Politics
Many Massachusetts residents agree: Housing is an issue within the commonwealth. However additionally they agreed on some measures to repair it.
Housing is a significant situation in Massachusetts, in response to a brand new ballot, and doubtless a no brainer to anybody who has tried trying to find an inexpensive residence in the previous few years within the commonwealth.
However what do residents assume state lawmakers ought to do in regards to the rising drawback? The newest UMass Amherst/WCVB ballot took a better take a look at not simply the issues that concern residents, however at which options may have robust assist.
Practically three quarters of the ballot’s 700 respondents both “strongly” supported or “considerably” supported each hire management and constructing extra low-income housing.
“The principle takeaway is that residents are actually involved with the housing disaster as seen in an important phrase cloud, and that almost all residents are supportive of insurance policies that present extra housing and decrease costs,” mentioned Tatishe Nteta, director of the UMass ballot.
The ballot reported that 9% of respondents strongly opposed hire management, 7% considerably opposed it, and 13% answered neither. As for constructing extra low-income housing, 5% strongly opposed it, 7% considerably opposed it, and 17% neither supported nor opposed it.
When requested if respondents supported extra low-income housing of their group, robust assist shot as much as 47%, in comparison with 43% for robust assist on the whole. However those that strongly opposed it of their group additionally went as much as 18%.
Respondents additionally expressed extra assist than not for tax breaks that may assist builders flip empty industrial buildings into housing.
The group that administered the ballot additionally identified excessive assist for the “proper to shelter” regulation — which requires the state to supply housing to sure homeless households — with a mixed 63% of respondents who both strongly supported it or considerably supported the regulation.
That result’s although extra respondents than not mentioned the migrant disaster was not being dealt with nicely in Massachusetts, in response to the ballot knowledge launched Monday.
When requested who they assume is accountable for the migrant disaster within the state, extra respondents blamed President Joe Biden, Republicans in Congress, and the state legislature. Solely 5% blamed Gov. Maura Healey, and 6% pointed fingers at Democrats within the U.S. Senate.
One other drawback that respondents didn’t blame on Healey, whose approval ranking was 58%, was transit. A mixed 62% of respondents mentioned they thought present MBTA management was at fault, or they didn’t know who was at fault. Solely 7% blamed Healey, and a fair decrease 5% blamed Mayor Michelle Wu.
Transit points had been one of many greatest issues among the many 700 respondents in Monday’s ballot outcomes. Damaged down additional, respondents who dwell in Middlesex, Norfolk, Suffolk, Bristol, Worcester, and Essex counties had been requested to fee the efficiency of the MBTA, with 28% saying the standard was “honest” and 24% calling it “poor.”
These are each slight will increase in comparison with the proportion of respondents who described the MBTA as honest and poor in April 2023, the final time this ballot was carried out.
Solely 4% described the MBTA service as “wonderful” and 14% mentioned it was “good.” When requested to explain the MBTA in a single phrase, the phrase used probably the most was “unreliable.”
Respondents had been additionally requested if they’ve considered leaving Massachusetts up to now 12 months, and 38% mentioned sure — only one% decrease than April’s consequence. The most typical states talked about as locations they’ve thought of transferring to had been Florida, North Carolina, New Hampshire, and Maine.
Among the many causes folks have thought of transferring had been the state’s liberal politics, the notion of extra alternatives elsewhere, the assumption that the federal government is corrupt or overbearing, and the excessive value of dwelling.
The ballot was carried out by YouGov, an information and analytics group, who interviewed 788 folks from Massachusetts. The pattern was lowered right down to 700 respondents, who had been interviewed from Oct. 13 to twenty. The UMass Amherst/WCVB ballot has a margin of error of 5.1%.
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