Follow-Up Memo on Inclusionary Zoning Ordinance Concerns Under MBTA Communities Act Compliance – by Patrick Barrett

To: Cambridge City Council
From: Patrick W. Barrett III, Esq
Date: June 11, 2025
Subject: Follow-Up Memo on Inclusionary Zoning Ordinance Concerns Under MBTA Communities Act Compliance
“Liberal legalism – and through it liberal government – had become process-obsessed rather than outcomes-orientated. It had convinced itself that the state’s legitimacy would be earned through compliance with an endless catalog of rules and restraints rather than through getting things done for the people it claimed to serve.”
— Abundance
Introduction
The above quote from Ezra Klein’s book “Abundance” describes more apply than I ever could the current state of affairs in the City of Cambridge in nearly all aspects, but no more acutely than in Cambridge’s zoning and housing policy. While intended to address housing affordability, the City’s focus on procedural compliance (“Policy”), reinforced by a flawed Economic Feasibility Analysis (“EFA”) to gain MBTA Act certification, a weak and deeply flawed nexus study three years overdue that was “forgotten,” and continued misleading data presentations, has undermined effective outcomes, revealing a paper thin veneer of a housing market held up by labs, hubris, and wishful thinking.
• This is an update from a memo I issued a few weeks ago to clarify a few points made previously (EFA) and to put into public view some exciting updates from our friends at CDD and new legal actions across the country. I also read Klein’s book … not too shabby.
Violates the MBTA Communities Act (M.G.L. c. 40A, § 3A)
The MBTA Communities Act mandates multi-family housing as-of-right with a minimum gross density of 15 units per acre, suitable for families and without age. EOHLC guidelines permit up to 10% affordability at 80% AMI without an EFA, while higher percentages, up to 20%, require a robust EFA demonstrating financial viability. Cambridge’s 20% affordability requirement, applied citywide since 2017, lacks a credible EFA, by using weak anecdotal data without citing sources, project addresses, or any specific material fact about the projects used to set policy. On June 27, 2024, the consultant issued a report to the Housing Committee wherein it stated, “No scenario is financially feasible under existing market conditions” and “Higher density does not overcome financial barriers in current market.1” He was quick to retract this in an email dated September 17, 2024 where the consultant states, “Based on the original EFA analysis and these economic conditions, I conclude that both rental and ownership housing development projects of different sizes that conform to the densities, dimensional requirements and minimum parking requirements under as of right zoning in the qualifying district can be feasibly developed2 with Cambridge’s existing inclusionary zoning requirements.” No calculation, no attachment, no underlying data to support this conclusion other than the email equivalent of a thumbs up. The consultant’s email cites improved interest rates, cap rates, and investment return thresholds as the basis for his conclusion. On June 27th, 2024, the avg interest rate hovered at 6.89%. This dipped by 69 basis points on September 17th, 2024 in anticipation of the federal reserve’s rate cut, and the current interest rate as of this writing is 6.89%. Cap rates between September ’24 and May ’25 have only increased and, given the risk associated with construction, tariffs, and other regulatory hurdles that exist in Cambridge, investor thresholds have only become more stringent (see also: The Bank). However, since CDD likes bar graphs, let’s deliver the information in a form they are accustomed to:

Basing housing policy on razor thin margins, whether we accept the consultant’s assessment or not, is not sustainable and sets the city up for confrontation where the only answer is either to dig in on failed policy or reassess. Did a mere two months change all that?
Misleading Representation of Inclusionary Housing Production

Presented on May 12th, 2025 the Director of Housing issued the above chart in his report on inclusionary housing production. (COF 2025 #813) The cumulative graph of IHP units from pre-FY99 to FY24 (above) suggests robust production, with FY24 as the tallest bar (~1,400 units). Spoiler: the FY24 tallest bar in the graph is where the least amount of “inclusionary housing” was permitted (zero actual IZ units).
