Workshops were held in every Island town; Oak Bluffs had its session Wednesday.
Mark Lovewell

Islandwide Affordable Housing Series Begins

<p>Residents from Edgartown to Aquinnah this week weighed in on an effort to increase the Island&rsquo;s stock of affordable housing as a series of workshops began.

Residents from Edgartown to Aquinnah this week weighed in on a major effort to increase the Island’s stock of affordable housing. A series of public workshops in schools, community centers and other public places presented data related to housing needs and demographics in each town and gathered public feedback.

JM Goldson, a community planning firm in Boston which is overseeing the process, expects to develop official housing production plans (HPPs) for each town, along with an Islandwide plan, by February.

Edgartown forum at Harbor View Tuesday; goal of plan is to increase stock of affordable housing.
Mark Lovewell
Edgartown forum at Harbor View Tuesday; goal of plan is to increase stock of affordable housing.
Mark Lovewell

The plans would provide a roadmap for how to achieve the goals of Chapter 40B of the Massachusetts General Laws, which indicates that at least 10 per cent of the housing stock in each town should be affordable. Meeting that goal is one stated objective of the initiative.

Affordable housing is generally defined as costing less than 30 per cent of a household income, although housing projects often target specific income groups, such as people earning less than 80 per cent of the area median income. The median income for a family in Dukes County is about $86,000, according to the U.S. Census, although the income limits for affordable housing vary by household size.

Judi Barrett, director of municipal services for RKG Associates, an economic planning firm working with JM Goldson, said about one third of the communities in the state already have housing production plans, although some have expired or have yet to be approved. Many have served a strategic purpose, she said, as towns prepare for large projects they hope will count toward the housing production goal.

The efforts on the Vineyard originated early this year when the all-Island planning board adopted a charter to vastly increase the Island’s affordable housing stock by way of the housing production plans. The Martha’s Vineyard Commission, nonprofit Island

Housing Trust and Martha’s Vineyard Donor’s Collaborative are also partners in the initiative.

Data presented at the workshops drew from many sources, including the U.S. Census and American Community Survey, along with the Donahue Institute at the University of Massachusetts, and the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development. But the planners have acknowledged the challenge of deriving accurate data from such small communities.

Chilmark group listens to data presentation.
Mark Lovewell
Chilmark group listens to data presentation.
Mark Lovewell

“We can only learn so much from the data, sitting at our desks by ourselves,” Jennifer Goldson, owner of JM Goldson, said at the opening workshop in West Tisbury on Monday. “One of the main reasons we are here tonight is to hear from you.”

Ms. Barrett, who joined Ms. Goldson and provided more detailed assessments of housing conditions in each town, agreed that the data for small communities are sometimes less than ideal, but didn’t see it as a big obstacle. “My experience working with these data sets is that when you view them in their entirety and you look at trends over time, there is a story to be told that is pretty consistent,” she said.

Planners are still working to obtain data related to local building permits. To fill in some of the gaps, they have purchased a large amount of data from the Warren Group, which handles real estate and financial information for Dukes County.

Information presented at the workshops painted a relatively detailed picture of living conditions in each town and how they may change over the next 20 years. Based on the available data, for example, the Island year-round population is expected to grow 12 per cent by 2035, although most of the growth would be down-Island (Aquinnah and Chilmark show an opposite trend).

People 65 and over are projected to account for 29 per cent of the Island’s year round population by 2035, compared to 21 per cent in 2014. Aquinnah and Chilmark would see the largest increase.

The number of households in almost every town is shrinking, according to the data, while household size is growing. That may relate to an observed increase in school enrollment, although the prepared data did not address that issue directly. The average household size on the Island grew from 2.3 to 2.86 between 2000 and 2014, while the number of households shrank from 6,421 to 5,839, according to the U.S. Census. Only in Oak Bluffs have both measures increased.

Consultant Jennifer Goldson.
Mark Lovewell
Consultant Jennifer Goldson.
Mark Lovewell

Chilmark has the highest overall income levels compared to the county, and Tisbury has the lowest. On average, household incomes for people under 25 in Tisbury are about $46,053, compared to the state average of $73,310. The same age group in Chilmark earns about $102,700. Islandwide, the figure is $50,114.

