logo
Google Play App Store
Log In subscribe and/or renew Eeditions
  • Home
  • E-Edition
    • This Week Newspaper
    • Archives
    • Local Shops
    • This is Westfield
    • Search the Archives
  • News
  • Opinions
  • Sports
  • Community
    • Life Events
    • Community Calendar
  • Arts & Entertainment
  • Obituaries
    • Submit an Obituary
  • Classified
  • Legals
  • Advertise
    • Advertorial
    • Paid Political
    • Sponsored Content
  • subscribe and/or renew
  • Contact
    • Home
    • E-Edition
      • This Week Newspaper
      • Archives
      • Local Shops
      • This is Westfield
      • Search the Archives
    • News
    • Opinions
    • Sports
    • Community
      • Life Events
      • Community Calendar
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Obituaries
      • Submit an Obituary
    • Classified
    • Legals
    • Advertise
      • Advertorial
      • Paid Political
      • Sponsored Content
    • subscribe and/or renew
    • Contact
  • Home
  • E-Edition
    • This Week Newspaper
    • Archives
    • Local Shops
    • This is Westfield
    • Search the Archives
  • News
  • Opinions
  • Sports
  • Community
    • Life Events
    • Community Calendar
  • Arts & Entertainment
  • Obituaries
    • Submit an Obituary
  • Classified
  • Legals
  • Advertise
    • Advertorial
    • Paid Political
    • Sponsored Content
  • subscribe and/or renew
  • Contact
    • Home
    • E-Edition
      • This Week Newspaper
      • Archives
      • Local Shops
      • This is Westfield
      • Search the Archives
    • News
    • Opinions
    • Sports
    • Community
      • Life Events
      • Community Calendar
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Obituaries
      • Submit an Obituary
    • Classified
    • Legals
    • Advertise
      • Advertorial
      • Paid Political
      • Sponsored Content
    • subscribe and/or renew
    • Contact
Main, News
By KATIE MOEN on
December 21, 2023
State Democrats Push Affordable-Housing Reform

AREA — As this year’s legislative sessions tick down to a close, state Democrats are working to push through new legislation that would effectively redefine the way New Jersey looks at affordable housing.

On Monday, Senate President Nicholas Scutari (D-Union) joined Assembly Speaker Craig Coughlin (D-Middlesex) in showing support for a new, 68-page bill that would effectively sunset the now-defunct Council on Affordable Housing (COAH) in exchange for new regional oversight and an updated algorithm that would allow municipalities to more definitively determine their affordable- housing obligations.

“For far too many people, the American dream of home ownership — which represents generational wealth — has been more fantasy than reality,” said state Sen. Troy Singleton, D-Burlington, one of the bill’s co-sponsors. “Our objective here is to bring that full circle so that everyone, no matter where they live, no matter where they come from, can find a home here in the State of New Jersey.”

The COAH, comprised of 12 gubernatorial appointees, was established by the New Jersey Legislature in response to the Fair Housing Act of 1985 and a series of New Jersey Supreme Court rulings known as the Mount Laurel doctrine. By definition, the council was tasked with establishing housing regions, estimating the need for low/moderate-income housing across the state, allocating fair share quotas and reviewing municipal plans to fulfill these obligations.

As developer lawsuits and municipal calls for aid continued to pile up around the state, however, the council’s efficacy, if not its authority, notably waned. The council was officially declared “moribund” — effectively, dead — by the Christie Administration in 2013.

Since then, all matters related to affordable housing — from plan reviews, oversight and implementation, to developer lawsuits and legal challenges — have been relegated to the lower courts.

Last year, more than a dozen municipal leaders, including representatives from Cranford, Bordentown, Beach Haven, Egg Harbor and Mahwah, filed suit against the state in an effort to force Governor Phil Murphy to re-instate the COAH and fill its numerous vacancies.

