Maine Could Be the Third State To End Single-Family-Only Zoning
The Pine Tree State is embracing California-style housing reforms. It could run into California-style problems.

Maine is embracing new California-style laws aimed at reducing restrictions on new housing. It could soon run into some of the same problems encountered by the Golden State's reforms.
Last week, the Maine House of Representatives passed L.D. 2003. The legislation legalizes "missing middle" housing options such as accessory dwelling units and duplexes, gives state officials the power to set housing production goals, and requires local laws to "affirmatively further" those goals.
The bill now heads to the Maine Senate, where it has already been approved once before.
The measure has attracted bipartisan support, reflecting a growing consensus that local governments' zoning regulations are making housing unaffordable and that state preemption of those regulations is one means of bringing housing costs down and returning rights to property owners.
"The lack of affordable housing in Maine has reached a crisis level," said House Speaker Ryan Fecteau (D–Biddeford), the chief sponsor of L.D. 2003, when the Senate first approved the bill. "This legislation could create more housing opportunities in every community in Maine."
"The housing market, like all markets, is subject to the law of supply and demand. For a long time, government over-regulation has distorted the housing market," said state Rep. Amy Arata (R–New Gloucester), who added that the bill "includes a free-market solution to housing shortages and honors property rights."
Should L.D. 2003 become law, Maine would become the third state to abolish single-family-only zoning.
In 2019, Oregon passed a law legalizing duplexes on all residential land in small towns and up to four-unit homes in single-family zoned land in communities of at least 25,000 people. California passed a similar bill legalizing duplexes on almost all single-family-zoned land in 2021.
Maine's legislation would require municipalities to allow two-unit homes everywhere that single-family homes are allowed today, and to allow four-unit homes in designated growth areas. The bill would also guarantee homeowners the right to build accessory dwelling units (ADUs)—sometimes known as granny flats or in-law suites—on their single-family properties.
Localities would not be allowed to require ADUs to come with additional parking spaces (a requirement that often makes them infeasible). They could still set maximum sizes for accessory units, and they would retain the ability to create their own permitting processes for duplexes and ADUs.
The bill also eases density restrictions and parking requirements for deed-restricted affordable housing in multifamily-zoned areas. Provided they offer units for rent or sale at specific below-market rates, these developments can be built at 2.5 times the density of whatever the multifamily zone already allows. They'd also only have to include one parking space for every three units.
The most controversial aspects of the bill are also its most centralizing. L.D. 2003 would give state officials the power to set statewide housing production goals. Municipalities would have to design their own regulations to meet those targets. They'd also have to ensure their regs would "affirmatively further" the goals of the federal Fair Housing Act.
Some local officials have said that these requirements would give cities effectively zero control over density, thus forcing them to allow development that quickly outstrips local infrastructure and services. Not doing so would open them up to lawsuits based on the vague and shifting sands of federal fair housing rules.
Nick Murray, a policy analyst for the free market Maine Policy Institute, also expressed concern that these provisions will invite meddling from Washington.
"The reference to federal policy is worrisome," he wrote in March, "because it could mean that the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) would hand down these goals to the state, further separating housing policy from local communities."
"Affirmatively furthering" fair housing is a nebulous concept. The federal government's own regulations defining that term have been in flux for a few decades now, and they are subject to substantial rewrites with each new presidential administration.
So it's hardly clear what this provision would oblige local governments to do. Would it outsource Maine's zoning decisions to D.C. bureaucrats with limitless discretion, or would it just be a toothless bit of code? Figuring that out would probably require lots of lawsuits.
State officials setting housing production goals is also hardly a free market ideal. How worrisome that provision is again hinges on what it would require localities to do.
If the ultimate impact is that municipalities would have to continually allow more density, that would just mean that local governments could enforce progressively fewer restrictions on housing construction. Private property owners would still be the ones deciding what gets built where.
But state housing production goals don't have a great track record when it comes to actually getting housing built.
For decades, California's state government has maintained similar targets: It projects regional housing needs and then requires local governments to plan for enough new housing development to meet those needs. For most of their history, these requirements have been pretty useless. Local governments have been able to ignore them, or offer paper-thin compliance, without penalty.
In recent years, animated YIMBY activists have started using lawsuits and legal threats to force local governments to comply with these planning quotas. The state is staffing up housing enforcement units. Lawmakers have passed bills giving these planning quotas more teeth.
