Inclusionary zoning has been successfully used for 40 years to create economically diverse and inclusive communities. By providing developers incentives to set aside affordable housing units, inclusionary zoning combats segregation and allows families to live near areas of opportunity. However, Oregon's ban on mandatory inclusionary zoning has limited its effectiveness, as voluntary programs often fail to produce meaningful affordable housing gains. Lifting the ban could help address concentrated poverty and provide more housing options to support complete and sustainable communities.
Finance strategies for adaptation. Presentation for CANCC
Inclusionary Zoning Presenation
1. Why IZ works
40 Years of Success
Oregon Legislative Workgroup
April 17, 2014
2. Introduction
Inclusionary zoning is a land use tool used by
local jurisdictions to ensure economic diversity
First tested in Montgomery County, MD in 1974
IZ helps create mixed-income developments
IZ provides developers with economic offsets in
exchange for affordable housing set-asides
IZ combats economic and racial segregation
IZ creates opportunities for working families to live
in areas of growing prosperity
3. Place matters. A strong predictor of a person's
future health is the ZIP code in which they're
born and/or raised.
Neighborhood supermarkets and park access are
top predictors of childhood health
In Portland Metro, East Portland and East County
residents, especially children, are projected to have
greater health risks and lower life expectancy
Saelens, Brian E. PhD, et al. Obesogenic Neighborhood Environments, Child and Parent Obesity The
Neighborhood Impact on Kids Study. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 2012 DOI:
10.1016/j.amepre.2012.02.008
Clapp Elizabeth and Moriah McSharry McGrath, BUILT ENVIRONMENT ATLAS: Active Living, Healthy
Eating. Multnomah County Health Department, Health Assessment & Evaluation, Office of Health &
Social Justice, June 2011: https://web.multco.us/news/how-healthy-your-neighborhood
4. Variety of IZ approaches
IZ can be customized to adapt to each
community’s unique housing market
Some programs are mandatory; others voluntary
Some programs require on-site set-asides; others
allow for construction of AH units in other locations
Each jurisdiction gets to determine specific unit-size
thresholds, set-aside requirements, affordability levels,
control periods and combination of economic offsets
and incentives to include
5. Inclusionary Zoning
Ordinances Across the US
Montgomery County, Maryland was the
first to adopt IZ in 1974
IZ produced over 11,000 AH units over first
30 years in suburban area of prosperity
IZ is commonly used in areas experiencing
growth such as California, Massachusetts ,
New Jersey , Colorado , and DC
Half of jurisdictions amended IZ ordinance
at least once since inception
Over 100 cities in CA use a form of IZ,
producing over 34,000 AH units in 20 years
6. History of IZ in Oregon
1998: Metro studied IZ as part of Housing-
Technical Advisory Committee (HTAC)
Mandatory IZ was identified as tool to employ if
voluntary incentives did not work
1999: Oregon Homebuilders Assn. lobbied to
amend ORS 197 to ban mandatory IZ
Oregon joined Texas as only states in country to
prohibit jurisdictions from using mandatory IZ
Metro Regional Affordable Housing Strategy
(RAHS) has failed to produce any real gains
AH has become concentrated in poorer areas
7. Various Incentives
Type of Cost-offsets What It Does and Why It Helps Developers
Density bonus Developers build at greater density than residential zones typically permit,
allowing for additional market-rate units
Unit size reduction Developers build smaller or differently configured AH units, reducing costs
Relaxed Parking Requirements Developers can offer reduced parking, tandem parking or no parking to
reduce costs
Design Flexibility Developers get flexibility in design guidelines to help lower costs
Fee waivers, reductions or deferrals Jurisdictions waive, reduce or defer permit and/or impact fees triggered by
development
Fast track permitting Jurisdictions streamline the permitting process for projects including AH units,
reducing carrying costs
Source: PolicyLink.org
8. Residential Segregation and
Economic Mobility
Residential income segregation has
steadily increased since the 1970s
Exacerbated by housing bubble
Families of color face additional housing
burdens; racial segregation increasing
