New York Gov. Kathy Hochul's Housing Plan Avoids Common Mistake of Other YIMBY Reforms
The governor would let developers route around local zoning codes and get housing projects approved directly by state officials.

New York has some of the most restrictive local zoning regimes in the country, resulting in rock-bottom rates of housing construction and sky-high prices.
Now, Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul is proposing to fix this sad status quo by allowing developers to bypass city and town zoning codes altogether and get their housing projects approved directly by a fast-tracked state process.
"Through zoning, local communities hold enormous power to block growth," said Hochul in her annual State of the State address yesterday. "People want to live here, but local decisions to limit growth mean they cannot. Local governments can and should make different choices."
In her speech, Hochul announced a Housing Compact strategy that she says will lead to 800,000 new homes being built in the state over the next decade.
To make that happen, her plan would give local governments a goal of growing their housing stock by 1 percent every three years, or in the case of New York City and surrounding communities, 3 percent every three years.
Any new housing would count toward that target, although local governments would get bonus points for approving new below-market-rate, income-restricted "affordable" housing. Cities that miss their growth targets would have to show the state that they're proactively reducing zoning restrictions on new housing.
If a locality fails to remove zoning restrictions, developers would be allowed to bypass local officials entirely and get their projects approved via the courts or a new housing approval board. A fact sheet on Hochul's plan says projects appealed to that board "will be approved unless a locality can demonstrate a valid health or safety reason for denying the application."
Crucially, those projects wouldn't have to conform to local zoning restrictions. Developers could theoretically use this process to build projects of unlimited density anywhere in a city, although they would have to include some affordable housing units to qualify for state approval.
Hochul's proposal would, in effect, create similar arrangements to what exists in California and New Jersey.
In both places, the state requires local governments to plan for a certain amount of affordable housing. If a locality fails to meet these state requirements, developers can make use of what's known as a "builder's remedy" to get projects approved, even if the project would violate the zoning code.
In theory, this builder's remedy would allow a developer to propose a skyscraper in a single-family neighborhood or commercial area, and the local government couldn't use its zoning code to stop it.
Garden State developers have made occasional use of this builder's remedy. That's not the case in California, where no developer has managed to use the builder's remedy to get a project approved in the three decades it's been on the books.
One major reason for that is that the state's builder's remedy still ultimately leaves local governments in charge of permitting projects. That creates a lot of opportunity for antigrowth cities and towns to find reasons apart from their zoning codes to shoot down projects.
Localities could manufacture health and safety reasons to reject a project, for instance. Another tactic local governments use is demanding a project go through perpetual rounds of environmental review so that it's never formally approved or denied.
The impotence of the builder's remedy points to a general flaw with YIMBY zoning reforms: the state government tells antigrowth local governments they have to allow more housing but still leaves them in charge of approving that housing.
This kicks off a perpetual mountain cat-and-mouse game where motivated local governments find increasingly inventive ways to ignore state zoning reforms, and state lawmakers keep having to pass bills closing whatever loopholes localities find.
Hochul's proposal tries to avoid this dynamic by cutting local governments out of the process entirely. That would, in theory, afford the state's NIMBYs, and local governments they control, no direct ability to stop new housing. Localities could still raise health and safety objections, but those would have to be vetted by the proposed new board.
Libertarians might well recoil at the idea of the state effectively setting housing production quotas, but Hochul's plan would only force local governments to eliminate their own regulations. As proposed, it wouldn't require them to spend tax dollars building housing. Nor does it give private parties any mandates. Rather, property owners would have more flexibility to build.
The governor's idea of targeting overall housing growth is also simpler and more rational than California's equivalent system, whereby the state calculates local housing needs by income level and then gives local governments goals of how much low-, moderate-, and market-rate housing they should be building.
That's a convoluted process all premised on the false notion that cities will only become affordable when they're building new income-restricted housing for low- and moderate-income renters.
In contrast, Hochul's approach is far more market-oriented. It's premised on the idea that cities need to build more housing generally in order to become more affordable, and doesn't get too fussy about which kind of housing that is.
Whether this is all politically practical is a big open question.
Hochul used her 2022 State of the State address to call for the far more modest policies of legalizing accessory dwelling units, repealing state-set density limits in New York City, and encouraging more density near transit. None of those ideas went anywhere last year.
This year, she's proposing all those policies again as well as creating the aforementioned system of housing growth targets enforced by a builder's remedy.
Hochul's more radical proposals probably don't have much of a chance, but the fact that she's willing to call for such bold reforms is an encouraging sign.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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My first thought. Want to avoid lengthy, local zoning issues. Kathy is happy to help, out of the goodness of her heart.
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Local governments can and should make different choices."
Without reviewing the wonky, technical details of the zoning reforms, and probably agreeing with them in principle, this is an incredibly authoritarian, undemocratic, elitist and chilling statement.
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So, authority for deciding on projects is to be transferred from a local government roughly accessible to the public to a demonstrably corrupt NY State government with only the most indirect accountability to the electorate. And this is being advocated by the folks who told us that a few idiots taking selfies in the Capital is a dire threat to "our democracy". Never change, Reason staffers, never change.
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More government is needed to solve the problems created by too much government. If Hochul really wanted to help solve problems, she'd fit herself with a nuclear suicide vest and walk into the opening meeting of the New York legislature.
Fascists gotta do fascism.
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Hochul and her soon to be very rich developer friends, wants to make neighborhood density for the lower and middle class comparable to the density typically found on Slave ships that sailed in the 18th Century. If anyone objects she will remind them of Lincoln's fate.
I'm sure homeowners will enthusiastically embrace developers bypassing local zoning laws.
This woman is not just a cunt.
She is an ugly assed hyper authoritarian cunt. Actually worse than her predecessor.
New York doesn't have to do anything. At the rate New Yorkers are bailing the state they'll be up to their ears in available housing soon.
"The more centrally the power is concentrated, the better." - Reason
Yeah, dipshit is also proposing banning all new construction from natural gas hookups. The destruction of the chick that won 2 elections to Gov has just started which is why NY is hemorrhaging people to the free states.
I'm leaving central NY in March for Florida..can't wait and leaving before Gov idiot and the bolshie legislature puts in an exit tax. You know that is around the corner and Reason will be all for it.
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plenty of available cheap housing in the cities of Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, Utica and Rome. The issue is the welfare class can be given a brand-new suburban home and will trash it in a few weeks. And the govt grifter class who make money on those deals via State "funding" will be living on the Hamptons...the middle class gets screwed. Hochul has the IQ of a piece of furniture. End all public sector unions to start. End all state welfare programs, bulldoze most of the upstate cities abandon housing...turn Rochester back to farmland. I could go on...but Reason likes force by govt.
Correct. This isn’t about improving cities. It’s about fucking over suburbs and upstate communities that vote Republican. Drive more out the “wrong” kind of voters out of state.