Those efforts are succeeding at getting some municipalities to take zoning reform more seriously. But progress has still been slow and halting. It's hard to force local governments to permit more housing if they really don't want to.
Maine officials might soon discover this fact. L.D. 2003 leaves a lot of room for intransigent local governments to undermine the spirit of its reforms.
The bill prevents municipalities from setting density restrictions on two- and four-unit homes that are stricter than what they set for single-family homes. But ideally, duplexes and fourplexes would be allowed to be larger to accommodate the additional units.
When Minneapolis legalized three-unit homes on single-family lots but didn't increase allowable densities, very few three-unit homes were actually built.
The duplex and ADU legalization parts of L.D. 2003 also allow local governments to set permitting procedures for these units. That opens the door to localities setting up lengthy, discretionary approval processes that discourage people from actually building them.
That's exactly what's happened in California. The first pieces of state-level legislation legalizing ADUs date back to the 1980s. Localities stymied the construction of these units by charging high fees, requiring endless permits, or imposing other restrictions that made them infeasible. It took decades and several more bills before local governments actually made building ADUs easy.
The state's recent legislation legalizing duplexes is running into similar, often creative resistance.
Murray of the Maine Policy Institute, in written testimony submitted to the state legislature, argues that this is an inherent problem with forcing local governments to allow housing they really don't want. He suggests a better approach would be to make the ADU and duplex portions of L.D. 2003 voluntary and then give financial incentives to local governments to adopt them.
That would certainly avoid the fights between state and local governments that have characterized California housing politics. But it would also mean that NIMBY municipalities that don't want new housing wouldn't have to allow it.
No one said reform is easy.
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Sarcasmic hardest hit!
(Sorry, couldn't resist a ME guy comment)
I don't follow local news so this is the first I've heard of it.
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For some reason, knowing that you live in Maine explains so much, too much.
Glad your prejudices are updated and being put to good use.
Supreme Court tackles case of Bremerton's praying football coach
Follow along as the Supreme Court takes up a dispute between school officials and Joseph Kennedy, a former coach at Bremerton High School who wanted to pray on the field after games.
Well, we know the right has gone too far again.
Yep. It is well known you can only kneel on a football if you are showing contempt for the USA.
So you consider protesting racism to be tantamount to showing contempt for the US? Really? Maybe protesting racism is uncouth, but it isn't contempt.
Considering the source of the original protest was Colin Kaepernick and the protest was implemented during the playing of the national anthem, yes, contempt for the US in many of our eyes.
And that the "Free Exercise" clause doesn't apply after sports.
Nothing says libertarian like moving local government decisions to the state level and requiring federal "guideline" adherence as if it were law.
I can't help but wonder. If there had never been any zoning laws, then OK, but there are laws now. If you bought a home in a desirable neighborhood - one with single family zoning - and paid $750,000 for it but now there are small apartment buildings going up across the street and the value of your home just dropped by $250,000, is that a taking? You are under water on the mortgage and may never recover.
You may not have legal recourse, but I bet you are pissed off.
Flashback to posters from the sixties:
You can't fight city hall; but you can burn it down.
I agree: it's a form of taking.
Furthermore, if there had never been any zoning laws, many of these neighborhoods would have had private CC&Rs that say pretty much the same as the zoning laws.
No, it should be a "taking" only if the zoning is changed to be more restrictive on the parcel that you actually bought. For example, you bought an acre where the zoning called for minimum 1/2 acre residential lots, then the zoning was subsequently changed to require 1 acre lots and you could no longer sell off 1/2 of your parcel for someone to build a home.
It's not just about what I can do with my home, it's how the character of the neighborhood affects the value of my home.
Rezoning from single family homes to multifamily homes may decrease the value of my home; hence, it is a taking.
NOYB2 wrote "Rezoning from single family homes to multifamily homes may decrease the value of my home;"
- Supposedly your property is worth more as multifamily housing, so sell it to a developer for that. After you leave they tear down the house and build another multi-family building. Or they do like my great-granddad did and divide the house into a triplex.
The value of my home decreases under the new zoning, that makes it a taking.
The possibility that the new zoning offers the potential for profit to a deep-pocketed developer doesn't change that fact.
Well, activists need somewhere to live in the nicer neighborhoods.
No. You have no expectation of economic gain. Ever.
Otherwise there's gonna be a massive bill due to NYC taxi medallion holders because of Uber.