This presentation is highly misleading. The cumulative format obscures annual trends, exaggerating recent progress by aggregating all prior units. In FY24, the only cited projects are 121 Broadway (99 units, project-specific zoning via contract or Planned Unit Development, not IZO compliance) and 8 Winter St (3 units, amending permit but not approved), resulting in zero permitted inclusionary units under the 2017 IZO revisions yet presented to the Cambridge City Council as the highest bar in a continuum of success and growth. Of the 20 developments from FY18-FY24 (524 IHP units, 3,227 total units), (4 projects: Mass & Main, 50 Rogers, 165 Main Street, 121 Broadway; 229 units) involve project-specific zoning, not standard IZO, and (12 projects: 305 Webster, St. James Place, 249 Third Street, 201 & 203 Concord Turnpike, 14-16 Chauncy Street, Charles & Hurley, 95-99 Elmwood, 151 North First Street, 212 Hampshire Street, 3-5 Linnaean Street; 144 units) are pre-2017 IZO projects exempt from the 20% mandate due to prior permitting or PUD special permits. Projects listed as “IZO with 2017 Revisions” include errors: 47 Bishop Allen Drive (23 total units, 3 IZ units) is part of Mass & Main (project-specific zoning, not IZO), and 8 Winter St is not yet underway and in the process of amending their plan set. After corrections, only four projects (50 Cambridge Park Drive: 55 units; 55-Wheeler Street: 99 units; 605 Concord Ave.: 7 units; 1055 Cambridge Street: 3 units; 164 IHP units over a 6 year period) comply with the 2017 IZO, comprising just 31% of IHP units, far below expectations for a 20% mandate. This data confirms the 20% requirement has not driven significant inclusionary production, and the City’s graph misrepresents the program’s effectiveness and raises serious questions regarding the viability of inclusionary zoning as a housing strategy.
Analysis of Economic Feasibility Assessment
The City’s reliance on the EFA produced in 2023 to support the 20% mandate is misplaced, as the analysis is so deficient it fails to meet EOHLC requirements for a comprehensive, transparent, and current EFA. Its outdated assumptions, lack of methodological rigor, and failure to use a sustainable economic model or account for the ordinance’s impact on smaller projects make it functionally equivalent to the absence of an EFA. Key points include:
• Outdated Cost Assumptions: The Consultant’s EFA assumes a uniform land acquisition cost of $87,000 per unit across all project sizes (small: 15 units, medium: 42 units, large: 49 units), based on three unspecified projects4, failing to account for economies of scale or market variations. The 2016 David Paul Rosen & Associates (DRA) Inclusionary Housing Study5, which informed the 2017 increase from an effective 11.4% to 20% set-aside, estimated land costs at $50,000–$170,000 per unit, with smaller projects at ~$150,000-$170,000 and larger projects at ~$50,000-$80,000. Consultant’s $87,000 per unit land cost, applied uniformly in 2023, is implausible given the consultant is using a lower land basis than used in the Rosen study. The EFA’s lack of transparency about data sources and its failure to adjust for 2023 market conditions further undermine its credibility. Even if a larger project could procure land at or below $87,000 per unit (I know of at least one), the 20% mandate remains economically infeasible due to higher costs of debt (8.5-10.8% vs. EFA’s 8.25%), equity requirements, construction costs ($400-$525/sq ft vs. EFA’s $350-$375/sq ft), and mitigating factors such as increased utility costs (e.g., electricity up 38%, natural gas up 67%), permitting delays, and new zoning requirements (e.g., Article 22, tree protection, climate resilience adding 10-25% to costs). Additionally, the EFA assumes no parking costs for all projects, including condos, despite market demand for parking in for-sale condo developments. The market typically requires 0.5-1 parking spaces per unit at $50,000-$100,000 per space. This omission underestimates costs by $500,000-$2,500,000 for a 15-42-unit project. These flawed assumptions inflate Consultant’s projected returns, as shown in the table below, which compares EFA returns with recalculated 2025 returns using current market conditions ($120,000-$200,000/unit land, $400-$525/sq ft construction cost, 9.65% lending rate, 5.3% cap rate, $13,000/unit operating expenses, $75,000/space parking for condos). The 2025 returns, significantly below developer expectations (7% ROC, 15-20% IRR for condos), confirm the mandate’s infeasibility. For example, the recalculated 5.62% IRR for a 42-unit condo project is far below the industry-standard 15-20% IRR for levered condo developments, making it unacceptable to developers and investors.
