Dear Lincoln,

I'm sorry I don't know how to reply to a thread on Lincoln Talk
directly - but I wanted to reply to the one that started as you see
below.

It is misleading to say being against Option C is being against new
development. None of the people I have talked to dislike Option C
because they don't want any new development. In fact they all support
reasonable development. The Option C rezoning proposal is not
reasonable for Lincoln.

I hope all of us considering Option C first explore the Lincoln
Station area to see the variety of multi-family zoning that exists
there now. Go check out the Flying Nun apartments, Lincoln Woods, Ryan
Estates and more. This housing came through 2/3 votes at Town Meeting
over many years. You won't see the same level of housing in Carlisle,
Weston or other similar towns that also provide home to wildlife and
let people live in and around nature.

Solution: Eighty five -100 units could be added at Lincoln Mall with a
separate proposal from RLF at Town Meeting. In this climate, a modest
proposal of 85-100 units would most certainly pass by 2/3 vote. More
than likely RLF would have 15% of the units be affordable.

Option C is not that modest proposal. With Option C we would be
rezoning the small section of Codman Rd between 117 and Lincoln Rd to
allow 180 units of housing instead of 11. With Option C HCAWG proposed
rezoning to allow an estimated 454 additional housing units and
estimated 900 cars. Under HCA rezoning guidelines there can be no
affordability requirements. Add to the picture multiple new traffic
lights, cars going down Tower Rd via Waze, and buildings and
nightlights impacting the wildlife corridor. Rezoning to meet HCA
state level guidelines needs to be very thoughtful, and Lincoln can do
better than Option C, if it chooses.

Housing advocates, who also care about Lincoln's wildlife corridors,
affordable housing and aren't blind to all the housing we already have
in the Lincoln Station area, can vote against Option C and still have
pride in themselves and Lincoln. Lincoln's leaders can propose an HCA
rezoning option focused on the Commons that wants to expand anyway.
RLF can propose 85-100 units at the Mall. We do not need to completely
change Lincoln for us, the new residents and our wildlife if we rezone
and add housing thoughtfully.


*I am replying to the post that started this way*

*Hello LincolnTalkers,*

*I do not wish to rub salt in anybody’s wounds, and I certainly
understand the anxiety around the possibility of change, but I’d like
to remind everyone why the Housing Choice Act was enacted, not in the
first place, but as a last resort.  *

*In many of Boston’s surrounding suburbs, there have been decades of
resistance to providing more housing using techniques such as local
zoning restrictions, concerns about traffic counts, burgeoning school
populations, declining property values, and increased taxes to support
additional services, etc.  And now, I hear the argument that we won’t
have enough affordable housing if we allow any new development.*


-- 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Barbara Peskin

*My Moments in Nature Photo Gallery: barbarapeskin.com
<http://barbarapeskin.com>*
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