This blog post digs into Connecticut’s 8-30g affordable-housing statute, the way it actually shapes towns from Old Saybrook to New London, and the current scramble among lawmakers to change the policy as the housing market gets tighter.
It looks at how the 10% benchmark, those 40-year deed restrictions, and a patchwork of local responses all play out in real life.
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Overview of 8-30g and the current debate
Connecticut adopted statute 8-30g back in 1989. Since then, towns with less than 10% affordable housing have had to justify any denials of projects with deed-restricted units.
These restrictions usually last 40 years. Developers can challenge local decisions if a town’s affordable stock stays below the threshold.
Right now, about 31 towns are exempt from 8-30g. Around 76 municipalities have added affordable housing, but roughly 74 have actually lost ground.
This year, lawmakers are looking at a dozen or so bills to tweak the statute. They’re debating everything from how moratoriums work, to what “affordable” even means, and which units should count.
Advocates like Connecticut Legal Services and Open Communities Alliance say 8-30g is vital. They believe it genuinely creates affordable units and supports other inclusionary policies.
But critics—including some municipal leaders and lawmakers—argue the law undercuts local control and just doesn’t make sense for rural places with limited infrastructure. The debate is everywhere: East Lyme, Groton, Waterbury, Danbury, Old Saybrook, Norwich, you name it.
Ideas on the table include letting modular homes count, assigning value to units with fewer restrictions, and pausing projects during certain appeals. It’s a lot to untangle.
Why towns struggle to reach the 10% benchmark
Town leaders say the numbers just don’t add up easily. Even when new units go up, the 40-year deed restrictions and 10% target feel almost impossible without really aggressive programs.
Connecticut’s patchwork of exemptions and geography means one-size-fits-all solutions don’t really work. Take Old Saybrook: the First Selectman claims hitting the affordable-housing goal would take a flood of deed-restricted units.
Meanwhile, New Haven, Bridgeport, and Stamford all face different headaches—urban density, infrastructure strains, the works. Hartford and Norwalk worry about how growth impacts schools and roads, while Danbury and Waterbury try to preserve neighborhoods as they expand options.
What lawmakers are proposing
Legislators are mulling a bunch of changes to 8-30g. They’re talking about tweaking moratorium rules, redefining “affordable,” changing the 40-year restriction, and deciding what units should count.
Some want to let modular homes count toward the goal. Others think towns should get a right of first refusal on affordable projects, or want to limit development during appeals.
Advocates worry some bills might water down the statute by including non-restricted or barely affordable units, or by making moratoria easier to get. The debate cuts across places like Greenwich, West Hartford, Middletown, Norwich, and New London, with every community pushing for something that fits its own reality.
Impact on Connecticut communities
The state’s housing market has gotten way tighter, and new bills aim to address that without giving up local control. Hartford and Bridgeport have always struggled with affordability, but now Stamford and Norwalk are facing higher prices and not enough rentals.
Smaller towns like Old Saybrook and Greenwich are trying to keep their character while still making room for needed development. New Haven and Danbury are stuck balancing density and infrastructure.
On the coast and inland, Groton and New London show how coastal policy choices can ripple through the region’s economy. The numbers are pretty stark: active listings dropped from almost 18,000 in 2019 to just over 3,100 in early 2026.
Rental vacancies have been falling since the 1990s. It’s a squeeze, no matter where you look.
Town-by-town snapshots
Connecticut’s story is anything but simple. In Essex and Clinton, worries about water and schools shape every development debate.
Over in Fairfield County, towns like Bridgeport, Stamford, and Norwalk push for inclusionary zoning to ease opposition, while Hartford and its neighbors focus on transit and neighborhood investment.
Groton works with regional partners to steer growth toward places with existing infrastructure. Middletown and New London are hunting for affordable options close to jobs.
People across these towns seem to agree—Connecticut needs policy tweaks that respect local realities, but don’t lose sight of the bigger statewide goals.
What’s next for Connecticut housing policy
Lawmakers keep tweaking the bill landscape, aiming to expand affordable housing while still letting towns call some of their own shots.
Everyone’s watching the next phase, which probably depends on whether folks can agree about modular-counting, moratorium rules, and what really counts as affordable.
For people living in Hartford, New Haven, Bridgeport, or smaller spots like Old Saybrook and Groton, it’s not just a numbers game. The real question is whether these policies actually help out in their own neighborhoods.
Honestly, the hope is that Connecticut becomes a place where people can actually find housing—without losing the quirks and strengths that make each town feel like home.
Here is the source article for this story: CT’s affordable housing goal remains out of reach, data shows
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