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Tag: peter durant

  • Homeowners demand relief from crumbling foundations

    Homeowners demand relief from crumbling foundations

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    Homeowners clamoring for state help as they deal with the hefty costs of fixing their crumbling foundations, which could eventually render their houses unlivable, called on Gov. Maura Healey Wednesday to wield her executive power to kickstart a potential solution.

    Advocates with Massachusetts Residents Against Crumbling Foundations say they want Healey to issue an executive order to create a committee to develop recommendations on providing assistance for those dealing with crumbling concrete woes. Those recommendations could form the basis for legislation on a relief plan and account, which advocates say would help people who are on the hook for hundreds of thousands dollars in repair or replacement costs for their deteriorating home foundations, caused by pyrite or pyrrhotite minerals.

    “We are asking for the ability to form a committee to start a captive insurance plan or start a plan that would allow us to get assistance to fix these foundations. We are mirroring a plan that’s already in place and working in the state of Connecticut — they’ve replaced over 1,000 homes,” said Cynthia Poirier, an assessor in Brimfield and Holland. “They use a $1 a month surcharge on homeowners’ polices, no more than $12 a year. The first year alone, if we were able to put that together in Massachusetts, we’d raise close to $22 million.”

    A Healey spokesperson did not directly answer a News Service question about whether the governor is willing to issue an executive order sought by advocates.

    “The Healey-Driscoll Administration recognizes the importance of providing support to homeowners whose concrete foundations are crumbling,” Healey spokesperson Karissa Hand said. “We will continue to work together with our partners in the Legislature to evaluate potential solutions that would provide relief to homeowners.”

    Financial relief proposals have failed to gain momentum on Beacon Hill, despite persistent lobbying from affected homeowners.

    The Senate, in its affordable housing bond bill, unanimously adopted an amendment that would have created a crumbling concrete working group and relief fund. The policy did not survive closed-door conference committee negotiations. Amendment sponsors, including Sens. Peter Durant, Ryan Fattman, Michael Moore and Jake Oliveira, joined with advocates outside the State House Wednesday morning.

    Advocates say more than 40 municipalities are affected by what they call the “crumbling foundation crisis” that stymies affected homeowners from selling or refinancing their houses.

    “My position is we have enough money to spend on so many other things and support so many other people, but we need to support the people that have been paying taxes in all of these towns, with these homes that are no fault of their own,” Monson Select Board member Peter Warren said. “And they’re not getting any support.”

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    Alison Kuznitz

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  • Boston’s Mass & Cass housing in use as state seeks shelter solution

    Boston’s Mass & Cass housing in use as state seeks shelter solution

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    BOSTON — Massachusetts’ immigration policies have made it a “magnet state” for new arrivals fleeing into the United States and policymakers ought to consider making the state “less attractive,” Republican Sen. Peter Durant said Sunday, as a rise in immigration is being felt around the country and becomes one of the top issues of the 2024 presidential election year.

    Republicans have proposed amending the state’s right-to-shelter law, a policy which — up until late last year — guaranteed qualifying families housing in the state’s shelter system. Lawmakers proposed changing the law to require that families have been in the state for a period of time ranging from a few months to a few years, in order to qualify for a spot in state shelters.

    Though the law remains in place and untouched, Healey capped the number of families guaranteed shelter at 7,500 last November, as the emergency housing system buckled under the weight of tens of thousands of new entrants, largely driven by new immigrants leaving war-torn or financially unstable countries.

    Durant, a newly-elected Republican senator from Spencer, said on WCVB’s “On the Record” Sunday that the right-to-shelter law is attracting more immigrants into Massachusetts than other states in the country, none of which have the same legal requirement.

    “It’s about making Massachusetts less attractive for those crossing the border,” Durant said.

    “You cross the border in Texas or New Mexico, wherever you happen to be, you’re greeted by a bunch of NGOs — nongovernmental organizations — that say, ‘Where do you want to go? You can pick a state, say, South Dakota, that doesn’t have any benefits. Or we can send you to Massachusetts where you get free housing, free health care, free food, free education, cash benefits. Where would you like to go?’”

    WCVB political reporter and co-host Sharman Sacchetti pointed out that the governor has capped the number of families it will shelter.

    “Well, I mean, she said that we’re going to have no more than 7,500 families, yet we just filled up the Melnea Cass arena, and now we’re looking at space in Fort Point. So I don’t think it’s — I don’t think we can trust the governor in some of the things she’s saying,” Durant said.

    The state closed the Melnea Cass Recreational Complex in Roxbury for community programming earlier this month to temporarily convert it into an overflow shelter with 100 beds for families placed on a waitlist for more permanent shelter. It was met with mixed reactions from the neighborhood’s residents.

    State officials have said they’re looking into the Fort Point area of Boston near the Seaport District for the next overflow shelter.

    Converting the Roxbury community center to an overflow housing site was the first time statewide that a building already in use has been tapped for shelter, Boston Mayor Michelle Wu said on another Sunday show, as a guest on @Issue on NBC Boston.

    Boston had been doing its own search for space that could be turned into shelter for the growing population of homeless individuals in the city, mainly concentrated around the intersection of Melnea Cass Boulevard and Massachusetts Avenue in the South End.

    “We in some ways have already been doing this search ourselves for the last two years as we’ve been primarily addressing Mass and Cass, the type of homelessness that’s often connected to substance use that local municipalities are often uniquely responsible for,” Wu said.

    She added that Boston serves the whole state in helping house this population, many of whom come from other parts of the state into the capital for services related to drug use.

    “We had identified every single vacant school building, other city building, much of it was put to service to address that larger crisis of individual adult homelessness and substance use as well, we’ve been seeing some major progress there,” the mayor said.

    Over the last year and a half, the city opened nearly 200 units of low-threshold housing — spaces that provide counseling and case management services for people with histories of substance use disorder or who are chronically homeless. Wu’s administration propped up these shelters as a housing option for folks living in tents on the street, before clearing the area around Mass and Cass of homeless encampments.

    Now, 25% of that previously created low-threshold housing is being used for newly-arrived immigrants through the state-run emergency housing program as the family shelter system has overflowed, Wu said Sunday.

    “We’re seeing that impact at all levels,” Wu said.

    The mayor added that almost 90 children living in the state’s family shelters have been enrolled in Boston Public Schools. They’ve been connected to schools within walking distance that had empty seats and go to school in cohorts with other children in their same situation.

    “They have been getting to school in a walking bus, where everyone kind of holds their hands with their parents and gets to school. There’s been a lot of community support with volunteers and neighbors providing extra clothes for those who might not be prepared for this weather, and other supports for the young people,” she said.

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    Sam Drysdale

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