Montgomery County, Maryland is located
immediately north and northeast of Washington, D. C. It is the most
populous County in Maryland with a population in 1990 of approximately
759,000. During the 1970's and 1980's, the County changed from a bedroom
community for the central city to the region's second largest employment
center. More than sixty percent of the County's residents work in the
County.
Beginning in the early 1970's, a
shortage of housing affordable to low and moderate income households
occurred in the County. In addition to a large increase in young
families looking for housing, this situation was exacerbated by a number
of other conditions. Controlled growth policies enacted by the County
government made it difficult for developers to subdivide raw land into
residential lots. The installation of public infrastructure such as
water and sewer lines, schools and roads did not keep pace with the
demand for housing. The County instituted a sewer moratorium in 1972
that significantly restricted the number of new water and sewer house
connections that were permitted.
Because the demand for residential
building lots greatly exceeded the supply, prices increased at a rate
much higher than general inflation. As the events curtailing the
availability of building lots occurred, builders saw a reduction in
their housing output. They began constructing the largest and most
profitable houses on virtually irreplaceable building lots. The
increasing costs of new houses also caused the price of existing housing
to increase. Even with deflationary house prices over the last 2 or 3
years, this situation has not improved; it is still difficult for new
and young families to find housing in the County that they can afford.
The median price of a new single-family detached home in the County in
1991 was $309,035, and the median price for a new single-family
townhouse was $146,000. The average turnover rent in April, 1992 for a
market-rate, two-bedroom apartment was $771.
In the early 1970's, housing advocacy
groups such as the Suburban Maryland Fair Housing and the League of
Women Voters began discussing the inadequacy of the County's supply of
affordable housing. These groups recommended the concept that builders
should supply a percentage of all units in new residential developments
at prices that would be affordable to low and moderate-income
households. The County Council introduced a local legislative bill that
proposed an innovative, County-wide inclusionary, zoning and density
allowance program known as the Moderately Priced Housing Program. The
legislation proposed that builders of most residential housing make a
portion of the housing units available at below-market rate sales prices
or rental rates.
The proposed legislation raised a number
of questions. One of the most important issues dealt with the
constitutional question of whether this requirement constituted a taking
of property without compensation. Another issue dealt with the
implications of the government requiring owners of expensive homes to
live side by side with moderate and low-income neighbors. Real estate
appraisers raised the question of what economic impact affordable units
would have on the value of the more expensive homes in the subdivision.
A corollary concern was whether higher income buyers would choose not to
purchase homes in Montgomery County in favor of other Washington suburbs
that did not have an affordable housing requirement. An alternative
proposal was submitted by home builders that would allow a developer to
fulfill the affordable housing requirement of a subdivision by
constructing the units at another location.
The County Council worked on the
legislation for over a year. As a solution to the question of an
"unconstitutional taking", the Council revised the bill to provide bonus
densities to builders who constructed the required moderate income
housing. A major debate occurred over the contention that giving bonus
densities would undermine the planning considerations which went into
designating zoning densities which were adopted in the County's general
plan and in local area master plans. Builders suggested that, if the
County were to give the density bonus, this would be sufficient
incentive to make it unnecessary for the program to be
mandatory.
The bill with a number of major
substantive amendments was unanimously approved by the County Council on
October 23, 1973. The legislation required that 15 percent of the total
number of dwellings in every subdivision containing 50 or more units be
affordable to moderate-income households. The total density of the
subdivision could be increased by 20 percent. An amendment gave the
County's public housing authority (The Housing Opportunities
Commission-HOC) the right to purchase one-third of the moderate priced
units produced in each subdivision. These units would be used for the
Commission's own programs for assistance to low-income
tenants.
The County Executive vetoed the
legislation because he believed it to be unconstitutional, invasive
public policy, and too difficult to administer. On November 6, 1973, the
Council overrode the executive veto and the Moderately Priced Housing
law became effective on January 21, 1974. Because land previously
subdivided did not contain the bonus densities, these subdivisions were
exempt from the requirement. The first moderately priced dwelling units
(MPDU's) built under the program were offered for sale to qualified
purchasers in 1976.