Secondly, if a change in the law harmed you - then you were benefitting under the law and others were harmed by it.
Did you get a windfall tax bill? Did you pay to mitigate the economic harms suffered by others under the previous legal regime?
To do otherwise would mean it is effectively impossible to ever change a law once implemented - someone always benefitted I see the law, someone's always going to suffer a loss in any change.
Sometimes you just have to call it a wash.
I don't see how that would be enforceable. The logical conclusion of that seems to be that any change in laws or regulations where any one can show a loss in economic value is actionable.
Which is a really absurd end state.
If your neighborhood was so elite exclusive that a duplex across the street lowers your property value by a third, then I find it hard to work up any sympathy for you.
If your neighborhood was so elite exclusive that a duplex across the street lowers your property value by a third, then I find it hard to work up any sympathy for you.
I'm not sure that is a glass house you should be throwing stones in Brandy.
So you are an angry, envious, greedy little socialist, Brandybuck.
It's implausible that you would lose 1/3 of the value of your home merely because an apartment building was constructed across the street.
I also wonder about some Reasonistas who demand a ban on zoning. What a group of citizens freely decides to do is supposed to be up to them, right?
If they own all the property affected, yes, otherwise, no.
Removing the parking requirement makes no sense. A duplex requires twice the amount of parking as a single family home. If you don't provide the parking, you end up with the shifty situation of having everyone park in the street. Reducing the usability of public streets.
Or perhaps we could just, gasp, use that "socialist" invention of public transit.
Cities are for people, not cars. Besides that, it's removing the *requirement* of that parking. Developers probably have a better idea of what prospective customers want and will pay for.
Are you for the free market or not?
Cities are for people, but those people don’t have a choice.
Fuck off, socialist.
Maine doesn't have the population density do support public transportation.
*to*
Yeah, in small town Maine! /sarc
Areas currently zoned single family homes are for people with cars.
I am! Let's start by prohibiting on-street parking, eliminating all subsidies to public transit, and completely privatizing public transit. Then the market can decide whether people want cars or public transit.
+1
" Let's start by prohibiting on-street parking, "
yes, just like in Brookline Taxachusetts.
Or we could get rid of the socialists. American cities are for Americans, not democrats.
Americans are Democratic socialists.
No, democrats aren’t really American. Just like they aren’t quite really human.
You would like that. Everyone in high rises, everyone's schedule at the whim of government provided transport. Everyone subject to having power, water, food cut off if they don't confirm.
Eat the bugs, love in the pod, don't own anything. And take your Soma.
I rode government mass transit to work for a good while. It sucks total ass.
Public transit is for politicians and government employees, not people.
You and your comrades can have any city layout and transportation devices you pay for.
The goal is to make more people take public transportation. Most apartment buildings in California only require one parking space, even though most of them are 2 bedroom units with 2 couples living there to split the rent (and hence 4 cars).
And everyone parks on the street. If you're lucky, and the street hasn't been metered yet.
These are residential streets though so I'm not seeing how any utility is lost.
Stand by for a time travel shock.
For many years, people who lived in single family homes parked on the street.
They must have visited Ballard and experienced how absolutely wonderful it is.
The Pine Tree State is embracing California-style housing reforms.
When your state embraces California-style anything, knuckle up.
At this point, I think it's safe to call California America's South Africa.
I would never insult South Africa in such a way.
Just because the state says you shall have "x" number of housing doesn't mean anyone is willing to build "x" housing. Also note some cities decide they will meet the housing quota by forcing areas that don't want high density housing in their area. NIMbyism is also libertarian
The measure has attracted bipartisan support, reflecting a growing consensus that local governments' zoning regulations are making housing unaffordable and
...adding MORE regulations will help!
Nothing says "libertarianism" like the word "require".
F*ck those people who made a choice to live in a neighborhood zoned for single family homes on larger pieces of land!
Maine is so densely populated that there simply is no alternative!
/sarc
Yeah, I question that one as well. I was more for the first thing of legalizing in-law houses and secondary dwellings. I can tell they're trying to preempt local laws, but I do tend towards a very subsidiarity heavy view of government. Even if the state can do so, I think they rarely should get quite so nitty gritty.
We shall see. I am very for deregulation though, and letting people work out the details on their own.
Nothing says "libertarianism" like creating a byzantine structure where unaccountable government officials, based upon personal financial interest or political considerations will designation an area as "growth" or "non-Growth".