“These [affordable-housing] obligations don’t take into account the town as a whole,” then-Cranford Mayor Kathleen Miller Prunty said when the lawsuit was filed. “While I feel strongly that we should be meeting our obligation and doing it well, there are also some logistical considerations that need to be taken into account. This town is only 4.4 square miles, with a population of over 23,000 people, and not a lot of developable land. This is an immensely complicated issue, and we need proper oversight to handle it properly.”

In a legal response dated March 27 of this year, however, Attorney General Matt Platkin argued that not only had the COAH proven ineffectual as a functional oversight committee, but that neither the state nor its highest office was under any obligation to reinstate it.

According to information provided by the state, the new bill, co-sponsored by Senator Singleton and State Assemblywoman Yvonne Lopez (DMiddlesex), would provide better, more effective guidance to municipalities by establishing regional mediation panels that would “quickly and efficiently arrive at the amount of housing needed and where it should be built in each municipality.”

If approved, the new legislation also would provide stronger protections against developer lawsuits and help to streamline the development process.

“Affordability has been the cornerstone of the efforts we have taken in the Legislature to address the challenges our residents face every day in New Jersey,” said Senate President Scutari. “By taking this significant step today, we aim to preserve and develop more affordable housing in the state. This bill marks a crucial stride towards making housing in New Jersey more accessible and more affordable for all of New Jersey’s residents.”

And while New Jersey has managed to make some headway under the current court-ruled system in recent years, lawmakers say the state is still coming up short.

“Although New Jersey has doubled its supply of affordable housing over the last eight years, we still remain over 200,000 units short,” Senator Singleton said. “While this proposal will not address all of the barriers to affordable-housing development, it will streamline the process and ensure that towns are in compliance with the obligations established by the courts. Expanding access to affordable housing must continue to be a priority, as it is needed now more than ever.”

The bill is being introduced in advance of the next round of municipal affordable-housing obligations, which begins on July 1, 2025.

With less than three weeks left in this year’s lame-duck legislative session, however, lawmakers will have to act quickly if they do not want to see the bill added to next year’s calendar.

ePaper
coogle_play
app_store
ePaper
coogle_play
app_store
ePaper
coogle_play
app_store
Most Read
From a Table to a Title: The Spark That Ignited Westfield Girls Lacrosse
Sports
From a Table to a Title: The Spark That Ignited Westfield Girls Lacrosse
By Morgan Lang Hutter 
Thursday, July 17, 2025
How two moms and a determined community planted the seed of a program that three decades later, claimed its first state championshipNearly 30 years be...
this is a test
Cranford Blue Tops South Plainfield For Cal Ripken, Jr. 10U State Title
Sports
Cranford Blue Tops South Plainfield For Cal Ripken, Jr. 10U State Title
Thursday, July 17, 2025
The Cranford Blue baseball team ran the table to capture the Cal Ripken, Jr. 10U State Championship held at the Memorial Field Complex in Cranford on ...
this is a test
Latest Once-In-A-Century Storm Floods Area, Strands Motorists
Main, News
Latest Once-In-A-Century Storm Floods Area, Strands Motorists
By FRED T. ROSSI 
Thursday, July 17, 2025
SCOTCHPLAINS/FANWOOD— The flash flood warning alerts started lighting up smartphones and text messages at mid-day on Monday, something that has become...
this is a test
Appellate Court Upholds Dismissal of Aziz Complaint
Main, News
Appellate Court Upholds Dismissal of Aziz Complaint
By FRED T. ROSSI 
Thursday, July 10, 2025
WESTFIELD — An Appellate Court this week upheld the dismissal of a complaint filed against former Westfield Board of Education member and vice-preside...
this is a test
August Symphony Orchestra To Give Free Concert
Arts and Entertainment, News
August Symphony Orchestra To Give Free Concert
Thursday, July 17, 2025
WESTFIELD– The August Symphony Orchestra(TASO)willpresentits annualfreeconcertonSunday,July20at 2 p.m. at the First United Methodist Church in Westfie...
this is a test
This site complies with ADA requirements

© Copyright The The Westfield Leader

  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility Policy
This site complies with ADA requirements

© Copyright The The Westfield Leader