Articles 33/34

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Ryan Wise

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Mar 23, 2023, 9:56:03 PM3/23/23
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First, as a new member of Town Meeting, I want to join in thanking the Cluster Housing Study Group.  Their posts have been extremely helpful.  They've been informative, thorough, and transparent about both their motivations and methods.  To my mind, they're persuasive that the pace of buildout will not have dramatic impacts to schools or infrastructure.  A likely outcome between 500 and 1000 units feels like a reasonable balance of goals.

Second, in response to Ms McKenna's note, I'll share my remaining concerns for the benefit of anybody considering amendments.  I'm opposed to approving the current version of the articles at this time.  Here are the points that I would need addressed -- either through amendments, or more comprehensive briefing materials.

1) I share the common desire to remove CBD from scope. More specifically, I share Mr Friedlich’s opposition to increases in height, and thus reductions in Sun exposure to the walking area, along the south side of Mass Ave.  I also think we have a stewardship duty to protect battle green sight lines, imperfect as they already are.  52 feet is too tall to be on the north side of that end of Mass Ave as well.  

2) I believe the Bedford St district would need to be adjusted, to avoid buildings looming above the treeline from Battle Green.  Alternately, somebody can do the trigonometry to alleviate that concern.  

3) I would need to see more of the affected acreage shifted to require mixed-use on the first floor.  I understand that would disqualify these zones from MBTACA qualification.  Residential-only is clearly not our preferred model, however, and the incentive seems weak to me -- notably, it only works if a developer wants to build to the maximum height.  Given that, we should apply the undesired model where we need to, and the desired model everywhere else.  Unless somebody can show otherwise, I don't see how this change would materially shift the economics to deter development.

4) It remains very unclear to me what leverage the town would have in the "by-right with (major) site review" framework.  I would like much more thorough briefing, with tangible examples of what changes the town can/cannot demand, along with examples where asking nicely has resulted in a material change in plan.

Finally, I will offer the feedback that as I came up to speed on these Articles, the framing around “MBTACA Compliance” felt disingenuous, and immediately put me in a suspicious mindset.  Petty perhaps, but first impressions can be hard to get over, and the mismatch between framing and scope continues to bother me.  It's completely understandable that everyone involved brought their own values, and that there were actually multiple goals, but those should have been more transparent.

Thank you,
Ryan Wise
TM Precinct 6




Todd O. Burger

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Mar 24, 2023, 10:23:51 AM3/24/23
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I would like to add my name to those thanking the Cluster Housing Study Group for their work and posts on Article 34.  But I would also like to make to make clear that there appears to be a real diversity of opinion about the inclusion or exclusion of the CBD from Article 34. I, for one, feel it is critical to keep the CBD in Article 34, even though those acres do not count toward the MBTA Housing Choice requirement since Article 34 requires them to have commercial on the 1st floor:

 Here are a few reasons why:

  • The CBD, if included, will more likely result in being among the first proposed multifamily projects, given the assurance of immediate rental revenue, and the desirability of being near shops in the center, and close to our transportation hub.
  • Such projects will likely significantly increase transit usage, being on both the MBTA route and having access to LexPress hub.
  • The center needs a jolt.  We certainly have enough banks and real estate offices in the center, but a reinvigorated center, with more shoppers and diners, will help broaden the business variety there, and strengthen the ones already there that we want to keep, and maybe encourage ones just barely hanging on to stay.
  • The condition of many of the buildings in the center (take a tour of the basement levels or 2nd floors of some of these buildings and you will get an idea of the lack of attention some have received from some of the property owners who lease these buildings to our local businesses. Even a number of the storefronts look "tired" and would benefit from new constructed, more environmentally sound 21st century construction, with exteriors suited to our historic town.
  • The HDC will be involved in these projects with its CBD oversight and any rebuilding will be likely to tasteful and result in an even better CBD.
  • Inclusion of the CBD will get us more quickly to a rethinking of CBD parking solutions - and there are solutions.
  • Inclusion of the CBD demonstrates a more holistic approach and a town wide commitment to the values driving Article 34.

-Todd Burger

Precinct 9

Harry Forsdick

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Mar 24, 2023, 11:16:57 AM3/24/23
to Susan Erdos, Town Meeting Members
Susan,

Re: On Fri, Mar 24, 2023 at 9:20 AM Susan Erdos <masd...@yahoo.com> wrote:
Harry,

Thank you for the correction. We are still very concerned about the impact of Article 34 on our town.

--Susan Erdos

Many people share your view, as do I.  

There are some things we must do regarding Article 34:
  • Whatever solution we come up with, it must satisfy the requirements of the MBTA-Communities Act.

  • We must follow the existing Lexington Zoning Bylaws or be prepared to amend them.

In addition, Article 34 addresses several similar issue that we want to do in order to implement previous commitments the Town has made but has still not acted on, including:
  • Improve the vitality of Lexington Center.  For many years people have complained about how Lexington Center is not attracting business and as a result, is declining in diversity of businesses as well as being a difficult location to run a retail business.

  • Mandate that new construction projects be built in a way that protects the environment.

  • Reverse the trend where developers are incentivized to tear down smaller houses and build larger, expensive houses on the same lots.

  • Increase economic diversity of our population.

One can say that the Planning Board has tried to do too much in Article 34 -- a lot more than required by the MBTA-Communities Act.  It is natural to say, let's just do what is required.  

The Planning Board has been thinking about the four additional issues just mentioned for a long time.  Article 34 is an opportunity to implement Zoning changes needed to solve these other problems at the same time we address the mandates of the MBTA-Communities Act.

Regards,

-- Harry Forsdick
    Precinct #7


On Fri, Mar 24, 2023 at 9:20 AM Susan Erdos <masd...@yahoo.com> wrote:
Harry,

Thank you for the correction. We are still very concerned about the impact of Article 34 on our town.

--Susan Erdos

On Friday, March 24, 2023 at 09:15:18 AM EDT, Harry Forsdick <ha...@forsdick.com> wrote:


Susan,

Thank you for your message regarding Lexington Town Meeting Article 34.

I wanted to make one correction to your comments: It is a requirement of the Massachusetts MBTA-Communities Act that the development be By Right.  Your message says:
  1. ...
  2. Most development projects require Special Permits. There is no reason that any building under Article 34 does not require this. Defining the standard as By Right limits the town’s ability to evaluate construction proposals under the Article. This is especially important since the new construction defined in the article will not be comparable to current housing. Each new project should be considered carefully and on a one-by-one basis.
  3. ...


Multi-family zoning requirement for MBTA-Communities (Section 3A of MGL c. 40A)
This new law requires that an MBTA community shall have at least one zoning district of reasonable size in which multi-family housing is permitted as of right and meets other criteria set forth in the statute:
  • Minimum gross density of 15 units per acre
  • Located not more than 0.5 miles from a commuter rail station, subway station, ferry terminal or bus station, if applicable
  • No age restrictions and suitable for families with children
Removing the By Right requirement from Article 34 will not comply with the MBTA-Communities Act.

Regards,

-- Harry



On Thu, Mar 23, 2023 at 4:53 PM Susan Erdos <masd...@yahoo.com> wrote:

As longtime residents of Lexington, we support expanded multi-family housing in Lexington as mandated by the state.  However we have concerns regarding the proposed Article 34.

 

  1. The article currently proposes too extensive a plan for this mandate. Care and caution must be taken in having the Town Meeting members approve Article 34 as written.  In proposing the article, the Planning Board believes that its adoption will have a slow and limited evolution, and that it can be amended as time goes on if needed, particularly if it is determined that it went too far. We believe it is wiser to begin at a slower pace and expand the Article if it seems practical. While assessing Article 34 requires a simple majority vote, amending it would require a 2/3 majority. It is always difficult to pull back on rights that have been provided. Builders would fight any changes that would restrict their rights under Article 34 as presented. As a result, the town would probably find itself embroiled in expensive litigation.
  2. Most development projects require Special Permits. There is no reason that any building under Article 34 does not require this. Defining the standard as By Right limits the town’s ability to evaluate construction proposals under the Article. This is especially important since the new construction defined in the article will not be comparable to current housing. Each new project should be considered carefully and on a one-by-one basis.
  3. We are concerned that this expansive article will change the town’s character and aesthetics, the tax base, and the school budget in unknown ways. Before this article is passed there should be an analysis regarding the impact on Lexington residents and on this historical town that we are all proud of.

A goal of Article 34 should be to enhance the town, carefully and sensibly.  We urge this article be rejected as currently proposed.

 

Susan Erdos
Mark Alimansky 
65 Fifer Lane
Precinct 7

Mark Andersen

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Mar 25, 2023, 11:28:34 AM3/25/23
to Harry Forsdick, Susan Erdos, Town Meeting Members
I think there would be benefit to the planning board withdrawing article 34 until fall town meeting.

My past experience suggests an amendment which limits the scope to what is required by the state would be more likely than an outright rejection.
But as I suggest, a smoother path is for the planning board to take this article back.  And I hope what comes back separates into distinct votable items.

Since article 34 goes beyond state-mandated scope it has a "pork barrel" feel, as the article does not let town meeting vote on what is required for compliance without accepting broader scope and consequences.

I hope the town continues to support "smart development" (i.e. mixed use commercial) and presses the MBTA to have real service in Lexington.  This includes service more than once an hour, it includes Sunday, and it includes the ability to work in the evening in Boston or Lexington and transit the other direction.  None of this exists now outside select peak hours.  Twenty years ago the service was better.

We do a *disservice* to the community by accepting a so-called MBTA proposal when the town has sub-par MBTA service and thereby requires people to own cars to live and work in Lexington.
I suggest we not approve anything which perpetuates this injustice unnecessarily.

Support mixed use development and public transportation to make Lexington vibrant and accessible.
Let's have not just the sticker but the actual product.

Thank you,
Mark Andersen
Precinct 9


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Valerie Overton

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Mar 25, 2023, 12:06:48 PM3/25/23
to Mark Andersen, Harry Forsdick, Susan Erdos, Town Meeting Members
I suggest we ask ourselves:

  • Do we want to just comply with the letter of the law, and do so in a way that brings about minimal change? Or do we want to comply with the spirit of the law, and do so in a way that produces a meaningful number of housing units? Note that the analysis of the Lexington Cluster Housing Study Group projects that the current version of Article 34 might produce 600-700 units of housing over 10 years. That seems reasonable to me: an amount that makes a difference without overwhelming us.

  • Do we want to uphold related goals that the community has prioritized, as documented in our new Comprehensive Plan? Article 34 serves to comply with the spirit (as well as letter) of state law while also supporting the possibility of a greater diversity of housing and mixed-use areas--so places like Lexington Center can become more vibrant as so many of us have wished for.

Personally, I'd like to take this opportunity to comply with the spirit of the law while also upholding our related community goals and values.

Valerie Overton (she/her)
Precinct 1

From: lex...@googlegroups.com <lex...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Mark Andersen <markan...@alum.mit.edu>
Sent: Saturday, March 25, 2023 11:28 AM
To: Harry Forsdick <ha...@forsdick.com>
Cc: Susan Erdos <masd...@yahoo.com>; Town Meeting Members <lex...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [LexTMMA] Re: Article 34
 
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Michael Martignetti

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Mar 25, 2023, 2:54:51 PM3/25/23
to Valerie Overton, lex...@googlegroups.com
Fellow Town Meeting Members,

I agree with Valerie’s comments.  I have great respect for the deep dive the Planning Board + Planning Staff and other boards, committees and commissions take on complex matters.  Once in a blue moon, Town Meeting may find a tweak to an article which was over looked (perhaps Al Zabin has discovered a needed tweak, may be a good one, not sure).  I’m voting with the Planning Board and their amazing staff for the following reasons:

1. I don’t want to kick the can down the road further on this subject.
2. I like the fact that the MBTA Village Overlay District (VOD) has been distributed from our Bedford boundary line to our Arlington boundary line - the higher density multi-family/retail developments will hopefully be built throughout Lexington, which seems fair to me.
3. I’m happy Lexington may follow the spirit as well as letter of the law and go beyond the minimum land area required to alleviate the state-wide housing shortage, as Valerie mentioned.

Please vote YES when Article 34 is presented on April 10th.

Michael Martignetti
Precinct 3 TMM

Glenn Parker

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Mar 25, 2023, 3:18:23 PM3/25/23
to Town Meeting Members

On 25 Mar 2023, at 12:06, 'Valerie Overton' via LexTMMA wrote:

Do we want to just comply with the letter of the law, and do so in a way that brings about minimal change? Or do we want to comply with the spirit of the law, and do so in a way that produces a meaningful number of housing units?

I think Valerie asks a reasonable question, but I would like to make it less abstract.

Zoning bylaws are a means to an end, albeit a means with some uncertainty in the timing and effectiveness of the results. I see a lot of arguing about the “means”, but we’re skipping right past the desired “ends”.

It would shorten the debate and clarify a lot of fuzzy arguments if we each opened with a clear statement of our position regarding the Town’s Comprehensive Plan, Lexington NEXT. If you have not yet done so, please take some time to read it (at least the 10-page Executive Summary). Yes, now… and then consider your response.

The Comprehensive Plan adopts an optimistic tone, but there is some strong medicine buried in it. Not everyone will enjoy the taste. Without placing blame, the Comprehensive Plan points to some serious ailments that we have allowed to fester for a long time:

  • Skyrocketing housing prices and a lack of socio-economic diversity
  • Challenging retail business environment
  • Systemic racism and a lack of racial diversity
  • Climate change

These ailments are synergistic: “Lexington’s history of exclusion with high housing costs, one-family housing, and lack of public transportation have contributed to Lexington’s current lack of racial, ethnic, and cultural diversity.”

Lexington NEXT is timely, and it examines the issues that Lexington residents consider to be important right now. It offers a path to repair some of the damage and to steer our development in a new direction.

Do you support the goals and objectives laid out in this document? If not, what would you change or remove? Rather than nitpicking the bylaw, let’s begin by re-affirming the ultimate goals of the bylaw.

I find serious fault with one aspect of Lexington NEXT: it is profoundly inward-looking. When the surround region is mentioned, it is usually to highlight some superlative aspect of Lexington. Lexington is portrayed as an island with few connections to the surrounding region, even in the area of transportation. But Lexington is hardly an island. Much of what we enjoy about Lexington arises from our location within a culturally and economically thriving collection of communities. IMHO, the communities we rely on the most exhibit far greater socio-economic diversity. To put it bluntly, we stand out like a sore thumb.

Why is this important? Because housing is very much a regional issue. Simply increasing the housing stock in any way, even with the kind of pseudo-affordable housing that some folks have pooh-poohed here, creates measurable benefits for the entire region. A report from the Brookings Institute, Fixing Greater Boston’s housing crisis starts with legalizing apartments near transit, recommends support transit-adjacent housing and rental subsidies, but it also concludes:

  • “Additionally, a statewide upzoning that allows developers to build in the most affluent, exclusive communities would take some of the pressure off moderate-income neighborhoods such as East Boston and Malden, which have been providing much of the region’s new housing. Allowing new construction in affluent, mostly white communities is one of the most effective ways to reduce the risk of gentrification and displacement in lower-income Black and Latino or Hispanic communities.

What we do here in our own back yards directly affects the economics of housing in other communities.

Our next move should be evaluated in this regional context. Without a thriving region Lexington will falter.

Glenn P. Parker, Pct. 3
glenn....@lexingtontmma.org

Todd O. Burger

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Mar 25, 2023, 4:31:03 PM3/25/23
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Valerie and Glenn, et. al.,

Well said below.  For all of those reasons, I think we should be including the CBD in Article 34. And we should not pit one neighborhood against another by including only half of the parcels that the Planning Board recommended. 

However, I do believe that it would make sense to phase in Article 34, with the CBD and half of the other parcels in the first traunch, and the balance 3-5 years later when all are satisfied that the sky is not falling and that, in fact, what is being built is both tasteful, beneficial and can be managed by our schools. We could decide in 5 years time that the development should be slowed or that we feel the state has not done its part to fix transportation issues in the region to support this growth and hold off on the second traunch. 

Now that we have enlarged the CBD to include the critical parking areas, it would seem ill-advised to turn around and exclude the CBD from Article 34, one step forward, one step back.  Keeping the CBD in the first traunch increases the likelihood that we have a balanced and sensible outcome in the center, with re-invigorated businesses.  With the town potentially retaining ownership of the land in the parking area, the town may be able to exert some downward pressure on rents across the entire center by making new store lots available at modest rents. The town is close to authorizing hundreds of millions of dollars for a new high school.  Do we think our young people who will benefit from that school investment find today's CBD, filled as it is with banks and real estate agencies, meeting their needs?  Probably not.  Let's keep the CBD in Article 34.

I moved my family here for the schools and the center 32 years ago. They can be even better. Let's commit to this path now.

Todd Burger, Precinct 9

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Alan Levine

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Mar 25, 2023, 5:06:30 PM3/25/23
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I have found the discussion in this forum on Article 34 to be informative. I agree that the Planning Board and staff have put a lot of effort into the proposal and I think they have done good work. I’d like to be able to support efforts to allow a significant number of units in multifamily units in Lexington; allowing the building of some is well justified. However, approval of the present proposal, even if amended, would make the biggest change in the zoning bylaw in 100 years. We need to get it right.

My first concern is the rather limited setbacks and absence of step-backs in the proposal, particularly in the VO districts and, to a lesser extent, in the MFO districts. My concern is high buildings close to residential lots, e.g., single-family houses, that are either in or abut an overlay district. It appears that a building 52 feet in height could be built as close as 15 feet from the lot line and that there could even be circumstances where a building 60 feet tall could be built 15 feet from a lot line that abuts a lot with a single family home or other sensitive property. Perhaps the Planning Board could address this concern by informing us how they can deal with it reliably in the site plan review process.

My second and more important concern is with the large area of 227 acres in the proposed overlay districts. The Lexington Cluster Housing Study Group has done a nice analysis (thank you very much!) and has estimated that, on average, developments would have densities of about 20 units per acre. They also conclude that the rate of development will be limited by a number of factors so that one might expect 500 to 700 units to be built over the next ten years. I found their analysis to be reasonable and I don’t have a reason to argue with it, except that I will note that their analysis tacitly assumes that the development environment and important limiting factors will remain similar to those that prevail at present. We need to be aware that, in the future, things could change that could affect the rate of development of new buildings. In any case, I don’t object to the development of 700 units spread over ten years.

If Article 34 passes as is, I don’t see any reason to expect development of multifamily buildings to cease at the ten year mark. The process of teardowns of single family houses and resulting mansionization has been going on for many more than 10 years, perhaps even more than 30 years, and it doesn’t appear to be stopping or even slowing down. So we better look ahead more than 10 years in regard to the implications of the present proposal. There doesn’t appear to be much in the way of economics that will ultimately stop the development of 3 or 4 (or 5?) story multifamily buildings except perhaps in Lexington Center or in the VHO district where commercial buildings including lab space in the VHO district may be more profitable. I therefore infer that, if Article 34 in its present form is approved, development of multifamily housing will proceed, and it may take a number of decades, until most of the 227 acres is covered with multifamily buildings. If, for example, 175 acres is developed with 20 units per acre, that would be 3500 units. At 2.5 persons per unit that would be 8750 people; at 3 persons per unit that would be 10,500 people. These units would undoubtedly be good homes and would diversify Lexington in many ways and that would be wonderful. But, that degree of development would have implications for our schools which might be hard to manage since there is no suitable land for additional schools. Such development would also exacerbate the traffic situation and would likely mean many more traffic signals. Furthermore, it may mean that new water mains, new sewer mains, new electric utility infrastructure and communication infrastructure would be needed. A lot of the facilities and infrastructure that we are paying to improve nowadays could become inadequate.

If development seems to be going too far (whatever that is deemed to mean), then a future town meeting could reverse the zoning bylaw allowances for new multifamily buildings. That could go against state law, would likely require a two-thirds vote, and it could make the buildings that were already built nonconforming. It seems better to put limits up front on the number of units that could ultimately be built. In an apparent rush to get units built quickly, the present article is missing such limits.

I will also argue that Town Meeting should be able to vote up or down on separate parts of the current proposal in separate articles over a span of time that would cover multiple town meetings. The first part (I’ll call it part (a)) should be an article to comply more or less minimally with the MBTA Communities law. This part is timely now through late 2024. It should cover an area not much more than the 50 acre requirement. I would support such an action.

