Massachusetts Supreme Court Upholds MBTA Communities Act

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BOSTON–On January 8, 2025, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court issued its much-anticipated opinion in Attorney General v. Town of Milton, et al, Nutter said in a legal advisory.

“The SJC upheld the MBTA Communities Act as constitutional and found that the Attorney General has the power to enforce it consistent with her broad powers to enforce the laws of the Commonwealth and to protect the public interest,” the Nutter advisory said. “The Act, among other things, requires communities serviced by the MBTA to allow as-of-right multi-family housing within a half-mile of a transit station—an important tool in addressing the state’s ongoing housing and homelessness crisis. The SJC found that the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities’ guidelines, however, are ineffective because they were not promulgated in compliance with the Administrative Procedure Act, G.L. c. 30A. Accordingly, the agency’s guidelines must be promulgated as regulations in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act before they may be enforced.”

Nutter filed an amicus brief in support of the MBTA Communities Act on behalf of the Massachusetts Housing and Shelter Alliance, Father Bill’s and Mainspring, the Planning Office of Urban Affairs, and the United Way of Massachusetts Bay, according to Nutter legal advisory.

This advisory was prepared by Matt Connolly, Valerie Moore, Matt Snell, and Sarah Turano-Flores in Nutter’s Real Estate Department.

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