The MPDU program is believed to be the
country's first mandatory, inclusionary zoning law that specified a
density bonus allowance to builders for providing affordable housing.
The density bonus was designed to preclude developers from losing
opportunities to build market-rate units and to help offset some of the
production costs of the MPDUs. The law presently requires that between
12.5 and 15 percent of the total number of units in every subdivision or
highrise building of 50 or more units be moderately priced. The law is
applicable to property zoned ½ acre or smaller. Subdivisions in large
lot zoning categories, which are not normally served by public water and
sewer, are exempt from the requirement because higher densities are
difficult to achieve when installing well and septic systems.
The zoning ordinance allows a density
increase of up to 22 percent above the normal density permitted under
the zone. The ordinance also allows some attached housing in
single-family zoning classifications so that optimum development of the
property can be achieved and less costly housing can be constructed. The
density bonus, in effect, creates free lots upon which the MPDUs are
constructed. The builder normally obtains some additional market rate
units equal to the difference between the density bonus and the MPDU
requirement. Because of physical constraints of the land, the full
density bonus cannot always be obtained; the MPDU requirement,
therefore, falls within a range of from 12.5% to 15.0% based on the
actual bonus density achieved.
The County imposes certain resale and
occupancy restrictions on the MPDUs when the completed units are sold.
The price for which the unit can be resold is controlled for 10 years.
The MPDU must be owner occupied and when the unit is first sold at
market price after the control period expires there is a split between
the County and the owner of any "excess" or "windfall" profit obtained
through the sale.
Program
Goals
The goals of the MPDU program
are:
- to produce moderately priced housing
so that County residents and persons working in the County can afford
to purchase or rent decent housing;
- to help distribute low and
moderate-income households throughout the growth areas of the
County;
- to expand and retain an inventory of
low-income housing in the County by permitting the Housing
Opportunities Commission (HOC) and recognizes non-profit housing
sponsors to purchase up to 40% of the affordable units;
- to provide funds for future
affordable housing projects by sharing the windfall appreciation when
MPDUs are first sold at the market price after expiration of the
resale price controls.
Over the past several years there have
been consistently about 2,000 households and individuals holding MPDU
eligibility certificates. The MPDU program markets units to renters and
first-time home buyers with incomes ranging from under $16.000 up to
$39,900 for families of 5 or more people. The average MPDU purchaser had
an income of $27,539 in 1992. The median income of a 4 person family
living in the County is about $70,000. Households having an income at or
below approximately 65 percent of the area's median income, adjusted by
family size, qualify for the program. Priority in the sale of the MPDUs
is given to people who either live or work in the County.
The average annual MPDU production rate
is about 250 units with an additional 200 units resold under the 10-year
price controls. Because of the high demand for the MPDUs, the County
conducts lotteries to select potential purchasers of the units in each
offering. The units range in price from $50,000 for a 1 bedroom
condominium to approximately $105, 000 for a 3 bedroom detached house
with a basement and garage.
MPDU units purchased by HOC are rented
to households with low or very low incomes. Depending on the financing
sources used by HOC to purchase the units, tenant incomes range from
below $10,000 to $30,000 is approximately 50% of the area's median
income. The HOC has a waiting list of approximately 8,000 households and
currently owns over 850 MPDUs. Non-profit housing sponsors have
purchased about 25 MPDUs since 1989.
Program Administration and
Funding
Operation and administration of the
program takes place within a unit of the Housing Division of the
County's Department of Housing and Community Development. The section
includes a program manager, a program specialist, one planning assistant
and two administrative aides. Operations are overseen by the Chief of
the Housing Division. The current annual operating budget for the MPDU
office is approximately $350,000 which includes salaries and fringe
benefits for the staff, office space, printing and postage, computers
and telephones. Funding is through the County's general operating
budget.
The program is established under County
zoning legislation adopted by the County Council and approved by the
County Executive. Certain program requirements such as income limits,
maximum sales prices and rental rates are set through executive
regulations developed by the Department, and approved by the County
Executive and the County Council.
