Sweeping Affordable Housing Reform Signed Into Law in New Jersey

On March 20, 2024, Governor Phil Murphy signed what could be the most significant and impactful affordable housing reform legislation in New Jersey since the original enactment of the Fair Housing Act (FHA) in 1985 in A4/S50 (the “Law”). After the New Jersey Supreme Court declared the Council on Affordable Housing (COAH) “moribund” in 2015, municipalities and developers, as well as interested advocacy groups, have been engaged in constitutional compliance litigation in an attempt to determine how best to create realistic opportunities for the construction of affordable housing. These various cases resulted in a large number of settlements across the state, with some very public and prolonged litigation still pending.

The Law is quite comprehensive and takes effect immediately. It applies to each new round of affordable housing obligations beginning after enactment of the Law, so it will apply to the Fourth Round, which commences on July 1, 2025, and for each 10-year period thereafter. In the immediate term, under the Law as signed, the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs (DCA) has an affirmative obligation to create its estimates for prospective and present need obligations no later than October 20, 2024, and municipalities must affirm their obligation (or calculate their own) no later than January 31, 2025. Developers and interested parties then have a narrow window in which to challenge these obligations and intervene through the newly created Affordable Housing Dispute Resolution Program (the “Program,” discussed below), if needed.

Developers, municipalities, and interested parties should review this legislation closely and make sure to note the upcoming dates for compliance and review. Gibbons’s experienced affordable housing attorneys presently work with developers and municipalities alike to determine obligations and strategic approaches for compliance.

According to a report released by the National Low Income Housing Coalition, New Jersey currently has a deficit of more than 200,000 affordable housing units. In an attempt to accelerate and incentivize the prompt creation of affordable housing in the next round of compliance (i.e., 2025-2035) and beyond, the six bills signed create a method for streamlining the litigation approach with something more akin to an administrative process to review and approve municipal housing elements and fair share plans, as well as determine their compliance with the Mount Laurel doctrine. The economic incentives component of this legislative package will be reviewed in a subsequent post.

The Law creates a new method of determining and reviewing constitutional compliance for municipalities, and will require developers and interested parties to engage early in the process if they are interested at all in helping to craft approaches for compliance. Among other things, the Law: