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Informed North Arlington
Citizens Served

gThe affordable housing myth.

The NJMC's misguided notion that government can regulate housing stock and force inclusionary zoning practices doesn't make any sense in a state where home values and property taxes are sky high!

Does an unelected regional state agency have the authority to impose inclusionary zoning restrictions upon local municipalities that have governing bodies directly elected by the voter?

Can the NJMC dictate to municipal planning and zoning boards as well as to member municipalities mandatory guidelines for affordable housing?

In a state long known for home rule, The Home Rule Act of 1917 granted to all municipalities powers previously granted to only a few. It also established broad areas of governmental services and controls that were to be available to all. These powers were bolstered by the declaration in the NJ Constitution that statutes conferring powers upon municipalities and counties should be liberally construed in their favor. It has therefore been politically difficult for the state legislature to recapture these powers.

Like elementary and secondary education, the issue of housing has been for the most part one of strict local control.

But the Meadowlands, the area with marquee views of Manhattan has been for the most part polluted marshes and salt water swamps that have been destroyed by decades of illegal dumping, landfill operations and a host of other unsavory usage have tantalized developers for centuries. With Brownfield remediation and landfill cleanup now attainable, a host of legal obstacles such as reclamation, title inquiries and fragmented government control all playing a role in the lack of progress in this fourteen town district.

In effect the creation of the Hackensack Meadowlands Development Commission in 1968 (now the NJMC) was to provide orderly development of the some 19,000 acres of valuable wetlands in Bergen as well as Hudson counties. At the same time, the original intent of the law was to also create disposal facilities for solid waste operations for all of northern New Jersey.

Since the NJMC can dictate a master plan, an adversarial relationship with the agency can complicate matters as it has with the failed EnCap project.

And while the NJMC has had some great accomplishments as it pertains to the construction of the Meadowlands Sports Complex and the preservation of environmentally sensitive marshes, the overall vision of the Meadowlands has changed from preservation of open space to the promotion of affordable housing and the overall urbanization of South Bergen County.

As we see the Meadowlands Sports Complex rapidly change from a revenue positive facility derived from para mutual handles, it is now a revenue negative unit of government that relies on subsidies of $100 million dollars due to declining para mutual revenues and the addition of casino gambling alternatives in Atlantic City as well as various locations along the east coast and as far away as Pennsylvania and Michigan.

So why is an agency that was originally conceived to create an orderly development process seeking a transformation of the area as it applies to the number of units of housing that they seek in a down real estate cycle? Secondly, how will any builder make the necessary profit on market rate housing when it costs virtually the same price to build affordable housing that will be sold at roughly 67% less the current median home value?

In effect, is affordable housing economically realistic?

Secondly, and probably more importantly, is home ownership now an entitlement granted by the government?

In a country where the free market drives healthcare, is it practical to impose public policy mandates that guarantee subsidized housing for the few at the expense of everyone else?

Practically speaking, how will local government assess the value of homes that are not driven by market conditions? Is it fair to place a cap on property taxes of owners of affordable units and thus pass the costs to every other homeowner? What if that affordable housing homeowner has several children who also attend public schools.

Is it fair that his or her taxes be in effect capped despite the sizable service they require?

These are issues that get lost in the affordable housing argument.

Instead, the affordable housing issue is driven on emotion, not common sense.

Those in government plea for fairness and opportunity for all. But what they do is create mandatory entitlements subsidized by everyone else who earns a home through hard work, savings and investment.

Why would the government want to undermine those values that created the American dream of home ownership for all in the first place?

A perfect example of this is the current housing crisis.

While homeownership increased at a wicked rate since 9/11, the Federal Reserve cut interest rates at such a pace that it created interest free loans for just about anyone who could qualify to purchase a home. But predatory lenders destroyed the market by approving loans for people with FICA scores so low it would make it impossible for these individuals to retain these properties in the long-term. The subprime explosion is directly credited to the fact that about 20% of all loans written were approved to individuals not with the sufficient income, but with deficient credit histories worthy of home ownership!

In the case of the affordable housing prospect, you have a situation in which income and credit history are probably both at risk and thus one wonders how the notion of something one cannot really afford makes any economic sense in the first place?

But most importantly, affordable housing only seems to work when the density of the project is such that it can carry the decreased values of the low income units by imposing an even higher price on the market rate units. This was the foundation of Arlington Valley. Increased density (1,650 units) to subsidize the implementation of low income properties.

But density urbanizes a suburban municipality. Density increases the cost of government, property taxes and essential services. In effect, what you sought in affordable housing is a direct opposite effect on the entire community!

In a community like North Arlington, the Area Median Income or AMI is quite compatible to most homebuyers. It is by definition, one of the more affordable places to live in all of New Jersey when you consider accessibility, employment opportunities, public school access and overall costs to own a home.

At the end of the day no matter what the price, the homeowner must have an ability as well as willingness to pay for homeownership.

The willingness to pay comes from the desire to live in an area that is conducive to a productive lifestyle. The market in effect ensures that willingness to pay for a home as well as maintain it and protect the investment. If affordable units are by nature artificially depressed by a government regulated ceiling that controls price, where is the willingness for the owner over time to protect or retain that initial investment?

With speculators thankfully out of the housing market, the proper price corrections will take place and balance out the unrealistic upward surges that must come down. For the market has not been driven by job creation or even job loss, but by predatory lending practices that put just about anyone with a job in the position to purchase a home.

In effect, affordability was created across-the-board by low interest rates that set prices and home equity values to record levels.

The truth about this housing market is that wealth has been built in equity, not income. 

Those smart enough to get into the market have seen personal wealth boom because of homeownership. Wages for the most part remain static and job creation remains mediocre.

With the foundation of income based in job creation, just how will these low income earners with practically no net worth hang on to these affordable units?

Again, a question never addressed by the NJMC or anyone else for that matter.

Basic economics cannot and should not be driven by public policy that seeks to right some perceived wrong. Why is it when affordable housing or low income housing is ever discussed, it never makes it way into Franklin Lakes, Old Tappan, Upper Saddle River or Alpine?

The case for affordable housing is noble, not realistic.

If public policy focused on job creation, research & development and education instead of $1.3 billion dollar subsidies to build football stadiums that are used by two teams sixteen Sundays a year, the notion of affordable housing would no longer be in our vocabulary of what government can and cannot do.






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