| Project | EFA ROC | EFA IRR | Actual ROC | Actual IRR |
| Small Rental (15 units) | 5.72% | 9.42% | 3.55% | Negative |
| Medium Rental (42 units) | 5.84% | 11.60% | 4.05% | Negative |
| Large Rental (49 units) | 5.56% | 6.55% | 3.88% | Negative |
| Small Condo (15 units) | N/A | 26.24% | N/A | Negative |
| Medium Condo (42 units) | N/A | 28.44% | N/A | 5.62% |
• Comparison with Director of Housing Contribution Rate: On January 23, 2025, CDD Housing Director Chris Cotter proposed increasing the IZ monetary contribution rate from $450/sq ft to $534/sq ft, based on $195,475,665 in subsidies for 366,298 sq ft of affordable housing across three projects (52 New Street, Jefferson Park Federal, 430 Rindge Ave). In contrast, Consultant’s EFA assumes construction costs of $350/sq ft for rental projects and $375/sq ft for condos (podium and stick-built), underestimating 2025 costs by 14-37%. This discrepancy inflates Consultant’s projected returns, making the 20% mandate appear more feasible than it is. Cotter’s $534/sq ft is wildly below the loss developers incur on inclusionary units which adds to the confusion of how Cambridge assesses proportionality impact. The number is derived from a gap in funding and not related to any nexus between the development and its impact on the City.
• Construction Costs Underestimated: The EFA’s $350/sq ft (rental) and $375/sq ft (condo) assumptions are significantly below 2025 market rates of $400-$525/sq ft, skewing return calculations and overestimating project viability.
• Unrealistic Financial Metrics: The EFA assumes a 5% cap rate and 8.25% lending rate, but 2025 cap rates are 5.3% for Class A/B and 5.3-5.8% for Class C (CBRE data), and lending rates are 8.5-10.8%, reducing NOI and valuations, especially for smaller projects. The Consultant does not distinguish between classes of building and assumes a uniform cap rate of 5%.
• Density Bonus Assumptions Flawed: The EFA assumes density bonuses (e.g., 15 units from 11 for small projects), but the 2025 zoning reform eliminated most bonuses in high-density zones (e.g., Central Square), undermining feasibility. Only a two-story increase in C-1 zones remains and its value is dubious. In most cases the extra stories are required for viability, so the “bonus” is more coercive than remunerating.
• Neglect of Smaller Project Impacts: The EFA’s scenarios (15-49 units) do not adequately address smaller projects or projects with existing structures, which face much higher per-unit costs. Using just three unnamed projects of similar size with no background data significantly limits the value of this analysis. It is the equivalent of saying “lots of people say…”
• Utility and Operating Costs: The EFA assumes $10,000/unit operating expenses and minimal utility cost increases, despite 2025 data showing electricity up 35%, gas up 65%, and heating oil up 50%, reducing NOI with more impact on lower unit buildings.6
• Conclusion on the EFA: Consultant’s EFA, with its reliance on anecdotal assumptions (e.g., $87,000/unit land, $350-$375/sq ft construction, no parking costs), inflated returns, and lack of transparency, would not withstand scrutiny under EOHLC guidelines, effectively leaving Cambridge without a credible EFA to justify the 20% mandate. The recalculated 2025 returns, including a 5.62% IRR for a 42-unit condo project (vs. 15-20% industry standard), and the City’s misleading FY24 data (zero 2017 IZO units despite the cumulative graph’s tallest bar) highlight the mandate’s infeasibility.
Legal Vulnerabilities
• Unconstitutional Takings: The 20% mandate lacks proportionality, failing the Nollan/Dolan/Koontz/Sheetz test, relying on the outdated and inaccurate 2016 Rosen report without the required 2022 nexus study. Removing density bonuses would exacerbate this by increasing the exaction’s burden without justified impact assessments.
- Update: Two cases have been filed already citing Nollan/Dolan/Sheetz/Koontz and attacking inclusionary zoning exactions as a taking.