Another part (part (b)) should be allowing mixed use buildings in Lexington Center. I favor this, but would like it to be voted on separately.

Part (c) would be to expand the overlay district areas beyond those covered in parts (a) and (b). I propose that this be acted upon only after a number of years so that we can be guided by experience as to the rate and character of the units that are built in putting together extensions of the overlay district map. In short, we shouldn’t dive into a pond when we have no idea of its depth.

In this context there would be several different ways to limit the total number of units that could be developed. One would be to make the provisions of parts (b) and (c) subject to special permits rather than by right. Another would be to limit the area of the overlay districts such that full development of multifamily buildings in them would clearly not have difficult-to-manage consequences.

It’s not clear what the goals are in terms of numbers of multifamily dwelling units. We need to make those goals explicit and consider how to get to them without going far beyond them. I’d be happy to vote for 1000 units, but I won’t vote now to allow 3000 or more units.

I will oppose Article 34 unless it is heavily amended or someone convinces me that there are ways to effectively manage these potential problems. Taking a few more months to sort out these issues and propose an article that won’t cause forseeable problems down the road would be very worthwhile.

Alan Levine
Precinct 8


Todd O. Burger

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Mar 25, 2023, 5:28:39 PM3/25/23
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Alan,

I too had concerns about step backs (actually the lack of them), but for me, the particular concern was in the CBD/MFO.  However, many of the parcels are considered part of the Historic District and I understand still subject to HDC regulations.  #17 and #18 of those regulations appear to give them authority over decks and balconies.  I have a question to the HDC asking about this, but it appears to me that HDC would have an opportunity in the MFO and in other parcels within the HDC's responsibility to suggest or even enforce a requirement for the 4th floor to have an 8' step back, but allow that area excluded from interior space, to be a deck area with unobtrusive cable railing.  The result would provide value to the 4th floor units, possibly enough to offset loss of interior square footage and make for some nice parade viewing, while reducing shadowing (which I have also looked at and appears to be modest with this change).  So I don't think we need to modify Article 34 in this area, subject to what I learn from HDC.

Todd Burger Precinct 9

gjb...@rcn.com

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Mar 25, 2023, 8:40:26 PM3/25/23
to Glenn Parker, Town Meeting Members
I am somewhat puzzled by the claim that Lexington lacks diversity.  Lexington has the largest (by percentage) Asian population in the state.  We will probably be a majority minority community by 2030.  Is there some magic number of each minority in the country that we are supposed to provide housing for? .  The schools are about 40% minority now. 

And then there is growth.  Perhaps it is reasonable to spread that growth around the country.  Infinite growth is not possible, although our stock market acts as if it is required.  If we stop the obsession with endless growth, the housing "crisis" disappears.  If there is not adequate housing for the staff of businesses, then they should move to where the  housing is available.  Massachusetts doesn't need to keep growing forever.  The time to  start contemplating reducing growth is now.  Every city does not need to look like New York (where I grew up).  It is a great city, but so is Boston at one tenth the population. 

Rezoning 3 times the area required by the MBTA law is going to be a mistake for this town (soon to be a city if we recklessly pull the trigger for endless growth).  90% of our voters didn't even bother with the last town election.  Before we make such a large irreversible change, there should be a referendum.   What is the harm with minimally complying with the law and seeing the effect on the town and schools?  It is required to have one contiguous 25 acre area, and enough acreage for 1230 or so units in total. At 15 units per acre, that is 375 units in one development.  We can select a greater density and get even more units in one place.  Where are the studies on the effects of this?  Just saying "oh, they won't build it anyway", "it is too difficult to put the lots together" etc. is not a convincing argument.  There is MONEY on the table.  I am sure there are experienced developers eager to work on taking it.

And as for economic diversity, the 3600 family friendly units that are permitted under this rezoning will have economic repercussions serving to drive out the middle class that still manages to hang on here.  There will be minimal affordable housing (that they don't qualify for) and maximal multimillion dollar condos.  Just leave it all in the hands of developers. I am sure that any kind of diversity is at the bottom of their priority list.

