Rhode Island
Town uses eminent domain to stop private affordable housing project
Happy Tuesday, and welcome to another edition of Rent Free. This week’s stories include:
- The housing policy implications of President Donald Trump’s (possible) trade war with Canada and Mexico.
- Whether state legislatures will kill the “build-to-rent” boom
- How the Fair Housing Act came to protect your right to an emotional support parrot
But first, a story about how Rhode Island’s new law intended to increase new housing construction is running into a very old power used to stop it.
Rhode Island Town Using Eminent Domain To Stop Affordable Housing Project
The town of Johnston, Rhode Island, is going to extreme measures to prevent a privately financed affordable housing project from being built under the state’s newly revamped density bonus law.
At a special meeting last Thursday, the Town Council authorized the use of eminent domain to seize a 31-acre site currently owned by developer Waterman Chenango LLC. The eminent domain resolution calls for creating a “municipal campus” on the site to replace its aging town hall, police station, and fire station.
The seizure would have the very much intended side effect of stopping the exiting owner from going forward with its current plan of turning the land into a 252-unit housing development.
Johnston’s existing zoning code allows for medium-density residential development on the site in question. The owner had proposed to make use of recent changes to the state’s decades-old Low and Moderate Income Housing Act to build even more units.
In 2023, the Rhode Island Legislature passed amendments to that state law to allow developers to build up to 12 units per acre on water- and sewage-connected parcels if all the units are “low- and moderate-income housing”—meaning rents are capped by a formula that incorporates family-size and area median income.
Projects that meet those income limits also receive relief from local minimum parking requirements and density restrictions. Localities are limited in their ability to turn down these projects so long as less than 10 percent of their housing units don’t qualify as “low- and moderate-income housing.”
You are reading Rent Free, Christian Britschgi’s weekly newsletter on urban issues. Want more coverage of urban regulation, development, and zoning from a free market perspective? Sign up for Rent Free. It’s free and you can unsubscribe any time.
The state law’s density bonus was generous enough (and rent caps high enough) that Waterman Chenango was able to propose a 100 percent “affordable” project that required no tax subsidies.
The number of units they were proposing proved to be a major sticking point with Johnston Mayor Joseph Polisena.
Shortly after Waterman Chenango filed its development application, Polisena issued a public letter in which he promised to use “all the power of government” to stop the project.
“No one expects this land to sit idle forever. We’re more than willing to support reasonable development, and single-family homes,” said Polisena in his letter. “If you pivot in that direction, I can assure you the town will roll out the red carpet.”
But new apartments on the site would create a “trifecta of chaos” from new traffic, new students, and drainage problems, the mayor said.
In that letter, Polisena said that he would challenge the constitutionality of Rhode Island’s Low and Moderate Income Housing Act to stop the project if necessary.
A few weeks later, he was saying the town needed to take the land to replace its dilapidated public facilities.
“[The mayor’s] primary purpose is clearly to block this project,” says Kelley Morris Salvatore, an attorney representing Waterman Chenango. Plans for a municipal campus had “literally never been discussed publicly ever before” her clients proposed their project, she says.
She says that while they are still in the early stages of the eminent domain process, she presumes her clients will accept an “appropriate” amount of money to sell their land and forgo their housing project.
The U.S. Constitution says that governments can only seize private property for “public use” and they have to pay “just compensation” when they do.
A new town hall and police station would pretty clearly satisfy that “public use” requirement.
State courts have reliably struck down “pretextual” takings of property, where the government’s stated “public use” rationale for seizing some land was not its actual reason for doing so. The U.S. Supreme Court recently declined to hear a case that might have given victims of seeming pretextual takings more protections from eminent domain.
Provided the town of Johnston is willing to pay just compensation for the land, it’ll likely be able to stop Waterman Chenango’s project. The only losers are the people who’d have lived in the new units and the taxpayers forced to pay for a “municipal campus” that might or might not materialize.
The Housing Implications of Trump’s (Maybe) Trade War
Last week, President Donald Trump announced that he’d apply a blanket 25 percent tariff on all imports from Mexico and Canada.