And meanwhile letting people build a duplex on their own land is considered authoritarianism run amok. Go figure.
We've seen what happens when "upzoning" activists take over the process. Their own single-family neighborhoods are mysteriously cordoned off from the new policy.
As Agent Maxwell Smart always says: Missed it by that much.
And another, in what should be Pulitzer Prize-level reporting.
I think people who choose to live in places like Seattle and San Francisco deserve everything they get.
The only thing the rest of the country has to watch out for is not bailing out those cities.
They knew the conditions under which they bought the property, and those conditions included prohibiting duplexes. These conditions reflect the preferences of the local property owners, as represented by local government.
The authoritarianism is in the state overriding local decision making and local government.
It's a requirement of a government that they allow citizens a type of freedom, to build a certain structure and use it in a certain way.
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Breaking: Looks like Twitter is going to accept Elon Musk's offer to buy.
Interesting. I still don't hold out high hopes for the outcome of this, but we'll see. I think Twitter's flaws are much more deep-seated (I don't know if I've ever written that phrase and had to double check that it wasn't actually "deep-seeded") then just moderation and thus the site will still largely to be avoided regardless of any good moves Musk can implement.
I'm wrong about everything else though, so I await that I am wrong on this as well.
Oh definitely. I'm guessing companies like twitter are like the US government. There's a deep state at work there that would undermine anything he tried to do if it pushed the platform towards a more free and open discourse.
I could see that. But I think there are actual issues in the model of short, pithy, bullshit responses that will always generate a bad environment. I'm increasingly for discovering a way to create public squares that filter themselves, not on content, but on some minimum effort required for the users to post. No idea how you create that. I increasingly think that was the advantage of the early internet, it was harder to get on and thus you filtered for the laziest noise makers.
There's also the fact that Twitter is just biased in its population. I think moderation has some impact there, but self-selection is huge. This is something we see a lot in the real-world too. Big institutions tend to get overtaken by leftist types. The main reason for this increasingly appears to be that the type of person who dedicates their life to converting large institutions to a cause seem to tend leftwards. Part of the importance of federalism for the continuation of freedom.
Some minimum effort == $$$.
CNBC just confirmed it.
No problem, they can change zoning laws but it doesn't matter because no one WANTS to build duplexes. This isn't 1970. What is stopping builders from putting up "starter" homes is that there isn't enough money in it to bother with. In the area where I live they put up massive apartment complexes, or mcmansion neighborhoods, or "affordable" housing, that's it, nothing else, then the political action groups get all huffy because there is no diversity. They don't HAVE to, they can build neighborhoods full of moderately priced homes, but they don't and won't. This ofcourse drives the price of the moderate homes that were built through the 80's up up up to the stratosphere.
Nothing in this requires homeowners to build duplexes. It simply removes from local governments the authority to forbid them.
I thought Reason was supposed to be a Libertarian magazine. Restricting government's authority to interfere with how people choose to use their own property _is_ the libertarian position.
What a failure of community committed by so many people living in wide single-family neighborhoods.
Karma's revenge will occur when easy automobile transportation fails.
The big problem with this type of "reform" is that it only allows more housing where housing already exists. Thus it encourages banks and other rich institutions to demolish whole neighborhoods of good houses and replace them with dense-pack housing I wouldn't be willing to live in.
I suggest that a better reform would be to abolish all greenbelt zoning and make it legal to build up to 10 houses per acre on any land you can buy, subject to your bringing in the needed roads and utilities out of your own pocket.
Here’s a radical concept, let municipalities decide their zoning for themselves and let the market decide. If a town wants to allow duplexes on single family sized lots and people move there, good for them. If the next town over wants to stick with single family homes and people who want single family homes are willing to pay more to move there, good for them. If no one wants to live next to a duplex, they should not be forced to - especially If parking and congestion become an issue as a result.
""The housing market, like all markets, is subject to the law of supply and demand..."
Supply and demand is MOSTLY bullshit these days.
q
Sure, end the zoning.
I completely oppose limiting private property covenants and deem that a taking.
I am free to contract over my property and go government should interfere. I own in a planned development restricted to single family dwellings and that was a contractual choice by all residents. Those who dislike can find contracts suited to their lifestyles. That I want my peace and privacy in less dense, “nice” areas is my business and that of my like-minded neighbours.
Hands off our covenants! Hands off our freedom to contract!
We have to have some place to house all those Doctors & Engineers that will be flooding into this country soon!