As State Lawmakers Look to Boost Housing, Zoning Remains a Pitched Political Battle in Rhode Island

House Speaker Joe Shekarchi made housing a priority, but some towns object to losing local control

Charlestown Town Planner Jane Weidman displays a map of development around the town’s salt ponds.
Charlestown Town Planner Jane Weidman displays a map of development around the town’s salt ponds.
Ian Donnis/The Public’s Radio
1 min read
Share
Charlestown Town Planner Jane Weidman displays a map of development around the town’s salt ponds.
Charlestown Town Planner Jane Weidman displays a map of development around the town’s salt ponds.
Ian Donnis/The Public’s Radio
As State Lawmakers Look to Boost Housing, Zoning Remains a Pitched Political Battle in Rhode Island
Copy

As Rhode Island tries to accelerate progress in taming its housing crisis, zoning changes remain a flashpoint for conflict.

Jane Weidman, the town planner in Charlestown and legislative liaison for the Rhode Island chapter of the American Planning Association, said “there’s a lot of resentment” between local planners and state officials.

“It’s been an adversarial position instead of a collaborative position,” Weidman said. “There’s this idea up at the Legislature that things have to come down from the top: ‘We need state mandates.’ There’s the whole issue of overriding local land use control, which is, I think, where a lot of the tension is.”

The measure was a top priority for House Speaker Joe Shekarchi and Gov. Dan McKee signed it into law last week after years of political battle.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Handful of candidates emerge with declarations due May 29-30
Updated complaint asks federal judge to reinstate work visa, allow for immigration court proceedings for Dr. Rasha Alawieh
Supporters say the proposed course would empower students by centering underrepresented histories, despite political pushback from the Trump administration
Facing a $34 million budget deficit and a student body half the size it was in 2011, the Providence-based university says layoffs—mostly at its flagship campus—are needed to stabilize finances
At least 27 percent of staff who worked at NOAA’s Northeast Fisheries Science Center when Trump took office are no longer with the agency. The Woods Hole lab is at the center of the regional fisheries operations
Joint study panel wants to increase the state’s five school bus districts to nine
The ACLU argues the Trump administration’s revival of the Alien Enemies Act to remove Venezuelans, including a Central Falls barber with a pending asylum claim, is unconstitutional and dangerously overbroad