AN ACT RELATING TO EDUCATION -- FEDERAL AID
SB 430 sets regional housing gaps and requires jurisdictions with gaps to expeditiously approve housing to reach a 1.5 jobs per housing unit target, with court enforcement.
SB 430 sets regional housing gaps and requires jurisdictions with gaps to expeditiously approve housing to reach a 1.5 jobs per housing unit target, with court enforcement.
Status: Introduced January 20, 2025 (Administration bill) — Effective date: January 1, 2026 (per fiscal note)
Summary
- SB 430 establishes a statutory framework to measure regional “housing infrastructure gaps” and to require local jurisdictions with such gaps to expedite approval of housing projects. The goal is to bring each region’s jobs‑to‑housing ratio to 1.5 or less (i.e., no more than 1.5 jobs per housing unit).
Key provisions
- Regional calculations and annual reporting (DHCD + MDP)
- By January 1 each year, the Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) and the Department of Planning (MDP) must publish, for six designated regions:
- total housing units; total jobs by place of work; jobs‑to‑housing ratio;
- number of housing units needed for the region to reach a jobs‑to‑housing ratio ≤ 1.5; and
- the regional housing infrastructure gap (existing units vs. needed units).
- Regions are predefined (e.g., Baltimore region, Washington Suburban, Southern Maryland, Western Maryland, Upper Eastern Shore, Lower Eastern Shore).
Apportionment to local jurisdictions
Approval standard where a local gap exists
Acceptable justifications for denial (examples)
Court enforcement
Gap reduction credit
Who is affected
- State agencies: DHCD and MDP (annual data, apportionment duties).
- Local governments: counties and incorporated municipalities will receive quantified local gaps and face new approval obligations and potential court enforcement.
- Developers and transit/affordable housing proponents: likely accelerated permitting where local gaps exist; multiplier for affordable/transit‑adjacent units incentivizes targeted production.
- Utilities, schools, and infrastructure planners: may face increased demand and planning pressures where capacity constraints are used as denial justifications.
Implementation timeline & fiscal notes
- Annual publication required by January 1 each year, starting after the bill takes effect.
- Effective January 1, 2026.
- Fiscal impact: State agencies can implement with existing resources; local revenues and expenditures may increase in certain jurisdictions. The bill imposes a mandate on local governments and is expected to have meaningful impacts on small businesses (per Administration and Department of Legislative Services analyses).
Potential impacts and considerations
- Intended to spur housing production near jobs and transit, and to encourage affordable housing.
- May constrain traditional local land‑use discretion and increase litigation between developers and jurisdictions.
- Infrastructure and school capacity constraints are explicitly recognized but must be demonstrated with objective evidence to justify denials.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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