- Pilling v. City of Healdsburg CA (status: Settled in favor of Plaintiff 2024)
- City settled less than two months after action filed
- Plaintiff awarded sum of exaction taken plus damages
- RedT Homes v. City of Denver CO (status: filed May 25, 2025 pending)
- Denver used Rosen and Associates to provide a nexus study which in part states that new residents generate more housing demand. Much like Cambridge who also used Rosen, Denver is punishing builders working to help solve the housing crisis.
- Pilling v. City of Healdsburg CA (status: Settled in favor of Plaintiff 2024)
The Supreme Court determined in a quartet of rulings that governments cannot burden homebuilders with costs for problems they do not create. How does building more housing make housing more expensive? (see: Rosen’s nexus study). Taken together, those cases established that permit conditions for new construction must be proportional and directly related to its impact. Anything above and beyond is an unconstitutional property taking. Now that Sheetz has “kicked open” the door allowing for Nollan/Dolan heightened scrutiny for government exactions, developers and homeowners are taking note and, in the case of the Pilling, winning.
Revisiting Rosen (The Nexus)
In 2016, Cambridge issued a nexus study produced by David Rosen and Associates. Key findings included:
• Affordability has declined markedly in Cambridge since the inception of inclusionary zoning program.7
• Increased migration of high wage earners due to increased commercial growth in Kendall Square.
• Increased migration leads to decreased diversity and “continued decrease in proportion of lower-income residents if current trends continue.” 8
The “nexus” between residential development requiring an exaction of 20% is tied to the growth of the commercial sector. The result, and an odd conclusion in my opinion, is that because commercial development draws in more people who make more money and therefore can buy out existing homes in the city of Cambridge and displace existing residents, the City decided to levy the highest tax on the development of homes that would ameliorate displacement. The report uses exaggerated cap rates (4%) to reverse engineer viability and presents an outcome that was politically preordained. Rosen does try to backtrack slightly and states, “If the inclusionary housing provisions become so onerous as to make new residential development problematic, then new affordable units will not be created. As Cambridge looks to update the Zoning Ordinance, the city will need to balance these concerns.” 9 Hence the 5-year reassessment Cambridge declined to initiate or, to paraphrase CDD, just plumb forgot.
Conclusion:
Inclusionary zoning in Cambridge is at best a mixed bag. It is not certain whether it ever worked as advertised and certainly from 2016 on it has not. The City has asked small to midsized developers to play a game that the largest and most capable developers were and still are largely exempt from. Further, the lack of a defendable EFA, the “whoops” moment of forgetting to update the nexus study, the lack of follow through on any of the non-punitive recommendations within the Rosen report, and the long history of cutting deals with large developers ($5.7M paid in 2020 to remove a 25-unit obligation Biomed inherited and Special Permit PUD exemptions in perpetuity for Cambridge Crossing and other groups in 2016) all leave Cambridge vulnerable to legal challenges, as we saw in 2020 with Arnold Circle, a case that predates Sheetz. In my opinion, if you agree to build inclusionary units as part of your project at anything above 11.4% of gross area, you are a committing your capital and risk to a scheme that the City makes very few well capitalized groups commit to and, further, is likely a violation of the takings clause of the fifth amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Notes:
1 Multifamily Zoning Analysis
2 Email Tuesday, September 17, 2024 2:39:17 PM “Cambridge EFA Analysis” Attached Hereto.
3 Attached
4 EFA_Scenario Analysis Model Results (attached)
5 Rosen Nexus Study (2016)
6 U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
7 Rosen pg 6
8 Id. 38
9 Id. 56
Sources:
- Rosen Nexus Study 2016
- Chamber of Commerce Memo 2016
- Seidman Housing Report 2024, EFA, EFA Analysis and Methods, EFA Update
- Arnold Circle & Cambridge Day Article
- Supreme Court’s Sheetz decision casts doubt on validity of Massachusetts inclusionary zoning regulations (Nolan/Dolan/Koontz/Sheetz Primer)
- CDD’s May 12th Report on IZ
If these buildings do end up getting built because the 20% affordable mandate is declared fair and developers calculate that it’s feasible, what we’ll get stuck with in perpetuity is big cubes looming over their neighbors 5 feet from their side and rear fences, providing a tiny number of affordable units.
