Affordability comparison -- Photo Redniss and Mead
A portion of the affordability comparison sheet — Photo Redniss and Mead

By Kerri Williams

WESTPORT – The Planning and Zoning Commission deliberated about a text amendment on Monday that would allow for off-site affordable housing for the nonprofit Homes with Hope in an existing two-family house in a residential area of town. 

The home would serve as two units of affordable housing, replacing the earlier proposed three units of onsite housing at The Gables of Westport, the new 14-unit luxury housing development at 785 Post Road East.

Richard Redniss, of Redniss & Mead, a Stamford land use firm, has requested that the commission adopt text amendment 852, which would allow for offsite affordable housing at most future developments at the discretion of the commission, based on a list of standards for review.

According to Redniss, the proposed housing by developer Ryan Moran checks off many of the boxes of those standards. It would

  • serve more people than the onsite housing it would replace,
  • be in a residential neighborhood, and
  • be more affordable (with a $1,869 rent cap for a family of four). 

An “affordability comparison” of the onsite and offsite options was shared at the meeting.

Homes with Hope

One key provision of the proposed amendment is that the zoning commissioner consider “non-profit involvement.” In this discussion, that means Homes with Hope.

According to Helen McAlinden, president and CEO of the non-profit, Homes with Hope helps people afford “workforce housing.”  “Many of the people we serve work in Westport. They no longer need to travel a long time in a car or a bus to work.” 

McAlinden said the mission of the organization has changed dramatically since she began working there in 2019. Then, Homes with Hope served mostly the “chronically homeless.”

In comments to Westport Journal after the Monday meeting, McAlinden said “Now, 85% of our clients are preventative.

“We can’t get housing for the people we serve,” McAlinden told commissioners. “My ask is that you consider this request. Come see our sites and how well we keep them.”

P&Z Chairman Paul Lebowitz said he “loves to see” McAlinden at meetings because she is “helping out a part of the population who needs it the most.”

Some pushback

But committee member Michael Calise said he was concerned that the two-family house is inherently already a form of affordable housing. By officially providing affordable housing there, the commission would be “destroying what already exists.” he said.

Redniss and some members of the board argued that the house, which is on the market for $1 million, could be torn down by a buyer to create a much more expensive building, thereby taking away any affordability.

“We need to protect it as affordable housing,” Redniss said. “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.”

Redniss asked to keep the address of the house out of the public record so that “negative consequences” do not occur, such as neighbors working to prevent the housing.

However, Commissioner John Bolton said he thought that the commission should release the address, otherwise members are “not being transparent.”

Lebowitz said that the specific address is not necessary for commissioners to make an informed decision.

Members voted to continue the hearing at the commission’s June 30 meeting.