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NC lawmakers block Outer Banks towns from regulating new affordable housing

The Marc Basnight Bridge spans the Oregon Inlet connecting Bodie Island and Hatteras Island on March 25, 2022. The bridge is a crucial piece of infrastructure for hurricane evacuation.
Madeline Gray
/
For WUNC
The state legislature recently allocated $35 million to Dare County to build new affordable housing. But the contractor hired by the county to build a 400-unit development has faced opposition over the locations it’s considering for the project.

Six towns in Dare County have filed a lawsuit to block part of the state budget bill that bans them from regulating a new affordable housing development.

Most residents of the Outer Banks are aware that the area has an affordable housing problem. As coastal real estate prices go up, the people who staff the area’s schools, restaurants and shops are getting priced out.

Dare County Commission Chairman Robert Woodard frequently hears those concerns.

"We get phone calls after phone calls after phone calls," he said at a recent meeting. "And I want you to hear the lady and the child on the phone crying that they don't have a place to stay."

The state legislature recently allocated $35 million to Dare County to build new affordable housing. But the contractor hired by the county to build a 400-unit development has faced opposition over the locations it’s considering for the project.

One of the proposed sites is in Nags Head near Jockey’s Ridge State Park.

"The town and the community felt like the property they were looking at was not the right location for it," town manager Andy Garman said. "And so the town has gone back and looked at its zoning with respect to where the appropriate locations for multifamily would be."

Garman said he got no warning that state lawmakers were thinking about taking away the town’s power to decide. But a provision buried deep in the recently enacted state budget bill stated that the Dare County affordable housing project will be exempt from local zoning regulations. That means no public hearings and no opportunity for the community to shape the details of what the housing development would look like.

"That would not allow us to regulate any projects regarding in any aspect of a project in terms of height, setbacks, density, lot coverage, all those things that the town's planned for fairly carefully," Garman said.

Dare County Commissioners got an earful about the law at their latest meeting.

"Dare County needs affordable housing," Nags Head resident Debbie Carrara said. "And you can't win — not really win — without the support of the towns, and bulldozing doesn't count as winning."

But County Manager Bobby Outten said Dare County leaders didn’t ask legislators for the exemption. "We didn't ask anybody to lobby for that," he said. "We didn't get involved in that. We didn't have anything to do with having that."

A draft version of the budget provision obtained by WUNC lists Rep. Keith Kidwell, R-Beaufort, as its sponsor. He represents part of Dare County and didn’t respond to an inquiry about his role in the process.

House Speaker Tim Moore confirmed that the language was added at the request of legislators from the area. All of Dare County's legislators, with the exception of Kidwell, have told media outlets they weren't involved.

"There were apparently some issues, I guess with zoning, so they wanted language put in there so the housing could be built," Moore said.

Moore’s office later emailed a statement that said he’s willing to repeal the budget provision — and take back the $35 million allocated for the project.

"If local communities no longer support addressing the affordable housing crisis in the Outer Banks, then I support repealing this provision and redirecting the funds to other state priorities," he said.

Opponents of the law suspect that the developers themselves lobbied lawmakers. Partners in the company, Coastal Affordable Housing LLC, include Jordan Hennessy, a former staffer at the legislature, as well as Aaron Thomas and his Robeson County construction company, Metcon.

Hennessy donated $4,500 to Kidwell’s campaign last year and $5,600 to Moore's campaign. Thomas also donated thousands to Kidwell, Moore and other Republican lawmakers last year.

Some speakers at the county commission meeting, such as Wanchese resident Amy Stone, mentioned Hennessy, who is also involved with a company that got a dredging contract from Dare County.

"He is a principal in the corporation, and he will personally benefit financially from that piece of legislation," Stone said. "It is at best unethical, at worst, possibly illegal and may be corrupt."

Hennessy did not respond to a request for comment.

The Dare County towns filed a lawsuit against the state, arguing the exemption from local regulations is unconstitutional. The lawsuit said that the constitution prevents the legislature from passing laws that don’t apply uniformly throughout the state and the budget provision only applies to one project in Dare County.

"The Dare County Local Act is designed to allow a private party the ability to construct a multifamily housing project of unprecedented and unequaled scale, size, density, intensity and which otherwise is contrary to the comprehensive land use plan and other local policies," attorneys for the towns wrote, adding that the law may be "an unconstitutional taking of property...without due process and without just compensation."

The lawsuit is now pending in Wake County Superior Court, but County Commissioner Robert Woodard said there’s no plan to use the new law to block local regulations.

"We're not coming to any town and trying to shove anything down a town's throat with respect to their ordinances and issues concerning housing," he said. "This board would never do that."

Dare County Manager Bobby Outten told WUNC that the developers will have to get further approvals from county leaders before they can begin building the housing project.

"The county has committed to working with the towns, and has always committed to working with the towns to solve the affordable housing problem in the county," he said. "Nothing has changed about that."

Colin Campbell covers politics for WUNC as the station's capitol bureau chief.
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