June 25, 2008

Groveland ZBA to review proposal for 132 single-family homes Meadowbrook project Thursday night

According to the Eagle Tribune, the Groveland Zoning Board of Appeals will review discussions on the topic of the Meadowbrook affordable housing project its meeting on Thursday, June 26th. The ZBA will meet with members of the development team for the 132 single-family homes proposed by Meadowbrook Construction Corp. on land off Center Street.

Read the entire Eagle Tribune article.

Thursday June 26th Georgetown Conservation Committee Meeting

The Georgetown Record reported that the Georgetown Conservation Committee June meeting will be held on Thursday, June 26th, from 6:30-8:30 p.m., at Town Hall, 1 Library St., 3rd-floor meeting room. On the agenda will be the results of the Parker River Clean Water Association’s recent River Restoration Grant from the MA Riverways Program. This study observed the impact of Georgetown’s water supply withdrawals on annual base flows and seasonal flows in the upper Parker River.

Read the entire Georgetown Record article.

Transfer Tax Call to Action

Realtors®, this week Massachusetts Association of Realtors® President, Susan Renfrew put out a Call to Action to oppose proposed transfer taxes in Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket, which will likely be heard and voted upon by the State Senate this week (Senate Bills S. 2546 & S.2544).

Realtors® strongly oppose real estate transfer taxes as bad tax policy for the following reasons:

  1. Community-wide Responsibility. A community wide responsibility should be paid for by the entire community. Property taxes are inequitable and discriminatory as it would single out a small segment of the population, specifically home buyers and sellers, to pay for a community-wide need.
  2. Exclusionary & Unstable Revenue Source. Transfer taxes are exclusionary because it would increase the cost of home ownership and in effect create an additional barrier to entry for an already expensive part of the state. Further, the real estate market is highly sensitive to economic downtowns as sales may vary greatly from year to year.; therefore this tax would provide an unstable source of revenue for a current and ongoing community need. However well intentioned, the fact that a transfer tax may contain a "sunset" provision does not change the problematic nature of this tax scheme.
  3. Subert Prop. 2½. The tax would subvert the voter approval process inherent in a Proposition 2½ override, in which voters can decide for themselves whether to increase their own property taxes. In fact, both islands have among the lowest property tax rates in the entire Commonwealth.
  4. CPA, 40B, 40R, 40S. The Legislature has already given all cities and towns many equitable tools to create affordable and workforce housing through passage of the Community Preservation Act, Chapter 40R, Chapter 40S and Chapter 40B. These tools are available for all communities to use. According to information provided by the Dukes County Regional Housing Authority last year, 3 of the 6 communities on Martha's Vineyard did not have a single unit of 40B housing.
  5. Foreclosures & Short Sales. Today's housing market conditions, with increasing foreclosures and "short sales," make transfer taxes even more detrimental to home owners. Because transfer taxes reduce one's equity, homeowners attempting to avoid foreclosure or selling their home for less than the outstanding mortgage – selling short – may face new burdens just to sell their home. For those with little or no equity in their home, these transfer taxes could force sellers to sell short or else, in some cases, face foreclosure.
  6. Equity Stripping. It is important to remember that, unlike a home purchase which can be financed, payment of a sales tax CANNOT be financed. Such a tax would cost thousands of dollars at closing taken from the seller's proceeds assuming that the seller has equity in their home at the time of sale. In some ways, a transfer tax can be looked at as a type of municipal "equity stripping" of the value of one's home.
  7. Voter Representation. Finally, the fact that Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket already have a significant transfer tax (2% of the sale price) in place for the acquisition of open space makes the argument for rejecting S.2546 and S.2544 even more compelling. Furthermore, most of the people who would pay this tax will not be able to vote on it. Many, if not most, of the purchasers who will pay this transfer tax are not residents of the communities of Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket.

For the preceding reasons, the NSAR Government Affairs Committee urges all Realtors® and like-minded citizens to contact your State Senator and urge them to vote “NO” on S.
2546 and S. 2544.

For comments/questions, please do not hesitate to contact us at governmentaffairs@northshorerealtors.com.

June 24, 2008

NAR Joins Senators to Introduce Small Business Health Options Program

The National Association of Realtors® reports that on June 10, 2008, NAR Treasurer Jim Helsel represented Realtors® at a bipartisan press conference introducing H.R. 6210, the Small Business Health Options Program Act (SHOP). H.R. 6210 is a House companion measure to the earlier introduced Senate small business health measure, S. 2795.

As proposed, the SHOP concept would offer tax incentives to encourage states to reform small group insurance markets and to make health insurance premiums more affordable for small businesses and the self-employed. It would also develop a nationwide insurance small-business purchasing pool that would still be subject to state insurance regulation to protect those who choose to participate.

In announcing its support for the Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP), NAR reiterated the importance of reforming the U.S. health care market for small businesses and independent contractors. In a recently conducted 2008 NAR Health Insurance Coverage survey, 82% of Realtors® believed the current health care system is not meeting the needs of most Americans, and 9 out of 10 Realtors® thought that the U.S. health care system should be reformed. Nearly a ¼ of NAR's 1.2 million members do not have health care insurance, and for most Realtors® without insurance, the reason is cost. NAR continues to meet with both Senate and House offices seeking additional cosponsors.

Click here for a Small Business Health Options Probram (SHOP) overview.

June 23, 2008

Chapter 40B Battles in Amesbury

The Boston Globe reported that Amesbury has appealed 2 recent decisions from the state Housing Appeals Committee, in an ongoing battle Amesbury has fought to prevent projects proposed under Chapter 40B, the Commonwealth’s affordable housing law.

The first project is a proposal to construct 269 townhouse condominiums on a 155-acre site off Kimball Road (Meadowbrook Estates).

The second proposal is a 56-unit rental development on a 10-acre site off Clark’s Road (Eagle Point).

According to the Globe, the recent rulings followed a decision by the Housing Appeals Committee against the city last October on another Chapter 40B project, a proposal to build 40 condominium units on Haverhill Road.

Read the entire Boston Globe article.