Whether these tariffs will actually go into effect, and whether they’ll be as comprehensive as the president initially said, remains to be seen. It appears that the implementation of these tariffs will be at least temporarily paused after Canada and Mexico agreed to increased border security activity.
Homebuilders are still sounding the alarm.
On Friday, the National Association of Home Builders sent Trump a letter highlighting the cost-increasing consequences of tariffs on home prices.
“Builders rely on components produced abroad, with Canada and Mexico representing nearly 25 [percent] of building materials imports,” wrote NAHB Board Chairman Carl Harris. The association said that 70 percent of softwood lumber comes from Canada and 70 percent of gypsum (used for drywall) comes from Mexico.
The costs of imported building materials have increased substantially since the beginning of the pandemic.
“Imposing additional tariffs on these imports will lead to higher material costs, which will ultimately be passed on to home buyers in the form of increased housing prices,” said the association.
The NAHB issued a statement praising Trump for delaying tariffs on Monday.
The federal government has little direct control over state and local land use rules that do so much to limit housing construction and drive up housing costs. It nevertheless controls a lot of other policy levers that can make housing more (or less) expensive to build.
On the campaign trail, Trump and the GOP offered a number of positive-sounding policy proposals related to housing affordability—including allowing home construction on federal lands and reducing federal environmental regulations that increase building costs.
The risk was always that those elements of his agenda would be undercut by protectionist trade policies that raise building costs and immigration policies that result in much of the country’s construction work force being deported.
In the first couple weeks of his presidency, it appears those latter, cost-increasing parts of his agenda are winning out.
The Build-To-Rent Boom Collides With the War on Corporate-Owned Housing
Last week, Point2Homes, a part of property management software company Yardi, released a report showing a boom in the construction of new, single-family rental housing units.
Per the report, some 110,000 single-family rental units are under constructions nationwide. Nearly one-fifth of these units are being built in Texas, with significant numbers also being built in Arizona and Florida.
Before the Great Recession, it was typical for most single-family homes to be built for sale to owner-occupiers. Built-to-rent single-family housing was a marginal percentage of new homes being built each year.
The number of new single-family rentals has been climbing quickly in recent years, according to Mercatus Center Senior Affiliated Scholar Kevin Erdmann’s May 2024 research brief on the topic.
Per Erdmann’s numbers, built-to-rent single-family housing has gone from 3 percent to 4 percent of new single-family housing to over 10 percent in the last couple of years. The Point2Homes numbers show this trend is only accelerating.
Erdmann argues the rise of corporate-owned built-to-rent single-family home communities is the natural consequence of decades of policy that restrict new housing construction.
Zoning and land use rules have stymied developers from building infill rental apartments in existing cities. Post–Great Recession restrictions on mortgage credit have prevented owner-occupiers from financing new single-family homes. Enter large institutional investors, who are buying made-to-order, built-to-rent single-family subdivisions.
But the rise of corporate-owned single-family rentals hasn’t been without controversy.
Politicians on the right and left have criticized institutional investors like Blackstone for buying up existing homes and pricing out traditional owner-occupiers.
It’s a rare issue that unites Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, J.D. Vance, and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott.
At the federal, state, and local levels, politicians are proposing policies that would either heavily tax corporate-owned housing or ban it outright.
Erdmann notes in a recent Substack that bills targeting corporate-owned single-family homes have been introduced in nine states, including booming build-to-rent states like Arizona and Texas.
“Builders are just starting to ramp up single-family neighborhoods that they are selling as a whole to investors. As I read them, these bills will kill it in the cradle,” he writes.
How the Fair Housing Act Created Emotional Support Parrots
I wrote the cover story for Reason‘s latest print issue about how the Fair Housing Act has been interpreted over the decades to protect a tenant’s right to emotional support parrots.
The parrots in question are from a high-profile 2024 case in New York City, in which the U.S. Justice Department successfully sued a building cooperative over its eviction of a longtime resident because she kept three (reportedly quite noisy) emotional support parrots in her apartment.
The resident had claimed that she needed the parrots to help with her depression and anxiety. Thus, she was entitled to a “reasonable accommodation” from her building’s antiparrot policies, as required by the Fair Housing Act.
The U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York agreed and forced the building to cough up a settlement totaling some $770,000.
