Connecticut Passes The “Affordable” Housing Law”This is just political theater to preserve unaffordability in desirable townsConnecticut Passes The “Affordable” Housing Law” November 17, 2025 Where I grew up in rural western Pennsylvania, the value of a house was determined by its structure, maintenance requirements, the number of bedrooms, the number of bathrooms and acreage. But in Connecticut, housing values are determined by three things, “location, location and location.” My family has the good fortune of living in Fairfield. The streets are safe; the schools are fine and there is a beachfront on a lake within walking distance. We have pristine beaches that overlook The Sound, two Audubon Society parks for birding, excellent restaurants (although overpriced), the Fairfield Theater Company and a train that gives us access to New York City, Boston and even Washington D.C. It doesn’t matter who wins the local elections. The town is run either by Republicans or Democrats who think like Republicans. Fiscal responsibility is the norm.
In order to force the desirable towns to build more affordable housing, the Connecticut legislature passed Law 8-30g requiring all towns to provide at least 10% of their housing to be affordable. Towns that refused could not use their zoning regulations to stop developers from building housing as long the development was 30% affordable. Thus, the Connecticut Legislature recently passed HB 5002 where liberals prevailed in making it much easier for the state to repeal town zoning laws. But reaction was quick and furious from the wealthier towns and Governor Ned Lamont, eyeing reelection in 2026, vetoed it. The resulting special session weakened the law. 2. Make the streets safe. At present, crime is not tolerated in wealthy towns and those who are arrested are treated severely. The same does not apply to crime committed in our poorer cities. Allowing carjackers to be freed without bail or career criminals to continue to ply their trade destroys housing values in our inner cities. 3. Stop the generous subsidies for Section 8 Housing. Section 8 is a well-intentioned plan that allows the state to subsidize the rental income to landlords so that our poor citizens can have place to live. The problem is that these subsidies have become so generous that landlords are buying houses in towns like Bridgeport because they can make a profit renting them out to the poor. This escalates housing prices and pushes the poor out of the market. 4. Lower property taxes in the cities. Our cities are run by Democrats who have given municipal unions competitive salaries with huge benefits such as outstanding health insurance and generous pensions, even with early retirement. The result, taxes on houses are astronomical. In Hartford, taxes are 6.90% of a house’s assessed value whereas in Darien, it is 1.76% Thus a house in Hartford assessed at $500,000 has an annual tax of $34,500 whereas a house of the same assessment in Darien is $8,800! This is not only unfair, it is insane. 5. The Federal Reserve has to stop printing money. Obviously, our state officials can do little about this, but our Congressman and Senators need to speak out on this issue. Flooding our economy with fiat money has resulted not only in unaffordable housing for many, but asset bubbles in gold, silver, the stock market (especially tech stocks) and cryptocurrencies. This will not end well. Read Dr. Bentivegna’s books for free: Two novels on Fairfield County politics and race relations, The Lords of Greenwich and Respect. Dr. Bentivegna’s year in Haiti as a young doctor. The Neglected and Abused: A Physician’s Year in Haiti. Follow on Twitter (X); @joebentivegnamd |