All towns show a declining proportion of people ages of 20 to 64, according to various data sources, with 2035 projections ranging from 44 per cent in Aquinnah to 55 per cent in Tisbury. Edgartown’s overall population growth would be almost flat, at two per cent, with the 20-64 age group projected to shrink from 66 to 53 per cent in 20 years.

Workshop participants were given small devices that enabled instant survey responses, with the results projected onto a screen. In five towns (Tisbury’s workshop took place after press time), most respondents said they have lived on the Vineyard for more than 20 years, although Oak Bluffs included more new arrivals. In each town, most participants said they own a year-round home, although Aquinnah, Chilmark and Edgartown included more longer-term homeowners, who moved in before 2000.

When asked their reason for attending the workshop, a vast majority chose “advocate for affordable housing,” although many chose “gather information.”

Data also touched on the issue of housing cost, with most towns showing a heavy burden among renters, especially those with a moderate, low or extremely low incomes. Nearly 60 per cent of the available rental units in West Tisbury, for example, exceeded $1,500 per month, including utilities. Islandwide, an estimated 52 per cent of low- and moderate-income households are severely cost burdened, according to the data.

Oak Bluffs planning board chairman Brian Packish.
Mark Lovewell
Oak Bluffs planning board chairman Brian Packish.
Mark Lovewell

Planners highlighted the influence of seasonal homeownership, which they say squeezes lower-income renters out of the housing market. In West Tisbury, for example, Ms. Barrett described a housing market “consumed by the interest and demand and willingness to spend of predominantly seasonal buyers. You don’t see those kind of costs on the mainland, and you don’t see those kind of costs in non-seasonal areas. You see them on Nantucket and you see them in South Berkshire county.”

The U.S. Census indicates that about 65 per cent of all houses on the Island are vacant in the winter, a trend that Ms. Barrett said affects the whole Island. “Everybody is trying to find a place to live,” she said in Oak Bluffs. “And when there is not enough supply and not enough choice within the inventory . . . that’s when the pricing really goes haywire.”

Another common feature of resort communities, she said, is the abundance of multiple homes on a single lot. The ratio is especially high in West Tisbury, with about 4.6 single family homes for every one property, and in Chilmark. “That type of property tends to have very high value,” Ms. Barrett said, noting that it also drives prices up.

Workshop participants spent about an hour in small groups envisioning ideal housing situations in their town and identifying obstacles to achieving those goals. Planners will include the results of the exercise in a later report, along with an update to the Island’s 2013 housing needs assessment and the final housing production plans.

Ms. Barrett said the exercises this week were at least partly aimed at further refining the data. “It’s a tall order to try to get to 10 per cent in towns this small,” she added. “So you kind of have to give people permission to talk about what they think they can do.”

Additional workshops are planned for the fall.

For more information on the housing production plans, visit mvcommission.org/housing-production-plan.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/23/2016 - 06:25

Permalink

Bill Croke Edgartown

Kudos to those who are organizing this effort. Much needed. Pity we can't use this as a model for folks
struggling to address our
Island-wide alcohol & drug problem. Far greater numbers. Far greater economic impact. Getting beyind turf. Nice to see it is in fact possible.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/23/2016 - 08:09

Permalink

Interesting Oak Bluffs/New Jersey

I work on an Island, Manhattan. There is over 600,000 commuters that travel to the island daily. I travel up to 4 hours a day to and from NJ. Maybe adding a real commuter ferry from New Bedford to the Vineyard would help you meet the demand for affordable housing. Manhattan is nice but I could never afford to live there. Just a thought.

Exactly

When did it become a "right" to live somewhere? I'd like a house in Malibu, but it ain't gonna happen. Hmmm.. Maybe they'll build me an affordable one...

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/23/2016 - 09:15

Permalink

edgartown worker edgartown

So most of the workshop participants advocating for affordable housing own their own home. Hmm, maybe next session include this question: "How many of you are business owners who want the govt. to subsidize housing in order to depress wages?"