One of the problems with this zoning change is that most Cambridge residents don’t have to care about it, because they won’t be directly affected. But for the few people who live next to a developable site, it will have terrible effects on their homes. The purpose of zoning is to protect people from this, but the city has basically thrown zoning and all review processes out the window.
We were sold a bill of goods for the 4 -> 6 story “bonus” for meeting the affordable mandate. Any building over 10 units already had the affordable mandate before this, and it’s unlikely anyone would build a 4 story apartment building with less than 10 units.
Comment by Oliver Arnold — June 16, 2025 @ 3:04 pm
“The purpose of zoning is to protect people from this” This is incorrect. Zoning was never meant to protect you from residential development in a residential zone.
Comment by Patrick Barrett — June 16, 2025 @ 4:48 pm
The point of zoning is to protect people from negative effects of new development. To this end, height and setbacks are some of the main things that zoning regulates. This includes if the new construction is residential.
Why would you think that zoning was never supposed to protect people from residential development? Then why have there ever been restrictions on residential development in a residential zone? The new zoning throws this out the window, and we’re going to see the unfortunate effects very soon.
Comment by Oliver Arnold — June 17, 2025 @ 3:58 pm
Zoning has more to do with use regulation in its first inception than density. Your example of protection seems a bit subjective and more to do with a development scheme you do not like. Over the last few decades folks have manipulated zoning to freeze their neighborhoods in amber. Neighborhood groups and folks have spent decades stopping development and growth to the detriment of all and the current reaction you’re seeing and reacting to is the result of decades of pent up demand, obtuse regulations, and clearly a pay to win development scheme that has left us in a fairly cavernous housing deficit. My memo has more to do with IZ zoning which I believe is not fairly applied among developers and is likely unconstitutional.
Comment by Patrick Barrett — June 18, 2025 @ 7:47 am
Again, who says zoning is not about density? It absolutely is, and always has been.
Why would upzoning to 4 stories with 10′ setbacks, rather than 6 stories with 5′ setbacks, in neighborhoods full of 30 foot buildings, mean freezing neighborhoods in amber?
Comment by Oliver Arnold — June 27, 2025 @ 12:49 pm
Zoning includes density but isn’t only about density. The math for your reduced scheme would yield very little housing; if that is the goal.
Comment by Patrick Barrett — June 30, 2025 @ 8:40 pm
If my goal was to prevent adding housing, I’d advocate for a return to 35 foot height limits and bigger setbacks.
4 stories and 10 foot setbacks is a compromise that allows MANY more units on most lots, yet doesn’t seriously degrade existing residents’ homes and outdoor spaces by dwarfing existing buildings and preventing ever seeing the sky again out their windows. In fact, the vast majority of apartment buildings in Cambridge would meet this rule. The current changes were sold as allowing more of what we already have, and that’s what it would be.
Comment by Oliver Arnold — July 17, 2025 @ 12:04 am
In fact, Community Development’s Multifamily Design Guidelines https://www.cambridgema.gov/-/media/Files/CDD/ZoningDevel/OtherProjects/multifamilyhousing/multifamilydesignguidelines20250625final1.pdf share many of my concerns about providing increased setbacks on residential streets and step-backs on upper floors, to avoid blocking sunlight and sky views from shorter buildings, and reduce visual bulk. But there’s no reason for developers to pay any attention to them, since the actual zoning allows 6 story cubes 5 feet from the property line, without any sort of review.
Where was CDD leadership when the zoning was being written? Why didn’t they testify that the Council was making a mistake by not codifying these guidelines?
Comment by Oliver Arnold — July 17, 2025 @ 11:11 am
I have for a long time viewed zoning – and residential zoning in particular – to be a form of social contract. The single greatest investment most people will make in their lifetime is their home (well, at least for homeowners), and people make that investment with at least some reasonable expectations about the location. If you choose to buy a home in a lower density area because the zoning defines it that way, then even though zoning laws are not permanently set in stone there should be at least some expectation that things won’t change so radically or that changes should be done gradually over time.