The program's implementation involves
both the public and private sectors; the local government in regulatory
and administrative functions and the building industry as the producer
of the housing. Builders must subdivide their land, obtain building
permits and construct the units. They notify the MPDU office when units
are to be offered for sale or rent. The Moderately Priced Housing Office
certifies the eligibility of individuals and families who want to
purchase or rent units under the program, enters into agreements with
builders for staging the construction of the units, establishes the MPDU
sales and rental prices and oversees the selection of potential buyers
and renters through a lottery selection process. The MPDU section also
enforces the occupancy and resale provisions of the law and oversees the
resale of existing units.
Funding for HOC's acquisition of MPDUs
comes from a variety of sources, including federal
acquisition-without-rehabilitation program funds, local tax exempt
bonds, private sector investment in federal low-income housing tax
credit partnerships, and from funding through the Maryland Housing
Finance agency.
Evolution of the
Program
There have been a number of changes in
the program since its inception. The original MPDU legislation required
that 15 percent of the total number of units in the subdivision be
MPDUs, with a density bonus of 20 percent above the normal zoning
category. Controls on the resale price and rental rate of the MPDUs
lasted for 5 years and the units were for sale or rent as determined by
the builder.
In 1981, after five years of experience
with the program, the building industry requested that the MPDU
requirement be reduced to 10 percent of the units in the subdivision
because they believed the 15% requirement was excessive. The County
Council compromised by reducing the requirement to 12.5 percent, but
enacted two other amendments that strengthened the program. The price
control period was extended from 5 years to 10 years, and all MPDUs had
to be for sale unless they were located in an all rental
subdivision.
A committee composed of builders, staff
from the County's planning agency, Housing Department staff and members
of the County Council studied the program again in 1988 and recommended
substantive changes that were adopted into law in 1989. The major
changes: (1) increased the bonus density to 22 percent; (2) based the
MPDU requirement on a sliding scale ranging from 12.5 percent to 15
percent depending on the bonus density achieved; (3) increased the
rental control period to 20 years; (4) required that a portion of the
appreciated resale price of an MPDU sold after the expiration of the
price control period be paid into the Housing Initiative Fund; and (5)
permitted an increase in the MPDU sale prices to enable builders to pay
for improvements in the design of the MPDUs to make them more compatible
with the market rate houses. Another major amendment provided for
alternative methods of meeting the MPDU requirement when the units are
not affordable because of high condominium or homeowner's association
fees and where the services provided cannot be eliminated or modified
for the MPDU residents. An example would be a luxury high-rise,
condominium building. The alternative program permits the developer to
make a payment to the Housing Initiative Fund or provide units at
another location; the alternative must result in more units or units
that are more affordable. Use of this provision is limited and has only
been allowed three times since 1989.
The County Council is currently
considering amendments to provide greater enforcement powers to the MPDU
Office as a means of dealing with the occasional abuses of the law. MPDU
owners have occasionally vacated their units and rented them without
permission or the MPDUs have been sold during the resale control period
for prices greater than allowed. A change in the applicability section
of the law may be considered to expand its scope to include one-acre
zoning classifications when the property is served by public water and
sewer.
Program Acceptance and
Criticism
The MPDU program has received
broad general support in Montgomery County. New homebuyers are among the
most vocal supporters because the program makes affordable housing
available to persons who otherwise would not be able to purchase a house
in the County. Employers and businesses are helped because the program
makes housing available to entry level and mid-management employees.
Affordable housing organizations and citizens groups advocate for the
program because it provides for a wide geographic distribution of low
and moderate income housing which encourages economic and racial
integration in the County. Elected officials back the program because of
its low impact on any given community or neighborhood and because the
program does not require a large financial investment by the County.
Although, in the past, builders expressed objection to some of the
procedures and regulations, they are generally supportive of the program
and have made numerous suggestions for its improvement.
The most likely critics of the program
are those who advocate no growth or slow growth because the program
offers increased densities in existing zones. The MPDU Program has been
criticized for causing additional congestion on County roads, and
requiring more funding of County facilities, infrastructure, and
services. Because the units are not assessed at the market price,
fairness in taxing groups have criticized the program because MPDU
owners do not pay a fair amount in property taxes relative to the amount
of public services they receive.