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/23/2016 - 14:09

Permalink

Concerned citizen Edgartown

I am shocked that in light of the magnitude of this obvious problem that the Edgartown Selectmen, Margaret Serpa, Michael Donoroma, and Art Smadbeck have voted to essentially give away three half acre lots on 6th Street in Ocean Heights for $75,000 apiece (worth around $300,000 in my estimation) with only a 10 year affordability restriction. After that, the lots are no longer in the "affordable" pool and the owners get to sell them at market. That is a deferred gift of $225,000 on each lot that ripens in year 11! I wonder to whom they might have in mind as recipients for these gift of the taxpayers money???!!! That 1.5 acre parcel could easily house a dozen or more families in buildings similar to that the Affordable Housing Trust has just erected on Water Street in Tisbury. The Edgartown Housing Committee has tried to work with the Selectmen on such a plan for years, but the bull headed paternalistic Selectmen have decided they can give away $675,000, benefit three people, and leave the dozens of needy families doing the Vineyard shuffle at best, or worse, leaving the island forever! Then, as a matter of social justice, we need to now raise the priority of human shelter over the almost unflappable institutionally transfixed effort to acquire all of the Vineyard open lands for preservation only. Our community has had the Land Bank conserve over 3100 acres of land on the Vineyard. Maybe now, that effort is reaching has reached its goal, and the remaining lands should be left for housing for humans, to provide a fair shot at using that 2% fee to acquire land to house us Vineyarders who have generational roots but can no longer afford the homes in which we were raised...in no small part due to the Land Bank eliminating housing opportunities by its ever growing funding for new acquisitions. I cry out for that social justice! The time is NOW!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 09/24/2016 - 00:48

Permalink

Bob Wheeler Bellevue, WA

Over ten years ago, the Island Affordable Housing Fund made a tremendous effort to secure dependable affordable housing funding through the institution of a transfer tax on real estate (much like the transfer tax that funds the Land Bank). This effort came close to approval by the legislature but was defeated by the concerted efforts of the Massachusetts real estate broker's community. Maybe now that affordable housing has become such a critical need on the island (not that it wasn't then), it might be time to try this approach again....

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 09/26/2016 - 11:51

Permalink

Aretha Brown Chilmark

I feel like I'm not understanding the following:

"Chilmark has the highest overall income levels compared to the county, and Tisbury has the lowest. On average, household incomes for people under 25 in Tisbury are about $46,053, compared to the state average of $73,310. The same age group in Chilmark earns about $102,700. Islandwide, the figure is $50,114."

Is this saying people under 25 are making $102,700 average in Chilmark?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 09/26/2016 - 15:24

Permalink

gina Menemsha/nyc

No , another tax will not be the solution, Mr. Wheeler.. There's a flip tax in NYC & it hasn't really improved the "affordable housing " problem.. It has created another new Bureaucratic City Dept. to collect & manage the tax process/proceeds.. bottom line is that towns & neighborhoods need to zone accordingly & make it attractive for Developers.. As mentioned by Ms. Barrett, the 10% goal per town might not be doable on MVY… due to land available not $$$. FYI I am not a Real Estate Broker..

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 09/27/2016 - 15:59

Permalink

Leigh-King and Harry Pusce Tisbury

Wonderful article.Great job on the part of all involved.Being as old as we, my husband and I truly hope for a future of more affordable living on this beautiful Island.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 09/27/2016 - 19:29

Permalink

Art Markey Tisbury

Bottom Lines: 1)Demand will always outstrip supply. Add 100 units of affordable housing and before you can say "boo" 100 more people will show up to refill the wait list, clamoring for their "fair share" 2)you can't have high population density and preserve the traditional character of the island, 3) Many landlords are withholding rentals from the market or only renting them seasonally because too many cretinous tenants have trashed their properties, and 4) We've been hearing about the looming crisis of "no teachers, nurses or firefighters" due to housing prices for years yet life still seems to go on. That's reality, folks!!!!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 09/27/2016 - 20:10

Permalink

Thomson Edgartown

I have been following an MV Facebook page that helps people find housing on island.
The prevailing attitude seems to be that it is a right for ALL people to be able to live on the vineyard at "affordable" price. And how dare the property owners make a profit from renting out their properties!
It is a privilege to live here. If you can't afford it , don't expect people to dip into their own pockets to make that happen!

Art Markey Tisbury

Sure would be lovely to live on Maui or in Malibu, but the prices there are beyond reach. Still, wouldn't dream of showing up and demanding affordable housing as an inalienable right. Guess I come from a different generation....

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 09/28/2016 - 12:25

Permalink

Rex Treadwell Edgartown

Ah, yes, this annual exercise in Lip Flapping, Hot Air Blowing, and Paper Generation. Peruse the archives of this paper 20 years ago and you'll find similar articles touting Studies, Workshops and Hearings.

Add new comment

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.