I have attended more than a few Planning Board meetings over the years, and they always seemed to understand this. They did not like recommending zoning changes that would render conforming buildings nonconforming (typical with downzoning), and they generally preferred modest increases in height and density in any single zoning change.
Something has changed in recent years, and any notions of social contract or reasonable expectations are being eclipsed by ideologically driven top-down dictates. Moderation would be preferred – if for no other reason than it takes time for existing homeowners to adjust and to perhaps relocate if proposed changes are simply too much to take. I also think there are some elected officials who would like nothing more than to drive out existing homeowners in favor of government housing.
Comment by Robert Winters — July 17, 2025 @ 11:44 am
Oliver in response to your comment:
The building guidelines start on page 29 and most of it is layed out as aspirational. All buildings no matter where they are built strive for flow and may hit a few notes but rarely are able to hit them all especially in a built environment. Calling out developers really is just a tired trope that I think everyone who understands the issue is simply tired of. Its meaningless. Where was CDD leadership when the zoning was written? CDD wrote this zoning. CDD presented this zoning. CDD/Planning Board recommended it be passed. Why didn’t they testify? They did. Several times. Not once did they state the Council was “making a mistake.”
Robert Winters in response to your comment:
1) You may have viewed zoning as a social contract but it isn’t. It is a police power granted by the state that allows municipalities to regulate land use; nothing more. Now if you had moved to Colonial Williamsburg and were dismayed that a Block-Buster Video planted itself next to your butter churn I could see an argument in favor of your interpretation of what zoning is supposed to promise. However that isn’t what we are talking about.
2) For decades Cambridge Neighborhood groups have redlined, downzoned, and fought to limit residential growth in this city while simultaneously supporting vast commercial expansion. This was always going to come to a head. While existing homeowners who bought in the 60’s 70’s 80’s right up until the early aughts have enjoyed massive appreciation due in large part to both limited residential growth and vast commercical expansion. Where is the “social contract” in that? I’ve been to many a Planning Board meeting as well, and I respect the body, I’ve also heard absolute bullshit pour like out of that body with such wild inconsistency that I’ve adopted my own strategy with how to navigate it and ultimately ignore it in instances, like zoning changes, where I could close my eyes and write the script for their responses. We, as a city, lack intellectual consistency and often mask our real desire with virtue signaling and nonsense coded language hoping that a wink and a nod will work like is has for decades. However you are right, we have replaced this with a new ideology … at least that seems to be the current direction. We need growth, like all cities, and our old rule set was absolute ultra-conservative nonsense and everyone knew it.
3) I do not think Cambridge City Councilors want everyone to move. I do think they’re grateful that I do though (ha!). I do think there is a fatigue that is real when “neighborhood leaders” claim the mantle of speaking for all and often use anything but their real motivations as ballast for why nothing should be done ever and especially in their neighborhood. This is why commercial development in Kendall was so “easy” … there was like one person fighting it while the rest of the city’s property owners got to enjoy the reduced tax benefit of it. Now that chicken has come home to roost and the rest of the City needs to play ball … or not. However if you want to go back to the old scenario everyone is going to have to be honest about why instead of using groups they absolutely do not speak for as ballast.
Is the new zoning perfect? Nope. It is amazing to me the contempt CDD has for anyone but institutional developers. Its gross really; and lazy. However people are too focused on developers as being the prime evil they’ve boxed themselves into an ideological corner. Developers are the best friends this city has and no other profession is under as much unnecessary scrutiny. That has more to do with politics and bureaucrats that use them as a distraction from either their own bias or pure laziness. Now are there socialists on the Council who want government housing to rule all? Yeah, I think Jivan would be excited about that prospect but I do not think the other eight are so limited in their thinking. Which makes some of them even more disappointing because if they took a second to understand the issue they’d know that inclusionary housing is a mistake, that forcing studios and one beds is a short term win and long term loss, and that not being able to say that because of some ideological finger puzzle they’ve put themselves in is a long term loss for all of us.
Comment by Patrick Barrett — July 19, 2025 @ 3:11 pm