure improvements are typical items for
negotiation. For those proposals that go to the State Housing Appeals Committee, the record has generally
been in favor of allowing reasonable projects to move forward.
A 2007 study found that 80% of applications filed between 1999 and 2005 were approved at the local
level. The majority of the cases appealed to the Housing Appeals Committee are resolved without a
decision. A 2003 study of 415 cases appealed to the Housing Appeals Committee found that 69% were
either withdrawn, dismissed, or resolved through negotiation; this trend has continued.
How Do Units Count Toward the State’s 10% Affordable Housing Goal?
1) They must be part of a “subsidized” development built or operated by a public agency, non-profit or
limited dividend organization.
2) At least 25% of the units in the development must be income restricted to families with incomes of
less than 80% of median and have rents or sale prices restricted to affordable levels. These
restrictions must run at least 30 years.
3) The development must be subject to a regulatory agreement and monitored by a public agency or non-
profit organization.
4) Owners must meet affirmative marketing requirements.
What Regulatory Changes Have Been Made to Chapter 40B in Recent Years?
DHCD has made numerous changes to the Chapter 40B regulations since 2001 and in February 2008, it
updated and revised the regulations to create a single, comprehensive regulation that codified policies and
guidelines that had evolved over the years, including policies established by court rulings and
administrative decisions by the Housing Appeals Committee. It also issued comprehensive program
guidelines.
The new regulation and guidelines incorporate and update many revisions first developed between 2001
and 2003 as well as procedures established in 2006 and 2007 (smart growth guidelines, MassHousing cost
certification and project eligibility guidelines and a DHCD universal deed rider that survives foreclosure).
The new guidelines require subsidizing agencies to more extensively review project designs and how they
fit into the neighborhood context and town planning efforts. They also make it easier for communities to
become temporarily appeal-proof by lowering the number of subsidized housing units they must create
each year to demonstrate that they are making progress toward the 10% goal and giving them more
flexibility regarding when units first count toward the 10% goal.
Major changes adopted since 2001 are described below, with revisions to date also noted:
Limiting project size limit 150-300 units, depending on the size of the community unless the ZBA
chooses to allow a larger project (the 2008 regulation lowers the threshold in communities with less
than 2500 year round units to 6% of year round housing).
Requiring compliance with extensive audit and cost-certification guidelines regarding the profit
limitations imposed on 40B developments.
Requiring developers to ensure completion of cost-certification through credit, bond, or cash ranging
from $25,000-$100,000.
Enabling municipalities to reject a 40B application if a developer submitted an application for the same
site for a non-40B development within the previous 12 months.
Allowing municipalities that have hearings underway on three or more projects to defer hearing
additional projects if the hearings underway involve a larger number of units.
Allowing group homes, accessory apartments, locally assisted units, and units funded under the
Community Preservation Act to count toward a community’s 10% goal.
Enabling a community to deny a comprehensive permit if that community has made recent progress on
affordable housing. Effective in February 2008, this is defined as either: an increase in affordable
housing units equal to at least 1% of the town’s year-round housing units over the previous 24 months
or a 0.5% increase plus an approved housing plan over the previous 12 months. (Prior to the 2008
revision, the thresholds were 1.5% and 0.75% respectively.)
Allowing units to count on the Subsidized Housing Inventory as soon as a comprehensive permit is
issued rather than having to wait until a building or occupancy permit is issued.
Require developers who want to access financing from the New England Fund to obtain a project
eligibility letter from a state agency. The state agency then monitors and oversees the project
The 2008 revisions also:
Require developers submitting an application for project eligibility letter to a subsidizing agency to
send a copy to the local chief elected official and a written notice to DHCD at the same time.
Require the subsidizing agency to notify communities as soon as it has received a project eligibility
application and to accept and consider local comments and conduct a site visit during the 30-day
review period.
Mandate that project eligibility approval letters contain more extensive, standardized information,
including findings on the appropriateness of the conceptual design for the site. DHCD agencies issued
a 40B Design Handbook in early 2011 to facilitate the design review process.
Require the subsidizing agency, in its project eligibility review, to consider “the municipal actions
previously taken to meet affordable housing needs” such as inclusionary zoning and overlay districts..
Require DHCD to update the Subsidized Housing Inventory every two years (communities can submit
changes to DHCD at anytime and be updated more immediately).
Allow towns to add units to the Subsidized Housing Inventory if the locality has approved a
comprehensive permit but issuance is delayed by litigation filed by a party other than the ZBA.