A privately initiated proposal to change Durhamโs zoning ordinance has lost the support of one of its own applicants, Habitat for Humanity of Durham, who last Tuesday requested that its name โbe removed from all documents regarding this process and applicationโ in a letter addressed to Durhamโs city council and board of county commissioners.
Itโs a major hit for the proposalโSimplifying Codes for more Affordable Development, or โSCADโโwhose proponents have frequently cited Durham Habitatโs cosign as a credence that SCAD will deliver on its promise to broaden affordable housing opportunities.
As the INDY previously reported, SCAD has drawn heavy criticism in the ten months since it was submitted for approval by Durham Habitat and Raleigh developer Jim Anthony, with local leaders and community members arguing that the proposal would relax regulatory compliances in a manner that worsens gentrification and displacement.
For SCADโs proponents, who say the proposalโs sweeping changes would open doors for local developers who are currently thwarted from creating affordable housing, Durham Habitatโs involvementโas both an applicant and an advisor to the team of writers Anthony hired to compose and revise SCADโhas been a key talking point, until now.
“Providing affordable housing in decent communities should be a matter of conscience and action for all,” wrote Carleena V. Deonanan, the chair of Durham Habitatโs board of directors, in the March 7 letter to Durhamโs city council and board of county commissioners. “Our support for the SCAD proposal was given in that spirit and belief. The Board of Directors is committed to gathering more information about the text amendments, reevaluating our partnerships, and carefully consider the overall community impact.”
Durham Habitat will still be named on the SCAD application, though its change of heart will be indicated in the proposalโs final form, according to an email INDY Week obtained via a public record request.
“We cannot remove Habitat from the application itself as we do not have authority to modify someone’s application,โ Durham planning director Sara Young wrote to the nonprofit on March 7. โInstead we will remove mention of Habitat from the staff memo and add the letter you provided as an attachment since the application is attached as well. That should make it clear what has occurred.”
Habitat did not immediately respond to the INDYโs request for comment on the impetus behind its withdrawal of support.
The letter was sent just 13 days before SCAD was scheduled to go to the city council for a vote. Two days later, though, on March 9, the council agreed to postpone SCADโs public hearing, originally scheduled for March 20, during its work session. The new public hearing will likely take place sometime in May.
Mayor Elaine OโNeal and council members Monique Holsey-Hyman and DeDreana Freeman said they need more time to comprehend and deliberate the proposal, noting its length and complexity.
โThis is unprecedented,โ OโNeal said. โWeโve really not had this type of text amendment, omnibus, given to us like this. Once again, I go back to: let us make sure we understand what is being asked of us.โ
OโNeal also said the public hearing should be scheduled on a date that has ample time for โresidents to come forward, as well as the development community.โ
The work sessionโs public comment period included statements from five InterNeighborhood Council (INC) representatives who have spent the past month formulating an in-depth report on SCAD. The representatives highlighted some of their concerns around the proposalโnamely, SCADโs creation of a program that would offer incentives for developers to create affordable housing while only requiring the housing to remain affordable for five yearsโand requested that the council โrestore some balance to this processโ by affording the INC an hour โto go through this proposed ordinance and explain our concernsโ to the council at a later date.
Freeman supported the idea.
โIt does raise serious concerns that weโre not hearing from such a vibrant organization in our community that is fully volunteer,โ Freeman said, noting that the INC represents more than 30 communities in the city and county. โIf theyโve created a subcommittee, and theyโve had that many meetings and created a report, it feels unjust [if weโre not] hearing out what they want to share.โ
Council members Mark-Anthony Middleton and Leonardo Williams said they were willing to reschedule the public hearing but pushed back on the INCโs request, raising concerns around the precedent it would set to give one community group โspecial accessโ to the council.
โI think itโs important that if weโre gonna change the public hearing, itโs because we as councilors need more time and bandwidth to educate ourselves and to digest this voluminous amendment,โ Middleton said. โ… [not] because one particular organization said โwe want an hour.โโ
The mayor and council members did not acknowledge Durham Habitatโs withdrawal of support at the work session, despite presumably receiving the organizationโs letter two days prior.
Read Habitat’s letter below.
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