Gloria Bloom, P4


Avram Baskin

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Mar 25, 2023, 8:51:09 PM3/25/23
to Lex TMMA
When you look at the top number in the census data, it appears to indicate diversity — more than 25% non white.  As Gloria points out, that’s mostly Asian.  The percentage for African Americans is (the last time I checked) less than 1%.  So, yes, Lexington has a diversity problem.  Also, there is more to diversity than racial diversity.  My guess is that the non-caucasian residents fit the Lexington demographic for wealth and education.  Part of diversity is economic diversity, and we definitely have a problem with that.

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Avram Baskin
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everyone else is already taken

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gjb...@rcn.com

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Mar 25, 2023, 9:10:53 PM3/25/23
to Avram Baskin, Lex TMMA
In order to create "economic diversity", you need to reduce property values, allowing middle income people to buy homes here.  Mr. Martignetti has already pointed out that reducing property values will be very unpopular.  Article 34 does nothing to create these middle income lower cost homes.  

Our median household income is now over $200K.  To reduce it to $100K (still above the Boston metro median), we either need another great depression or we need to add 12,000 households with no income.  Neither option seems attractive, (and we can't create the depression on our own). 

Gloria Bloom, P4

Kathryn Roy

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Mar 26, 2023, 6:35:55 AM3/26/23
to gjb...@rcn.com, Avram Baskin, Lex TMMA
Gloria please be careful about repeating an untruth about property values. But MBTA housing is not mainly about low income housing. Only a small percentage of housing will be for 80% of Area Median Income, and that is too high for many people who would like to live here, such as a starting salary for school teachers.

To “summarize the summaries” — the vast majority of studies have found that affordable housing does not depress neighboring property values, and may even raise them in some cases. Overall, the research suggests that neighbors should have little to fear from the type of attractive and modestly sized developments that constitute the bulk of newly produced affordable housing today.

https://furmancenter.org/files/media/Dont_Put_It_Here.pdf

And I include below slides from the US Census showing racial makeup of local towns.  Lexington does have an outsize population of Asian - including Indian and Chinese people  - but lower than average for Latino and Black.  I, for one, would like to see more Latino and Black live in the area.

And Lexington has a representative government.  People who care about the town enough to participate, vote.  Those that don't, don't and leave it up to their representatives who study the issues to do what they think best.

Kathryn Roy 

Precinct 4



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Avram Baskin

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Mar 26, 2023, 6:51:28 AM3/26/23
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First, Mr. Martignetti was representing one opinion, his own.  He does not speak for my family.  I’m voting “yes” on Article 40. This is Lexington.  No matter when someone bought their house or what the setbacks are, we will all all turn a tidy profit when we decide to sell our homes.

Second, I am not an economist, but my opinion is that Gloria's economic analysis is faulty.


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RODNEY COLE

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Mar 26, 2023, 7:46:20 AM3/26/23
to Avram Baskin, Avram Baskin' via LexTMMA
All,

(original subject was article 34, I am replying in agreement with Avram's comment on art. 40, though some of my comments are more general)

I am early elderly. In ten years, 15 years, I may need the value of my home to afford a continuing care retirement community, or maybe I'll need a nursing home. So I don't want to home prices to totally collapse. But I also want to leave Lexington as a better town for future generations. I am willing to balance the value of my home against the needs of other people. 

As it is the town is changing for the worse, in my opinion. Thirty years ago a mid-30s couple, one an engineer working for a not-for-profit (so decent pay but not great pay) and one a school teacher could buy a median house in Lexington, a median house being about 2000 sqft and costing about $250K. Now, our house is about a 10%-tile home, with a value pushing $1M. This is out of reach of a couple like we were, not to mention good luck finding a 2000 sqft house today. A median value house in Lexington is much higher and out of reach of all but the wealthy. New houses are even higher priced and larger. 

Lexington is ever more becoming an enclave of the very wealthy. Article 40 will only make the slightest dent in that trend, as the dimensional control reductions are very modest. But then too, any impact on existing home values will also be very modest. After all, for example, the change for a 10,000 sqf lot is from 5,950 sqft to 5,150 sqft - from ginormous to still ginormous. All lot sizes have very modest reductions. And this only impacts those builders who intend to build to or very close to the absolute maximum size. These new dimensions are also still rather higher than some of the surrounding towns leaving Lexington still very desirable to builders who want to build very large houses. I just can't see that this is going to drive a large drop in the value of existing homes in Lexington.

