Municipal League: Housing reform could strip authority from local communities
(The Center Square) – The Illinois Municipal League says a new proposal for housing reform could allow the state to take zoning control away from local communities.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker introduced the Building Up Illinois Developments plan during his budget address on Wednesday and said local regulations have made it too costly and difficult to build new housing.
“This is an ambitious slate of reforms designed to eliminate unnecessary barriers and lower costs for housing construction, produce a wider range of family-friendly housing types and streamline construction processes,” Pritzker said.
Illinois Municipal League CEO Brad Cole expressed concern that the governor’s proposal would take control over housing away from local communities.
“So it removes the local land use zoning authority from the planning commission or zoning board or city council, and it strictly dictates those parameters in state law,” Cole told The Center Square.
Pritzker said rent is too high and home ownership is too far out of reach, but Cole said the governor’s proposal addressed a lot of things that don’t affect the cost of housing.
“Issues with the number of stairs that are in an apartment building or the setback distance around single-family homes or allowing new development on individual lots, a number of those things, including maybe the timeline for inspections, don’t add a lot of cost to housing,” Cole said.
The IML CEO said inflated housing costs are affected by the price of goods and services and actual construction costs.
Cole said local officials are doing everything they can to incentivize home ownership and housing development.
Chicagoland Apartment Association Executive Vice President Michael Mini said the BUILD Illinois proposal represents a meaningful step toward modernizing the state’s housing policy framework.
“By streamlining zoning restrictions, allowing for greater development, reducing barriers such as lengthy permitting timelines, and investing in infrastructure, BUILD Illinois moves the conversation toward practical, long-term solutions that expand housing supply,” Mini said in a statement.
Mini also said that increasing taxes, fees or regulatory hurdles would drive up costs, reduce development and limit the supply of quality housing.
###
Latest News Stories
Everyday Economics: Fiscal reality meets Central Bank caution in week ahead
Tariff uncertainty here to stay regardless of Supreme Court ruling
Nearly 1M without power as massive winter storm rages
Walz deploys 1,500 National Guard troops in Twin Cities
Will County Commits $15M to Transfer Sanitary District Operations to City of Joliet
GOP looks to hold, expand U.S. House majority
Noem defends fatal shooting of armed man in DHS confrontation
Govt. funding process close to finish line as Senate preps for final vote
Trump threatens 100% tariffs on Canada over China deal
Attorneys review Chicago Teachers Union audits following congressional request
DHS: ICE agent shoots, kills armed Minneapolis man; protests erupt