Federal requirements that landlords make reasonable accommodation to their housing policies to ensure the disabled have equal access to housing dates back to the late 1980s.
As I explain in the piece, the universe of things that could be considered a “reasonable accommodation” has been expanded by federal regulatory guidance and fair housing lawsuits to include tenants’ right to keep an “emotional support animal” (ESA) that would otherwise be prohibited by pet restrictions or no-pet policies.
In a few of these early fair housing cases establishing this right to an emotional support pet, the landlord in question is a real jerk. In a few others, the tenant is insisting on a truly unreasonable accommodation for a dangerous or unusual animal no one would want to live next to.
The main impact of grouping emotional support animal protections into the Fair Housing Act is less severe but the rise of sketchy online ESA letter mills that openly advertise their services as a way of getting around landlords’ pet policies.
It’s not a state of affairs that well serves either landlords or people who might legitimately require an emotional support animal. You can read all about it here.
Quick Links
- A new report from the Niskanen Center and the Institute for Progress proposes depriving large cities of affordable housing tax credits if they don’t liberalize zoning rules for all housing projects.
- Legislators in New Mexico introduced a bill to repeal the state’s ban on local rent control policies.
- Grants Pass, Oregon—the town that gave its name to the Supreme Court decision allowing local governments more freedom to sweep homeless encampments—has been sued again for sweeping a homeless encampment. Street Roots has the details.
- Inside air used to be hot and dirty. At Asimov Press, Larissa Schiavo breaks down the technological changes that made it more comfortable.
- Slate gives advice to a person who very curiously decided to buy a house when it would have been about half as expensive to rent one, and now needs to move. The advice asker says that, in addition to rent not covering their mortgage, they feel “extremely morally ambivalent” about being a landlord. Their own financial situation—where local rents are half the cost of homeownership—would seem to highlight the productive value landlords can provide to society.
Rhode Island
Man killed in RI shooting; suspect involved in Mass. car crash that killed 2 others
A man has died after a shooting in Cranston, Rhode Island, and investigators say a suspect was later involved in a car crash in Swansea, Massachusetts, that killed two other people.
The shooting victim was found Thursday on Legion Way, shot multiple times in the chest, Cranston police told NBC affiliate WJAR-TV. He was taken to Rhode Island Hospital where he later died. His name has not been released.
The suspect initially fled on foot, setting off a shelter-in-place order while investigators searched the area.
Police said Friday that investigators identified a suspect vehicle, which was later spotted by Massachusetts State Police. A trooper followed the car down Route 6 and Interstate 195, but stopped when it crossed back into Rhode Island. The car was later involved in a crash on Route 136 in Swansea, Mass.
Swansea police say that crash on Route 136 (James Reynolds Road) resulted in the deaths of two other people.
According to the Swansea Police Department, two officers saw a white Infinity G37 speed past them around 12:18 a.m. Friday on Route 6, otherwise known as Grand Army of the Republic Highway. Moments later, officers observed that the vehicle had crashed into the side of a blue Subaru Ascent that had been traveling southbound on Route 136.
Both vehicles sustained catastrophic damage, police said.
The vehicle that was struck was fully engulfed in flames. First responders and bystanders tried to extinguish the fire, but both occupants — a man and a woman — were pronounced dead at the scene, police said. Their names have not been released.
The 28-year-old Infinity driver, who struck the victims’ Subaru, was taken to Rhode Island Hospital with serious injuries and later into custody by Cranston Police. They have not been publicly identified at this time.
Swansea police said they are aware that the Infinity was the subject of a police pursuit, and know the driver was wanted in connection to the Rhode Island homicide investigation. While Swansea police had been alerted to be on the lookout for the suspect’s vehicle, however, they say they were not involved in the pursuit and were not pursuing the vehicle at the time of the deadly crash.
The crash in Swansea is under investigation by Massachusetts authorities, including state police and the Bristol County District Attorney’s Office. Meanwhile, Cranston police said they would give an update on their investigation around 1 p.m.
Rhode Island
RI House speaker unveils housing bills for 2026. What to know
House Speaker Shekarchi unveils 2026 RI housing legislative package
House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi’s nine-bill package for 2026 seeks to cut red tape and relax rules on parking, dividing lots and staircases.
