Solve our Housing Crisis & Revitalize Our Communities

Making Housing Affordable and Revitalizing Communities

The below is a summary of Nick’s plan to solve the housing crisis and revitalize communities.  You can read Nick’s full plan – The Dream and Deliver Framework here.  It is the most comprehensive plan for housing in the County’s history. 

Check out his One County Initiative to see his vision for your community here

Nick’s vision to make Baltimore County more affordable, inclusive and modern, for everybody, starts with housing.  

Baltimore County has something for everybody—from 200 miles of tidal shoreline and hiking trails to a global logistics hub and leading colleges and universities.  And it used to be that families from all walks of life could come and start a life here and help write the next chapter of Baltimore County’s story.  However, that promise is slipping away.  

Too many families are being squeezed by rising costs, low wages and a housing crisis that’s pushing dreams out of reach and forcing hard choices every single day. 

Today, one third of Marylanders spend over a third of their income on housing—or are “cost burdened.”  For renters, over half of them are cost burdened, with the average age to buy your first home at 40.  This ranks us 43rd in the country for housing affordability. 

But it’s not just those who are looking for homes that suffer.  It’s those who are happy with their homes too.  Just last year, we saw property tax assessments jump by 25% in Baltimore County.  This isn’t sustainable and will push out neighbors on fixed incomes.  

Our housing challenges are the consequence of a political culture that clings to outdated systems. From “councilmanic courtesy” to our “APFO” law, these rules have fractured our ability to plan as One County and forced families to struggle.

Under the status we have seen:

Families are stretched thin.  College students graduate and move away.  Public servants—nurses, teachers, police officers, firefighters—can’t afford to live in the communities they serve, lowering morale.  Seniors can’t live close to their grandkids or age in the communities they’ve built. 

This is a crisis. We cannot afford more of the same.

Nick’s One County Housing Reform Plan– The “One County” Initiative

We have the opportunity to deliver real reform to County government—to make it smarter, more modern and more transparent.  We can turn this moment of crisis into a movement for change and unlock investment all throughout our County.  We can finally solve our housing crisis while revitalizing communities from every zip code.  Nick has a vision and has laid out a pathway to vibrancy and prosperity for every region of the county. Read about your area here

Nick’s plan is based on a fundamental truth:  We are “One County,” more than the sum of our parts, be it the Southwest, North County or the East Side.  And we need to act like it. 

We have everything we need to accomplish a better future for Baltimore County together. 

Change the Culture of County

On day one of his Administration, Nick will bring action that declares “Councilmanic Courtesy” is unconstitutional.

This practice allows each councilmember to control everything that happens in their district, like a fiefdom chief even when the Planning Department or the Planning Board makes a different recommendation

Create Radical Transparency with HousingStat

Make Decisions Using a Master Plan

Make It Easier to Deliver Mixed-Use Projects

Most other jurisdictions understand that people want to be able to live, work, play and learn all in the same place. This is what Nick envisions for places like Security Square Mall, Pikesville, Liberty Road, Lutherville Station, Eastern Boulevard, White Marsh, East Point Mall and so on.

We will:

Prioritize Post-World War II Communities & Build $200K Starter Homes

Baltimore County has many communities dating back to World War II like Baltimore Highlands, Lansdowne, Dundalk and Essex, among others.  These offer some of the most affordable homes in the County, but they desperately need reinvestment.

We will: 

System Improvement: Rebuild the Permitting Process

We must ensure that every department from Permits, Approvals and Inspections to Environmental Protection and Sustainability, to Public Works are all fully engaged and working collaboratively to make prompt, actionable decisions. 

To get there we will:

Overturn the County Council’s Housing Ban

While APFO laws can be used as a tool to guide smart growth, the Council’s amendments turned ours into a weapon against growth.  

We will overturn the APFO championed by Councilman Patoka and clear the way for new housing initiatives and school infrastructure projects so that our communities and BCPS are supported. 

Prioritize Community Development Organizations

Baltimore County has a number of community development organizations (“CDOs”) throughout the County.  CDOs are community-led nonprofits that develop strategic plans for their areas and then apply for and distribute grant funding for revitalization projects to implement that plan. CDOs are the tip of the spear when it comes to building trust and revitalizing communities. 

We will:  

Fix Impact Fees

The County government enacted “impact fees” in 2019, the council continues to undermine the value of these fees by approving exemptions and passing legislation in 2024 that did nothing to address that loophole. 

We will veto any efforts by the council to provide unearned exemptions from developers and work to restore common sense in the collection of these fees. 

Right now, it’s about who you know—and how well you understand the County’s byzantine web of laws, regulations and rules. 

When we implement our One County initiative, this will change.  It’ll be about the merit of your idea and the value you’ll add to our County writ large.

 

 

Local governments must hunt for smart growth | GUEST COMMENTARY

We must dispel the myth that local governments should be passive actors in development projects, Nick Stewart and Tom Coale write.

This practice is holding Baltimore County’s future hostage | GUEST COMMENTARY

Baltimore County Council’s “councilmanic courtesy” is suffocating the region’s future prospects, writes Nick Stewart.