Affordable Swarthmore:

Housing, Zoning, and Community

 
 

Photo: Andy Shelter

About Affordable Swarthmore: What This Blog Is and Is Not

Last summer, startled by the alarming rise of housing prices in Swarthmore, a group of neighbors started meeting to talk about the problem. Of course, it isn’t just our problem. Housing affordability (or lack of affordability) is a nationwide crisis. But once you start to think about that, you can get dizzy and want to go back to bed.

One advantage of living in a small town is that it seems possible to solve local problems—or at least to have a fighting chance of solving them. So we decided not to hide our heads under our pillows but instead to go out into the community and see what we could do.

In October, we circulated a petition. It read in part:

As residents of Swarthmore, we are concerned about the future of development and the issue of affordability. We believe now is the time to take stock of our town’s values and ensure that our planning, zoning, and land-use ordinances align with those values….We ask Borough Council to take steps to maintain a diversity of housing and retail space in Swarthmore, and to seek ways to keep the borough affordable and welcoming to a wide range of people.

Within a couple of weeks, over 300 people had signed. We presented the petition to our borough council, and in December they authorized a task force with the mission of recommending strategies to “preserve and expand reasonably priced housing in Swarthmore.”

I don’t know how to do that, but I’ve been thinking about it a lot for the last eight months. I’ve read books and articles, had coffee with many neighbors, gone to webinars, and called up strangers on the phone. Lots of ideas are swirling in my head. I’m a writer by profession, and my instinct when it comes to swirling thoughts is to try to make sense of them by organizing them into sentences and paragraphs, then sharing them with others.

The affordability task force started meeting in March. I am its chair, but this blog is not its mouthpiece. Rather, it is a record of my explorations, wonderings, and ponderings.

This is a chronicle of one woman’s effort to learn more about housing affordability and to contemplate what we might change to make our community more affordable and welcoming.

Scroll down to start reading!

-April 1, 2022

ADUs, race Rachel ADUs, race Rachel

ADUs Are Awesome: Living Up to Community Values

Accessory dwelling units (a.k.a. ADUs, granny flats, garage apartments, accessory apartments, or in-law suites) are one way to make more housing more accessible to more people.

“We’re at the same place we were in the 1960s,” Dwight Merriam laments to the crowd on Zoom.

He’s talking about intergenerational wealth—how much money people pass on to their children. Specifically, he’s talking about how much more wealth White people are able to pass down than non-White ones can. “How do we get past that?” he asks.

A land-use lawyer, law professor, and past president of the American Institute of Certified Planners, Merriam has been active in Connecticut’s effort to make more housing more financially accessible to more people.

One approach he’s enthusiastic about is legalizing accessory dwelling units, also known as ADUs, granny flats, garage apartments, accessory apartments, or in-law suites. ADUs have been the subject of many recent articles, studies, and webinars—like this one from the organization DesegregateCT, which I attended to learn more about the small dwellings and how they can help address housing affordability and the racial wealth gap.

In the webinar, Merriam expounded on the multiple benefits of ADUs, which he says “enable us to take care of empty-nesters and single people and young people.”

Specifically, they:

●      Create value by raising what a property is worth.

●      Provide income to help the less affluent afford mortgage payments and taxes.

●      Offer a sense of safety for older people who may feel more comfortable having someone they know living close at hand.

●      Supply a path of entry to people who otherwise couldn’t afford to live in a town.

●      Mitigate the effects of climate change by using less electricity and water than larger dwellings—and, when built near public transportation, allowing more people to get out of their cars.

But it’s the equity issue that Merriam’s is most passionate about. He is among a small but growing cadre of proponents of permitting owners of ADUs to subdivide their land and sell the second unit. Purchasers can then “begin to achieve the intergenerational wealth that comes from ownership.”

California passed legislation permitting such sales last year.

Other participants in the webinar were equally passionate. Kyle Shiel, a senior planner for the town of Manchester, showed a photo of the familiar “In this house, we believe” yard sign. “In a lot of communities, you’ll see signs indicating these sentiments,” he noted. “But they won’t allow ADUs.”

Some people object to ADUs because they worry about parking congestion, overcrowding, changing the look of a neighborhood, or the potential for noisy tenants. Many studies have found these concerns to be misplaced, noting that ADUs tend to be highly dispersed and blend into neighborhoods, and that onsite landlords keep the risk of noise or neglect low.

Shiel is frustrated with people who say they are committed to racial equity yet don’t see how resisting ADUs (and other modest density increases) helps perpetuate racial segregation. For him, supporting more housing is a way for people to put their money where their mouth is.

“We need to live up to our values,” he says.

Last year, Connecticut approved a new law requiring towns to permit accessory apartments of up to 1,000 square feet or 30% the size of the main dwelling by right. That means that any homeowner can build one without getting special permission from their town. (Towns were allowed to opt out of the requirement if they did so by the end of 2021.)

In Swarthmore, only senior citizens or people with disabilities who want to house a caregiver can legally create an accessory apartment. But the borough is actually home to a bunch of ADUs. Most of them were built decades before the local zoning code was drafted in 1976 and have therefore been grandfathered in. Our community is dotted with elegant carriage houses and old-fashioned garages that might make great homes.

If you live in an ADU, or rent one out—or if you know someone who does—I’d love to hear about it. Please email me at rachel@rachelpastan.com.

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