House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi is once again taking aim at the regulations he says are stifling new homebuilding.
The Warwick Democrat unveiled his sixth annual suite of housing legislation on Thursday, Feb. 26, a few weeks after announcing he would not be running for governor this year.
“We are still trying to play catch-up for all the years that Rhode Island was dead last in the country for new housing starts,” Shekarchi said. “While Rhode Island remains a relatively affordable option for people moving here from other states, our own residents are too often priced out of the neighborhoods they grew up in.”
The legislative text of the nine-bill housing package, and with it the specifics of how it would work, were not available for Thursday’s news conference.
But highlights of the package, according to summaries, include:
- Infill housing. Allow property owners to divide lots in single-family zoning districts, creating multiple dwellings instead of one, provided they have water and sewer service.
- Parking maximums. Put new limits on how much off-street parking communities require for new apartment buildings.
- Homeless Bill of Rights. Expand the state’s Homeless Bill of Rights to require 15-day notice to the occupants of encampments before local authorities clear them.
- Emergency shelters. Let communities build temporary shelters, such as the ECHO Village Pallet shelter in Providence, during a state of emergency.
- Stairs. Legalize the construction of four-story apartment buildings with a single staircase.
- Affordable housing taxes. Overhaul the tax system for income-restricted housing covered by the state’s “8 Law.”
Is land-use reform working?
Since Shekarchi was elected speaker in 2021, the General Assembly has passed dozens of bills he backed that tweaked state land-use statutes or streamlined the process for building.
How successful this approach has been is subject to debate.
Many local elected officials wary of development in their communities continue to rail against efforts to erode their power over construction.
Others in the growing Yes In My Back Yard movement see Rhode Island’s piecemeal approach as inadequate in comparison with the scale of the affordability problem and what other states are doing.
As evidence that his changes are making a difference, Shekarchi said Rhode Island saw a 70% increase in building permits in 2023 and a more modest increase in 2024. (Statistics for last year were not immediately available.)
Gov. Dan McKee’s 2030 plan calls for 15,000 new housing units built by that year.
Democratic primary challenger Helena Foulkes is slated to roll out her housing plan on Monday.
It is expected to include a millionaires tax to fund affordable housing, a revolving fund and target of 20,000 new homes.
What would the new laws do?
Letting property owners put multiple homes on a plot of land is one of the most direct ways that lawmakers can encourage the construction of more homes, but it is also one of the most controversial.
That’s especially true in areas zoned for large lots and single-family homes.
How far the new bill allowing lots to be subdivided in single-family zones goes is unclear. It is sponsored by Rep. Stephen Casey, D-Woonsocket.
Legislation setting maximum parking requirements for new developments, introduced by Rep. Joshua Giraldo, D-Central Falls, would apply to areas accessible by public transit.
Critics of off-street parking requirements say they make it harder to build new apartments and make the units that are built more expensive.
Shekarchi proposed the emergency shelter bill last year. It passed the House and died in the Senate.
It was the result of how long it took state officials to navigate Rhode Island’s building code and open the ECHO Village Pallet shelter in Providence.
The staircase bill, sponsored by Rep. June Speakman, a Warren Democrat and chair of the House’s home affordability study commission, follows a wave of cities and states relaxing rules on how many exits are required in new construction.
Currently, the state building code requires two stairways in buildings with more than three stories, and fire officials have opposed all efforts to change that.
Speakman’s bill would allow four-story buildings with a maximum of 16 units with a single staircase.
Supporters of single-stair buildings say they allow development of small sites that would otherwise sit vacant and allow family-sized units with more light and better ventilation.
A previous Rhode Island single-stair bill would have allowed six stories, but it died in committee.
Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey signed an executive order in mid-February to study the idea.
Rhode Island
One of Africa’s soccer giants will be based in Rhode Island for the World Cup – The Boston Globe
Providence has positioned itself as an alternative to Boston, one of the official host cities for the 2026 competition. Located just 30 miles away from Gillette Stadium — or “Boston Stadium” as it will be known during the World Cup — Rhode Island’s leaders have been touting the tiny state as more-affordable for fans and closer to the action. Seven matches, including a quarterfinal, are scheduled to be played in Foxborough.
