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The ANHD Blog raises the profile of our issues, and educates our member groups, city decision makers, and the general public on our core issue areas. The ANHD Blog offers sharp, timely and effective commentary on key public policy issues, as well as our work and the work of our member groups.

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De Blasio ZQA Proposal - A Step Forward

November 4, 2015

Mayor de Blasio has set a big task for his administration by introducing three major zoning policy initiatives in September. With so many zoning proposals, it is easy to be overwhelmed. But each proposal needs to be  understood on own its merits.

De Blasio's Zoning for Quality & Affordability Proposal: A Step in the Right Direction
 
Mayor de Blasio has set a big task for his administration by introducing three major zoning policy initiatives in September. With so many zoning proposals, it is easy to be overwhelmed. But each proposal needs to be  understood on own its merits. The first - the East New York rezoning - is just one of at least fifteen major neighborhood rezonings to come, and should be judged by the local community based on how well it truly addresses their specific concerns. The second - Mandatory Inclusionary Housing - has been a central policy focus for ANHD, and we'll be putting out a full analysis and set of recommendations on this shortly.
 
The third new proposal - Zoning for Quality and Affordability (ZQA) - may be the least well understood. In many neighborhoods, the public conversation about ZQA has become enmeshed in concerns about the intrusion of overdevelopment and big real estate interests on residential neighborhoods. This is unfortunate, because ANHD believes that the Zoning for Quality and Affordability proposal is worthy of support
 
The ZQA proposal reflects thoughtful and modest changes to encourage affordable and senior developments, while preserving the types of livable, mixed-use communities New Yorkers value. We all agree that we should plan for our future needs, and it is clear that housing will continue to be one of the City's most pressing issues. We currently have a million senior citizens, who are disproportionately low-income. The City is projected to add over 360,000 more senior citizens by 2030. Our low-income population is growing, but our supply of apartments with affordable rents continues to shrink. Going forward, we simply have to make it easier to build affordable and senior housing in New York so that we can address these future needs.
 
The Zoning for Quality and Affordability proposal takes some smart steps to address this need. Contextual zoning districts - areas of the city which have strict height limits and design guidelines - were first developed in the 1980s. But the situation in the city has changed dramatically since then. Construction techniques are different. Affordable Housing programs are different. Car usage is different. And our city needs affordable and senior housing more desperately than ever, a need that is projected to continue well into the future. The City's proposed ZQA text amendment would adapt our contextual zoning rules for the current environment, making it easier to build affordable and senior housing in contextual districts. Design guidelines would be made more flexible, costly parking requirements would be eliminated, and unused parking lots could be developed as more senior housing. It's important to be honest about the tradeoffs - these changes do mean height increases for new buildings in many areas. And since contextual districts are almost always the result of community advocacy, put in place to provide protections against unwanted types of developments, revisiting the regulations in these districts is something that should not be taken lightly. But ANHD believes that the modest height increases offered by ZQA in return for incentivizing affordable and senior housing are reasonably designed. The new rules are specifically written to not encourage tear-downs of existing structures to make way for new developments, just to encourage better design and affordability options for new developments.
 
Planning New York City is the art of balancing many concerns in a city with limited space. With our affordable housing crisis continuing unabated, and our senior population projected to increase 36% by 2030, the ZQA proposal strikes the balance our city will need in the upcoming decades. Most importantly, this proposal fits with ANHD's belief that zoning changes should, in all cases, encourage specifically affordable housing development or other community benefits. Communities of all types from across the City, have made it clear that more luxury housing is not a community benefit - which is why the City has modified its original ZQA proposal to better encourage Inclusionary Housing, Affordable Housing, and Senior Housing instead of unrestricted market-rate housing. Instead, small changes to market-rate designs are now linked to providing a higher first floor, which leads to the commercial ground floors and the mixed-use streetscape that's one of New York's unique urban design strengths. ZQA is only one piece of a larger puzzle - along with better support for community-based nonprofits developers, a stronger Mandatory Inclusionary Housing proposal, a citywide plan to prevent displacement and harassment, and smart, inclusive community planning - but it's an important piece. It can also be improved: for instance, affordability requirements should be strengthened and lengthened in conjunction with these zoning changes, and as the amendment makes its way through the ULURP process there will be opportunity to do so. But more senior and affordable housing is something our city needs, our seniors and low-income families need, and we are ultimately much better off addressing this issue now, before our affordable and senior housing crisis get worse. The administration should be commended for its foresight and proactivity on this issue, and we support their effort.

 

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