A brewing conflict on affordable housing:An interview with Bill Baroni

Assembly bill 500, which would eliminate the use of regional contribution agreements as a way for suburban towns to meet their affordable housing obligation, is now in the hands of the state Senate.

The bill, a first step toward reforming the state’s affordable housing program, comes at a time when most suburban communities in the state are challenging a rule proposal put forward by the state Council on Affordable Housing that would dramatically increase the housing obligation created by new warehouse construction.

A500, as I said, is a good first step, but it has its flaws — read my recent posts or our editorial.

State Sen. Bill Baroni — whose 14th District includes Cranbury, Jamesburg, Monroe, Plainsboro, South Brunswick and West Windsor among towns covered by Packet Publications — also sees flaws in the bill. In a conversation today, he told me that he was working in the Senate to address the warehousing issue, especially as it pertains to Cranbury.

The warehousing formula, as he says, is “not even close to being based on science — there is no data to support it.” Plus, he adds, the retroactive nature of the rules — which require towns to factor in development that occurred as far back at 2004 — contradicts the planning basis on which the Mount Laurel decisions were made.

“One of the goals of the Mount Laurel decisions was to have towns plan better, to make sure that they plan for affordable housing in their towns,” he said. “Retroactivity runs counter to that smart-growth approach and I have a problem with that.”

He said the final product needs to respect the “core moral responsibility of providing affordable housing,” but also respect the needs of local towns.

He said he agrees with criticism of RCAs, but he would prefer to see them phased out over time.

“I don’t think you can go cold turkey with RCAs,” he said. “Donor and receiving towns have been dependent on them for too long.”

The Legislature, he says, has a potentially larger issue to address, however, one that could create new constitutional complications — that of shrinking space. I asked him about towns that are at or close to build out but that are considered by COAH to be developing. A town like Cranbury, or even South Brunswick, is fast running out of buildable land in no small part because of municipal commitments to open-space preservation. COAH, however, has not generally factored in preserved land.

It creates a conflict that should be resolved sooner rather than later.

“How do we provide affordable housing, keeping the commitment we’ve made, but also recognize that there are economic, health and space issues that towns have already run into?” he asked. “At what point, do you say we can do no more

“At one point, you will have a clash between affordable housing and open space. If trends that are apparent now don’t change, you will have towns faced with requirements to build but the only space available would be the open space.”

The conflict does not lend itself to a simple answer.

Enough with the mud

This has gotten a bit too stereotypical — trading half-truths and ugly barbs, a seemingly desperate candidate, another staying above the fray but relying on his running mates to take the battle to his opponents and a venal outside group lobbing bombs from outside the playing field.

Voters need to remember the issues in this year’s campaign in the 14th legislative district:

1. Property taxes and tax reform
2. The governor’s monetization program
2. Ethics in government
3. The environment
4. Civil unions and same-sex marriage
5. Affordable housing
6. Infrastructure

This election is not supposed to be about the mud. When you go into the voting booth next week, remember that.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

E-mail me by clicking here.

Baroni v. Singh and the attacks begin

Earlier this week, state Senate candidate Seema Singh went after Assemblyman Bill Baroni, her Republican opponent, hoping to tie him to President George W. Bush and maybe alter a race in which the Republican has won all of the major progressive endorsements (Garden State Equality, environmental groups, labor unions).

Among her charges was Mr. Baroni’s apparent silence on the president’s veto of the expansion of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program.

The problem, however, is that Mr. Baroni wasn’t silent — as Politics NJ reports, he sent a letter to the president before the veto asking that the president sign the expansion bill.

“As a Republican state legislator, I am in the ‘trenches’ and I see what a great job FamilyCare does every day in our state to provide coverage to these kids,” Baroni wrote Bush. “I also see too many children who still lack access to basic health coverage. Not renewing this program would be irresponsible and would put over one hundred thousand children in this state at risk.”

The attack elicited this response from the International Brotherhood of Teamsters Joint Council 73:

“We are shocked by recent attacks by Bill’s opponent calling him a ‘Bush Republican,'” said Teamsters President Cliff Nolan. “We know Bill Baroni–nothing could be further from the truth, and we call on his opponent to stop these senseless attacks.”

The attack is part of a larger strategic approach taken by Ms. Singh in the waning days of the campaign, with Mr. Baroni picking up union and other endorsements and Ms. Singh’s campaign apparently stalling.

I won’t say at the moment how the Post and Press plan to endorse (check in with the papers on Thursday and Friday) but I’ve been intrigued by the manner in which some Democrats have been willing to narrow Mr. Baroni’s record to a few votes — his lack of a vote on the Assembly resolution opposing the surge, for instance, or his abstention on a resolution opposing privatization of Social Security — without looking at the entire package.

South Brunswick Post, The Cranbury Press
The Blog of South Brunswick

E-mail me by clicking here.