“Today we announce that Ghana will be staying in Providence and we’d also like to extend an invitation to the fans and families to come to our city,” said Providence Mayor Brett Smiley in a statement on Thursday. “We are committed to being a festive destination for soccer fans from around the world.”
The news has created excitement among the local Ghanaian community in the state.
Kwame Larbi, the president of the Ghana Association of Rhode Island, said Ghana’s decision will be a chance for people to celebrate the West African country’s culture through its soccer team and an opportunity to see what successful Africans look like on a grand stage.
“The Black Stars represent everything Ghanaian. They are Ghana’s pride and joy, our strength, perseverance, and freedom,” he said. “Hosting the Black Stars at Bryant would mean so much for our community. More specifically, our youth. Representation is everything.”
Larbi said the local community plans to show out for the team with traditional Ghanaian dances at Foxborough when they face England on June 23.
“We will all be in our Ghana T-shirts, Ghana flags and our drums,” he said. “I just came from Ghana. My shirts are ready.”
This is the fifth time that Ghana has qualified for the World Cup. Their best showing was in 2010, when they reached the quarterfinal after defeating Team USA only to be eliminated when Uruguay prevented them from scoring in extra time with an intentional handball on the goal line. The team boasts some world-class talent who compete in top leagues around the world, such as star players Mohammed Kudus, who plays for the English Premier League team Tottenham Hotspur, and Antoine Semenyo of Manchester City.
Larbi is bullish about Ghana’s chances at this year’s tournament.
“We are going to beat England. It’s a big name, but we have hope. We are going to surprise everyone, and with the spirit of brotherhood and all, we are going to be successful,” he said.

Rhode Island Congressman Gabe Amo said his father, who hails from Ghana, is excited about the team being based in the state.
“The first thing he texted back to me upon the announcement was ‘Nice. Exclamation point. Buy me a ticket,‘” he said. “There’s a lot of immigrants and immigrant kids who are going to feel some special feelings across the weeks that Ghana has us as their home base.”
Amo said he hopes Ghanaian fans from places such as Worcester, Mass., and New York City will join their compatriots in Rhode Island and create a vibrant atmosphere in the state.
“This is a big deal for our state. We get to showcase all the things that make us special — our food, our amazing Rhode Island summer and our people — to Ghana,” he said. “So it’s going to be great soccer … and it’s going to be a great setting for the World Cup.”
State officials say that the team’s training sessions will be closed to the public, but the country’s football association was planning some events with young players in the state.
“We’re working hard to ensure that the FIFA World Cup leaves behind a legacy of passion for the sport and a commitment to growing the game of soccer in Rhode Island. Partnering with the Black Stars will fuel these young players’ passion,” said Jonathan Walker, executive director of the Rhode Island Sports Commission.
For Larbi, he said Rhode Island’s Ghanaian community is ready to prepare some jollof rice for the team. He has lived in Rhode Island for more than 40 years and he never thought that he would see his country’s national team be based in the state for such a huge tournament.
“It has never occurred to us that one day the Ghana Black Stars will be based in Rhode Island…competing for the World Cup,” he said. “It’s not only Ghanaians, but it’s for the whole of Africa.”
Omar Mohammed can be reached at omar.mohammed@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter (X) @shurufu.
-
World2 days agoExclusive: DeepSeek withholds latest AI model from US chipmakers including Nvidia, sources say
-
Massachusetts2 days agoMother and daughter injured in Taunton house explosion
-
Montana1 week ago2026 MHSA Montana Wrestling State Championship Brackets And Results – FloWrestling
-
Oklahoma1 week agoWildfires rage in Oklahoma as thousands urged to evacuate a small city
-
Louisiana5 days agoWildfire near Gum Swamp Road in Livingston Parish now under control; more than 200 acres burned
-
Technology6 days agoYouTube TV billing scam emails are hitting inboxes
-
Denver, CO2 days ago10 acres charred, 5 injured in Thornton grass fire, evacuation orders lifted
-
Technology6 days agoStellantis is in a crisis of its own making