To the editor:
I am writing in response to the recent article titled “Affordable housing in Nahant meets resistance.”
That headline does not accurately capture what many residents objected to at Town Meeting.
Article 17 was not simply a vote on whether Nahant supports affordable housing. It was a vote on whether to create an Affordable Housing Trust with appointed trustees and broad powers, including the ability to buy, sell, own, lease, and manage property, guarantee loans, and potentially employ staff. The article itself noted that voters rejected the proposal after debate over “expanding housing tools while maintaining public oversight.” It also reported that concerns were raised about the Trust’s “broad powers” and the fact that its members would be appointed, not elected.
Those are governance concerns. There are oversight concerns. There are accountability concerns.
Many residents fully understand that Nahant has housing challenges. Seniors may want to downsize. Young families may want to stay. Teachers, first responders, veterans, and working residents face real affordability pressures. Those concerns deserve serious attention.
But good intentions do not eliminate the need for clear guardrails.
If the Town wants an Affordable Housing Trust, residents should know exactly how it would operate, who it is intended to serve, what actions require Town Meeting approval, how local preferences would work within fair-housing law, and what limits would apply to real estate transactions and funding decisions.
A more accurate description of the vote would be this: Nahant voters rejected the proposed Trust because they were not satisfied that the article provided enough public oversight, accountability, or clarity.
That is not resistance to affordable housing. That is, residents are asking for a better, more transparent proposal before handing broad authority to an appointed board.
Candace Cahill
Nahant