Concentrated poverty is strongly
correlated with lower educational
attainment levels and lowers overall
economic mobility
9. Public Benefits of IZ
IZ is part of the solution to concentrated poverty
Areas with concentrated poverty typically have
higher crime rates and school dropout rates
IZ expands the supply of AH while dispersing the
units across jurisdictions by linking to private
development
Allows private developers to be a part of the
solution
New market-rate development generates needs for
low-wage jobs and working families
IZ works best at developing “workforce housing” for
public school teachers, janitors, civil servants and
childcare workers who earn too little to afford
market-rate housing, but are needed to support
“complete” communities
10. IZ and Education
Inclusive housing gives lower income children
access to low-poverty, high-performing schools
“Over the course of elementary school, highly
disadvantaged children with access to the
district’s lowest-poverty neighborhoods and
schools began to catch up to their non-poor, high-
performing peers, while similar disadvantaged
children without such access did not”
Schwartz, H. (2010). Housing policy is school policy: Economically integrative housing
promotes academic success in Montgomery County, Maryland. Century Foundation.
11. Healthy Neighborhoods and
Sustainable Development
Concentrated poverty results in unnecessary
economic, environmental and social costs
Income segregation results in negative health
impacts that increase health care costs
Income segregation results in additional vehicle
miles traveled, air toxics and greenhouse gas
emissions
Exclusive housing limits density, contributing to
energy inefficiency
12. Voluntary vs. Mandatory IZ
Out of 107 local IZ policies throughout California, 101 were mandatory and
produced far more affordable units than the 6 voluntary programs
Three of the six voluntary policies produced no units at all, and two locales, Los
Alamitos and Long Beach, “blame the voluntary nature of their programs for
stagnant production despite a market rate boom.”
Many jurisdictions are replacing ineffective voluntary programs with
mandatory ordinances, resulting in increased AH production
Cambridge MA, Irvine CA, Pleasanton CA and Boulder CO, among others, all
replaced voluntary programs with mandatory ones
Orange County, CA did the opposite, replacing an effective mandatory
program with a voluntary policy in 1983
The county produced 6,389 units in 4 years under the mandatory policy, and
produced only 952 units in the 11 years after the switch to a voluntary program.
Non-Profit Housing Association of Northern California. (2003). Inclusionary Housing in
California: 30 Years of Innovation. p. 8
Brunick, N. (2004). The Inclusionary Housing Debate: The effectiveness of mandatory
programs over voluntary programs. Zoning Practice, 9(1), 1-7.
13. Case Study: North Bethany,
Washington County
Washington County was the fastest growing county in
Oregon from 2000-2010, and currently has the highest
median family income in the state.
The North Bethany area was slated for residential
development in 2002 with the expectation that it would
include affordable housing.
Metro and Washington Co. leaders set a target of 20% of owner-
occupied properties for families making less than 80% of the
Area Median Income, and 20% of rentals for families making less
than 60% AMI
In 2010 the Washington County Board of Commissioners
adopted a voluntary IZ policy to reach those targets.
The County offered a mix of incentives to developers, such as
density bonuses, tax abatements and fast-track permitting
14. North Bethany, Cont.’d
County officials negotiated with West Hills
Development Co. to include affordable units in the
new Arbor Oaks development in North Bethany in
exchange for incentives
The private developers rebuffed those offers, insisting
that they keep the incentives without having to meet
AH targets
The developer characterized the County’s voluntary
IZ program as “coercive and disadvantageous.”
West Hills is the largest property owner and landbanker in
the North Bethany development area, and has
continuously refused to participate in the County’s
voluntary IZ program
15. Our Questions:
Could mandatory IZ be effective in
helping local jurisdictions in Oregon
address their economic, environmental
and social needs?
How can local jurisdictions better engage
private developers to be part of the
solution?