So, I will support Article 40. It is a very modest step in the right direction. And I hope it is not the only step we make towards a more economically diverse and inclusive Lexington.

Rod Cole
Precinct 9

Glenn Parker

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Mar 26, 2023, 5:40:00 PM3/26/23
to lextmmA

On 25 Mar 2023, at 17:06, Alan Levine wrote:

There doesn’t appear to be much in the way of economics that will ultimately stop the development of 3 or 4 (or 5?) story multifamily buildings…

I agree with Alan that development won’t come to a halt after 10 years, and I think that’s probably a good thing. However, basic economics, good old supply and demand, are always at work. Home developers will slow down when they run low on home buyers. There are at least two ways that could happen in the coming decades, and we will likely see a combination of both.

The first driver is increased supply, and this is the more desirable path, IMHO. A significant increase in the regional supply of housing would lead to a reduction in acute demand. Economics tells us there will never be a perfect balance, but bringing the regional housing market closer to equilibrium will reduce many of the problems we suffer from now, and it would reduce the incentives for building new homes.

If increased supply is the carrot, then decreased demand is the stick. Housing demand is weakened by a declining population, and right now Greater Boston is losing its people. Many of those moving out have cited the high cost of housing as a key reason for leaving. Some of them are fortunate enough to have Work-From-Home options, others are just starting over.

Boston is also a city with a constant influx of new immigrants, and until recently the flight from the city was compensated for with new arrivals. That balance of in-migration versus out-migration has now shifted to the negative. This issue is discussed in the latest housing report from The Boston Foundation.

When population falls, it generally takes everything else with it. Could that happen to Lexington, where the boom never ends? Let’s ask Pittsfield or Lowell.

Our housing crisis is like a kind of arthritis for the entire region, effectively reducing wages, squandering output, and limiting opportunities. It just makes everything harder, slower, and more painful. Decades of exclusive zoning in Lexington have contributed to this situation. When people ask, “Why should we do more than the absolute minimum?”, I think about what we have been doing up until now.

Albert Zabin

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Mar 28, 2023, 9:49:28 PM3/28/23
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Dear Fellow members,

I am very likely to offer an amendment to Article 34,  subsection 7.52.  I have raised my concerns  to the Planning Board and have discussed them with some members privately and with the Associate Member, Attorney Michael Leone and with the Planning 
Director, over the last few weeks. 

Subsection 7.5.2 provides: Overlay District. Village and Multi-Family Overlay Districts shall not replace existing zoning districts but shall be superimposed over them. The provisions of this section apply only to developments on a lot located entirely within Village and Multi-Family Overlay Districts where the property owner has elected to comply with the requirements of the Village Overlay District, rather than complying with 
those of the underlying zoning district.  

 By allowing a developer-owner a choice of which set of rules he will comply with, this proposed by -law the very purpose of the Article.  Unless, a parcel of land is fairly large, multi-unit developments are less desirable for developers than single family mega houses.  Multi-unit developments are much more complex.  Builders, as we know all too well, can buy a modest, tear it down and build a big house at a big profit.  Even more important, the developer who might  consider building a multi-unit project has to acquire enough land before he can even begin the work.  In most of the districts where the underlying zone permits single family housing,  there are very few parcels large enough to support a profitable multi-unit development.  Land in Lexington’s scarce, expensive , and no one is making more. It will take sometime for a developer to get enough land, lot by lot, to begin a project.  The real estate market is unlikely to change because Lexington is a wonderful town and prices are high because demand is great and Lexington will be a most desirable place for years to come.

The goal of Article 34  is to encourage the creation of new more modestly price housing, which I think every knowledgeable person believes, requires multi-unit housing.  The Article as drafted carries the seeds ofd its own failure.  I will propose to remove the following language: where the property owner has elected to comply with the requirements of the Village Overlay District, rather than complying with those of the underlying zoning district.  

I hope for your support

Best regards,
Albert P. Zabin, TMM Pct.1
1 Page Road
Lexington, MA 02420

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