I had a very different reaction to the article.  Nowhere in the piece did I
discern that the Globe's Spotlight's team's thesis is that there is a
housing crisis for those looking for single-family homes.  Rather, the crux
of the article (and this is just the first in a series) is summed up in the
introductory paragraphs below.

John

For Milton’s story is everywhere – it is the story of Boston’s pricey
suburbs, cocooned by restrictive single-family zoning rules that make
apartment and condo projects so hard to permit that they are rarely built.

It is the story of a town, and region, that has for half a century doubled
down on the status quo, or made zoning even more restrictive, all but
guaranteeing that single-family home prices — rising more steeply here than
in any other state since 1980 — will remain shockingly high.

The fallout from these outrageous home prices is a sort of economic climate
change, steadily making much of the region uninhabitable for those of
modest incomes. Expensive housing acts as a golden gate, and there is a
price to be paid for living in a gated community.

This is the price: Across this region, the dream of suburban life is
largely foreclosed by lack of affordable options to the children of those
who live in the suburbs now, to the town employees who keep municipalities
humming, to newcomers who might bring new energies to town — and added
diversity of class and race.

One fact became obvious in the course of this review: The sense of urgency
here does not match this brewing crisis. Not even close.

One reason may be that swelling property values don’t feel like a crisis
for those who bought into the market years or decades ago, they feel like a
windfall. This region, Milton included, is awash in paper millionaires.

But standing pat will suffocate hope — the hope of many now trying to enter
this mad housing market, from empty-nesters hoping to downsize in the town
they know, to newcomers seeking to buy a first home as careers and
prosperity grow.

On Wed, Oct 18, 2023 at 1:15 PM Sara Mattes <samat...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Yes -very inserting article.
> And very well written-very readable.
>
> But what is of special  note is that the article calls it a crisis for
> those seeking  *SINGLE FAMILY HOMES.*
> Those are the first examples they offer.
>
> And, then the pivot is to apartment developments and condos, with no
> equivalent documentation of demand…just the assertion.
> It is easy to document the demand for affordable units as there are waging
> lists.
> On the other hand, we are not documenting demand for market rate,
> especially high end units.
> It seems there is no discussion as to how to meet the noted demand for
> single family homes.
>
> Also of note is the graph of where there are a lot of building permits
> being pulled  and where there are not, without also noting that lots of
> permits are being pulled where land is easier to come by, like the Denver
> area.
>
> The real challenge will be how to meet demand for single family homes in
> our area.
>
>
>
>
>
> ------
> Sara Mattes
>
>
>
>
> On Oct 18, 2023, at 1:02 PM, Alice Waugh <awaugh...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> The housing crisis since the 1960s and soaring prices... Chapter 40B...
> minimum lot sizes... triple deckers... and of course the Affordable Housing
> Act... this article has it all. Highly recommended to see the big picture
> in the Boston area with a focus on Milton.
>
>
> https://apps.bostonglobe.com/2023/10/special-projects/spotlight-boston-housing/milton-restrictive-zoning/
>
> I believe you can read a few Boston Globe articles per month for free if
> you're not a subscriber.
>
> Alice Waugh
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