It would be expected that criticism of
the program would come from the communities in which the low and
moderate cost housing is being built. This criticism has rarely occurred
because the program is equally administered in all parts of the county
and, if properly designed, only a small portion of a subdivision is
built as low or moderate cost housing. The criticism that does occur
from neighborhood groups most often deals with an insistence that
alternative proposals of meeting the MPDU requirement be discouraged,
and that all neighborhoods be subject to the same MPDU production
requirement. MPDUs have not been shown to have a detrimental effect on
the value of the market priced housing and the program has never been
legally challenged by either developers or citizens.
Program Achievements and
Limitations
The most important achievement of the
MPDU program is the production of over 9,000 affordable housing units.
Housing constructed as MPDUs now constitutes about three percent of the
County's total housing stock. The program has also provided a means for
the Housing Opportunities Commission and other nonprofit housing groups
to purchase approximately 850 units for long term retention as part of
the County's low-income housing supply. The program contributes to the
economic and racial integration of the County because MPDUs are marketed
to an economically and racially diverse group; 51 percent of MPDU
purchasers during the 1988-1992 period were minority
households.
The program's most significant
limitation is its reliance on a favorable housing market; the production
of MPDUs is based on the accompanying production of market rate housing.
At the recent rate of production, following the economic slow down of
the early 1990's, less that 350 units are being produced annually;
supplying less than 20% of those on the waiting list. Although builders
have occasionally constructed a subdivision's MPDUs ahead of schedule
because they can be easily sold, there is little the County can do to
stimulate MPDU construction during slow housing sales periods. Most of
the land in the County which is zoned 1/2 acre and smaller (R-200) has
been built on; therefore, fewer subdivisions of 50 or more units are
being submitted for development approval.
Another limitation is the loss of an
owner occupied, affordable house at the end of the 10 year price control
period. While some consideration has been given to extending the
controls, an initial premise of the program was that MPDU purchasers be
able to have the same advantages of homeownership as other homeowners. A
compromise was achieved when the law was amended to require that half
the "excess" or "windfall" profit made when the MPDU is sold at the fair
market price after the control period expires be paid into the Housing
Initiative Fund (HIF). The fund is used to produce future affordable
housing projects.
Because of a number of factors,
including a change in the income tax laws dealing with rental housing
investments, little rental housing except for those projects with
low-income tax credits or tax-exempt bond financing have been
constructed. The bonus density does not provide enough incentive to
construct apartment projects. To solve this problem, the County has
offered construction and permanent financing through the HIF to
non-profit housing sponsors to purchase and renovate existing apartment
houses and to build new rental projects.
Replicability of the
Program
The Moderately Priced Housing program
can be replicated in any jurisdiction that has local legislative and
zoning powers and significant residential construction activity. Because
localities bear little of the financial cost of this program, it is an
attractive alternative or supplement to traditional housing subsidy
programs. Both developing suburban areas and more urbanized areas
undergoing residential expansion or redevelopment can often be improved
by the inclusion of an affordable housing component in market rate
developments in exchange for increased density allowances.
Three of Montgomery County's
neighboring/jurisdictions, Fairfax and Loudon Counties in Virginia and
Prince George's County, Maryland, have recently enacted inclusionary
zoning programs modeled, to a large extent, after the MPDU program.
Fairfax County is implementing its Affordable Dwelling Unit program
after first trying a voluntary program and then convincing the County's
Board of Supervisors and State General Assembly of the need for a
mandatory program. The Fairfax County staff received a great deal of
support from the building industry in getting its legislation approved.
These programs have some differences from Montgomery County's program
for instance Fairfax requires 50 year price controls and Prince Georges
County has no split of the windfall profit if an owner stays in the unit
for 15 years.
If you would like additional
information on the program please contact:
Eric Larsen, Program
Manager
Moderately Priced Housing Office
Montgomery County
DHCD
51 Monroe Street, Suite 908
Rockville, MD 20850
Telephone: (301 )
217-3705;
Fax: (301 )
217-3709