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Summary of Question 2
This proposed law would repeal an existing state law that allows a qualified organization wishing to build government-subsidized housing that includes low- or moderate-income units to apply for a single comprehensive permit from a city or town's zoning board of appeals (ZBA), instead of separate permits from each local agency or official having jurisdiction over any aspect of the proposed housing. The repeal would take effect on January 1, 2011, but would not stop or otherwise affect any proposed housing that had already received both a comprehensive permit and a building permit for at least one unit. Under the existing law, the ZBA holds a public hearing on the application and considers the recommendations of local agencies and officials. The ZBA may grant a comprehensive permit that may include conditions or requirements concerning the height, site plan, size, shape, or building materials of the housing. Persons aggrieved by the ZBA's decision to grant a permit may appeal it to a court. If the ZBA denies the permit or grants it with conditions or requirements that make the housing uneconomic to build or to operate, the applicant may appeal to the state Housing Appeals Committee (HAC). After a hearing, if the HAC rules that the ZBA's denial of a comprehensive permit was unreasonable and not consistent with local needs, the HAC orders the ZBA to issue the permit. If the HAC rules that the ZBA's decision issuing a comprehensive permit with conditions or requirements made the housing uneconomic to build or operate and was not consistent with local needs, the HAC orders the ZBA to modify or remove any such condition or requirement so as to make the proposal no longer uneconomic. The HAC cannot order the ZBA to issue any permit that would allow the housing to fall below minimum safety standards or site plan requirements. If the HAC rules that the ZBA's action was consistent with local needs, the HAC must uphold it even if it made the housing uneconomic. The HAC's decision is subject to review in the courts. A condition or requirement makes housing "uneconomic" if it would prevent a public agency or non-profit organization from building or operating the housing except at a financial loss, or it would prevent a limited dividend organization from building or operating the housing without a reasonable return on its investment. A ZBA's decision is "consistent with local needs" if it applies requirements that are reasonable in view of the regional need for low- and moderate-income housing and the number of low-income persons in the city or town, as well as the need to protect health and safety, promote better site and building design, and preserve open space, if those requirements are applied as equally as possible to both subsidized and unsubsidized housing. Requirements are considered "consistent with local needs" if more than 10% of the city or town's housing units are low- or moderate-income units or if such units are on sites making up at least 1.5% of the total private land zoned for residential, commercial, or industrial use in the city or town. Requirements are also considered "consistent with local needs" if the application would result, in any one calendar year, in beginning construction of low- or moderate-income housing on sites making up more than 0.3% of the total private land zoned for residential, commercial, or industrial use in the city or town, or on ten acres, whichever is larger. The proposed law states that if any of its parts were declared invalid, the other parts would stay in effect.

2010 - Norfolk County - Question 2Do you approve of a law summarized below, on which no vote was taken by the Senate or the House of Representatives before May 4, 2010?

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Norfolk County Results
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City/Town Ward Pct Blanks Total Votes Cast
Totals
113,151
139,998
20,389 273,538
Avon
 
789
923
140
1,852
Bellingham More »
 
3,139
2,854
456
6,449
Braintree More »
 
6,689
7,339
1,314
15,342
Brookline More »
 
4,312
14,693
1,551
20,556
Canton More »
 
5,020
3,900
629
9,549
Cohasset More »
 
1,940
1,525
358
3,823
Dedham More »
 
4,474
5,096
846
10,416
Dover
 
1,582
1,171
153
2,906
Foxborough More »
 
3,424
3,446
408
7,278
Franklin More »
 
5,461
6,487
881
12,829
Holbrook More »
 
1,721
2,068
287
4,076
Medfield More »
 
2,939
2,596
363
5,898
Medway More »
 
2,464
2,819
266
5,549
Millis More »
 
1,636
1,929
167
3,732
Milton More »
 
4,605
7,123
1,222
12,950
Needham More »
 
4,703
8,551
1,000
14,254
Norfolk More »
 
2,005
2,153
345
4,503
Norwood More »
 
5,053
5,477
839
11,369
Plainville More »
 
1,518
1,535
182
3,235
Quincy More »
 
11,806
16,836
2,985
31,627
Randolph More »
 
3,893
5,653
694
10,240
Sharon More »
 
3,326
4,115
500
7,941
Stoughton More »
 
5,486
4,264
632
10,382
Walpole More »
 
5,877
4,499
547
10,923
Wellesley More »
 
4,254
6,487
1,227
11,968
Westwood More »
 
3,000
3,603
725
7,328
Weymouth More »
 
9,768
10,637
1,413
21,818
Wrentham More »
 
2,267
2,219
259
4,745
County Totals
113,151
139,998
20,389 273,538