NBN Online for the week of August 28, 2006

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In This Issue:

Front Page
NAHB Study Shows How Much Bathrooms Are Really Worth
Sustainable TND Community, Daybreak, on Tour at Fall Board
NAHB Economist Calls Inclusionary Zoning a Bad Idea
Share Nation's Building News With Your Staff. It's Free.
Coast to Coast
Sweetening the Deal to Sell a Home
Housing Forum
Letters to the Editor: Learn How the Codes Work
Politics & Government
Pact Sets Builders Searching for New Lumber Sources
Survey Finds NIMBYs on the Rise in Both U.S. and Britain
Economics & Finance
New Single-Family Home Sales Down, Inventory Up in July
Mortgage Rates Nudge Down Housing Affordability
Eye on the Economy: Housing Will Not Drag Economy Into Recession
Tips
Builder's Tip: Using Wall-Sheathing as Insulation Stops
Business Management
Working With Subcontractors: Pros, Cons…and Cautions
Base Pay of California Builders Up 6.8% in 2005
Multifamily
Condo Market Retreating From 2005’s Record Sales
Building Systems
Approved Guide for Installing Tile Roofing Now Available
Education
Want to Know More About Designations? Ask an Expert
Education Calendar
Green Building
Dallas the Latest to Hop on the Green Building Bandwagon
Katrina Recovery
Lowe’s to Sell Expandable Katrina Cottage Kits
Legal
NAHB Weighs in on Two Pending Wetlands Cases
International
Sign Up for Trade Mission to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico
Workforce housing
Apply for 2006 Workforce Housing Awards
Labor
Beazer Internships Put Hispanics on the Fast Track
Building Products
David Weekley Homes Names Trane Supplier of Choice
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on HGTV & DIY This Week
Endowment
Endowment Scholar Trades in Swatches for Home Building
Association News
New NAHB Video Shows How to Communicate With Media
'Associate Appreciation Month' Is Almost Here
GM $500 Exclusive Offer for NAHB Members
Securely Collect Payments on-the-Go With Solveras
UPS Offers Up to 30% Discount to NAHB Members on Shipping
Find Key Employees Through the NAHB Online Career Center
Fall Board Meets Sept. 13-17 in Salt Lake City
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Related Articles

NAHB Study Shows How Much Bathrooms Are Really Worth

Sustainable TND Community, Daybreak, on Tour at Fall Board

Share Nation's Building News With Your Staff. It's Free.

NAHB Economist Calls Inclusionary Zoning a Bad Idea

As a solution to a shortage of affordably priced housing in many parts of the country, inclusionary zoning is “just a plain bad idea” and “it should be dumped in the trash bin,” NAHB economist Elliot Eisenberg told the news media during the Southeast Coast Builders Conference earlier this month in Orlando, Fla.

Sky-high housing prices in such markets as Los Angeles; Miami, Fla.; the Washington, D.C. area’s Montgomery County, Md.; and Seattle are to a great extent the result of overly restrictive zoning and regulation, he said, and government attempts to correct the situation by requiring builders to set aside a certain percentage of their homes for households with lower incomes only add another layer of regulation, further distorting housing and land prices.

“The government has gotten involved in the process and made it worse,” said Eisenberg. “Every time you regulate, you raise the cost of housing.”

“Builders don’t just want to build expensive houses,” he said. They realize that housing demand is heavily concentrated between $175,000 and $400,000, the range in which some 40 million households can afford to buy a home, “but there’s not a lot of homes being built at these prices,” particularly in areas where the government is artificially constraining the supply.

“People don’t think about the unintended economic consequences of regulation,” he said. “Do we make GM give cars to the poor? Do we force teachers to teach extra students? Do local governments require Wal-Mart to sell stuff to the needy at reduced prices? Do we require grocery stores to provide food to the needy at a discount? Why is workforce housing different? Inclusionary zoning typically raises the cost of housing production, and there is no debate on that among economists.”

Inclusionary zoning is likely to increase new house prices, decrease the housing supply, increase existing house prices, decrease land prices and push building outside the area zoned as inclusionary, he said.

For example, in 45 California jurisdictions, housing production averaged more than 210 units annually before inclusionary zoning was imposed and below 150 after, Eisenberg said. The yearly growth rate of the housing stock in Bolder, Colo. is 12.5% where there is inclusionary zoning, but 26.7% in the surrounding metro area. In Burlington, Vt., those percentages are 5.9% versus 31.5% and in Montgomery County, 13.2% compared to 24.8%.

Touted as a model for inclusionary zoning, Burlington’s program has managed to deliver only 180 affordable units over its 15-year history, he said.

What’s worse, in an attempt to hold the inclusionary zoning units in the area’s stock of affordable housing, the benefits of homeownership are delayed or denied entirely. In Montgomery County, deed restrictions prevent the subsidized unit from being sold for a lengthy period of time. The county has gradually raised the restrictive period from five, to 10, to 20 and now 30 years, but inevitably, when that period is up, the owners “ditch the home and it’s no longer in the affordable housing supply when it’s sold for full price,” Eisenberg said.

Furthermore, “units are distributed unfairly, often by lottery, and the poorest are rarely helped,” he said. The zoning encourages construction to move outside the regulated area, increasing sprawl, and racial integration is limited.

On the supply side, Eisenberg suggested several affordable housing solutions: governments should expedite development reviews; waive impact fees; pursue negotiated instead of mandatory ordinances; increase density bonuses; reform building codes, such as allowing a front-door knocker instead of requiring a door bell; relax design standards, such as allowing a smaller yard; eliminate exclusionary zoning, such as large-lot requirements; and entitle a sufficient number of lots. “But best of all, use market forces,” he said.

For more information, e-mail Elliot Eisenberg at NAHB, or call him at 800-368-5242 x8398.


 

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