Opinion: New Hampshire’s housing challenges demand urgent action, creative solutions

“When businesses can’t hire because housing is non-existent or beyond what even professional families can afford, waiting isn’t an option,” writes Stavis. Pixabay
Published: 10-15-2024 11:39 AM |
Rep. Laurel Stavis is the prime sponsor of LSR’s 0095 and 0097, coined the Partners in Housing and Housing Action Act. She serves as Ranking Member on the House Municipal and County Government Committee.
The New Hampshire housing market is in what economists call a state of disequilibrium – a self-perpetuating syndrome where the normal rules of supply and demand don’t work anymore. Some believe the situation will eventually correct itself. But when businesses can’t hire because housing is non-existent or beyond what even professional families can afford, waiting isn’t an option. We need intervention now.
On the Municipal and County Government committee in the New Hampshire State House, we intimately know that the housing crisis is hurting hardworking Granite Staters. That’s why I filed two bills filed for the 2025-2026 term which will help the system regain balance.
These two bills coined as the “Partners in Housing” and “Housing Action Act” offer incentives to developers who build starter homes, duplexes or small apartment buildings on municipally owned land. These bills lower the developer’s costs in three crucial ways: by reducing the cost of purchasing land, providing low-interest construction loans, and expediting Planning Board review.
At a time when the cost of land, lengthy permitting processes, and high interest rates make it impossible for modestly priced homes to “pencil out,” these bills offer developers and municipalities new ways to work together to address a key driver of New Hampshire’s housing shortage.
As the bill is now written, these programs will be administered through the Division of Business and Economic Affairs (BEA) and the New Hampshire Housing Finance Authority (NHHFA). The programs are entirely voluntary and only “communities of the willing,” as BEA Commissioner Taylor Caswell terms them, will choose to participate. Cities like mine in Lebanon, which is already forging ahead with a similar model, will bring starter homes online for municipal workers in the next few years.
New Hampshire’s housing imbalance is caused by a multiplicity of factors and no single solution will fix the problem. Restrictive zoning plays a part, but housing is out of reach everywhere in New Hampshire because the cost of building is just too high. Only large expensive homes or multi-unit, market-rate apartment developments allow developers the opportunity, a return on their investments.
Our Lebanon mayor Tim McNamara tells me, “We are losing our social vitality,” and that “Solving this problem requires innovative thinking and close partnerships between municipalities, developers, and state government.”
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The “Partners in Housing” and “Housing Action Act” are designed to foster partnerships between developers and local and state governments. In the process, they will bring more starter homes online, help businesses recruit employees, allow municipalities to increase revenues by returning under-utilized land to the tax rolls, and put more local developers across the state to work building the kinds of homes New Hampshire residents need and can afford.
New Hampshire’s housing challenges demand urgent action and creative solutions. The “Partners in Housing” and “Housing Action Act” provide a promising approach, offering incentives that lower costs for developers while fostering collaboration between municipalities and state government. These initiatives are crucial steps toward addressing the housing shortage, creating affordable options for residents, and ensuring that the state can continue to attract and retain the workforce it needs to thrive.