The state wants to encourage mid-density development to ease the housing crisis and provide a wider variety of housing options for residents.

A new ‘Homes for All Toolkit’ released in March by the Vermont Department of Housing and Community Development aims to streamline and clarify the development process for missing middle housing. Amy Love Tomasso describes the toolkit for Congress for New Urbanism.
The document provides a guide for small-scale builders and community leaders, highlighting the benefits of small and mid-sized multifamily housing projects.“These home types, which include accessory dwelling units (ADUs), duplexes, small-scale multi-household buildings, and neighborhood-scale mixed-use/live-work buildings, are rooted in Vermont’s traditional development pattern and the New England vernacular style.” Yet over the last century, these traditional housing types have been legislated out of existence.
According to Tomasso, the toolkit “is the start of a movement to bring missing middle housing back to Vermont communities, an opportunity to grow a new generation of developers who value ‘return on community’ as much as return on investment.”
The state plans to pre-approve plans for four different missing middle housing types to make permitting and building easier and more affordable. While cities like Los Angeles have done this at the local scale, Vermont would be the first to issue a statewide pre-approved plan set.
FULL STORY: Vermont is bringing back missing middle housing

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The legislation seeks to cut down on ‘absurd’ citations for low-level violations.

New Tennessee Law Allows No-Cost Incentives for Affordable Housing
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Planners’ Complicity in Excessive Traffic Deaths
Professor Wes Marshall’s provocatively-titled new book, "Killed by a Traffic Engineer," has stimulated fierce debates. Are his criticisms justified? Let’s examine the degree that traffic engineers contribute to avoidable traffic deaths.

Study: Housing Crisis is About Affordability, not Supply
New research shows that there is no overall shortage of housing units, but all U.S. metropolitan areas face a severe lack of affordable units for low-income renters.

Are Race-Based Lawsuits Affecting Community Lenders?
Shelterforce spoke with community lending leaders and experts about the current mood across the sector. What, if anything, are organizations doing to avoid becoming the next target of conservative activists?

New Park Promotes Community and Connectivity in Lewisville, Texas
The city of Lewisville just celebrated the opening of Glory Park/Parque la Gloria, helping to improve park access and the quality of life for residents.
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HUD's Office of Policy Development and Research
Chaddick Institute at DePaul University
HUD's Office of Policy Development and Research
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