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Poll: Housing, Transportation Costs Pushing People Out Of Massachusetts

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By Chris Lisinski

One in five Bay Staters envisions themselves leaving Massachusetts for another state within the next five years, according to a new poll that found a sizable majority of residents burdened by high housing costs.

More than seven in 10 residents surveyed by the MassINC Polling Group said the amount they pay on housing each month is “somewhat of a burden” (34 percent) or a “very big burden” (37 percent). Eighteen percent of those polled answered housing when asked to name the single biggest issue facing state government, tied for the highest share with migrants and immigration.

And when pollsters asked if participants saw themselves moving in the next five years, 21 percent said they could see themselves leaving Massachusetts altogether.

Among residents who said both their housing and transportation costs pose a “very big” burden, 38 percent are thinking about leaving Massachusetts in the next five years, a higher share than the overall population, pollsters found.

The results are unlikely to come as a surprise on Beacon Hill, where lawmakers are facing pressure from constituents, business leaders and interest groups to boost the housing supply and deliver more affordable options. Previous efforts have done little to slow the trend of rising prices, and lawmakers hope that more state borrowing alongside some policy reforms will finally unlock much-needed production.

MassINC conducted the poll on behalf of advocacy group Transportation for Massachusetts, which has long pushed for more state investment into public transit. Pollsters surveyed 1,408 Massachusetts residents between June 12 and June 30, and they oversampled 300 residents of so-called Gateway Cities and 100 residents of Boston’s Mattapan and Hyde Park neighborhoods.

“The high cost of housing is the biggest crisis facing Massachusetts families — especially renters who are struggling to get by amid skyrocketing rents and high transportation costs,” Rose Webster-Smith, executive director of Springfield No One Leaves and a co-anchor of Homes for All Massachusetts, said in a statement MassINC included with its poll results. “Our state’s housing and transportation systems are failing to meet the basic needs of Massachusetts families, and status quo solutions won’t fix them.”

On the transportation front, 41 percent rated the state’s system in “fair” condition. Five percent called it “excellent,” 28 percent called it “good” and 25 percent called it “poor.” Forty-seven percent of respondents said the public transit near where they live is good enough that they can rely on it, compared with 38 percent who said it’s insufficient.

Respondents were most likely to give Gov. Maura Healey and lawmakers middling grades on transportation. About a third rated Healey’s work on transportation a “C,” the highest share of any letter grade, and the same was the case for their review of how the Legislature has funded transportation infrastructure.

Participants were also most likely to see a status quo at the MBTA under General Manager Phil Eng, who started on the job in April 2023. Twenty-two percent said they think the T is getting better during his tenure, 17 percent said they think it’s getting worse and 43 percent see the agency “about the same as it has been.”

One major transportation reform that’s on the verge of becoming law appears to have broad appeal. The House and Senate voted as part of their compromise fiscal 2025 state budget to fund fare-free trips at all of the state’s 15 regional transit authorities (but not the MBTA), and nearly three-quarters of the residents polled by MassINC strongly or somewhat support the idea.

Pollsters found respondents were more likely to support than oppose a range of strategies to generate new funding for transportation projects, or at least to examine the options.

They told participants that in London and Paris drivers pay a fee to enter central business districts, and recounted the history of New York Gov. Kathy Hochul pausing congestion pricing in New York City on the eve of its launch. Asked if Massachusetts should study “ways to use congestion pricing to reduce traffic and raise money for public transit in and around Boston,” 50 percent said yes and 36 percent said no.

Another question noted that other states allow cities and towns to vote on whether to raise local taxes for transportation projects, but Massachusetts does not. Sixty-eight percent of residents said the Bay State should allow local votes on local taxes for transportation, compared to 19 percent who said no.

Forty-seven percent said businesses with “a certain number of employees” should pay a payroll tax to help cover commuting costs, compared to 35 percent who opposed that idea, and 58 percent backed real estate developers paying part of the transportation costs near projects they build, compared to 25 percent who do not want that.

Those ideas and many others to overhaul how government pays for transportation appear all but certain to remain on Beacon Hill’s backburner until at least next year. No major action on new transportation revenues is expected this legislative session, although the Legislature this year may decide how to allocate a surplus of income surtax funds on education and transportation initiatives.

“This survey confirms that housing and transportation are not separate issues; they are deeply interconnected,” said Transportation for Massachusetts Executive Director Reggie Ramos. “Residents are experiencing these as combined, intersecting crises. Housing affordability and transportation connectivity to opportunities impact quality of life and can exacerbate inequality. Our public officials must take steps to solve them jointly and immediately.”

The poll’s margin of error is plus or minus 3.2 percentage points.

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7 Comments

7 Comments

  1. Fed Up

    July 23, 2024 at 10:27 am

    Blame the Democrats running this state into the ground and the morons who keep voting them in. And please do NOT look to them for solutions. They’re the reason we’re in this mess. The American dream is dead in this state along with liberty. Why would anyone want top stay here? It’s the second most expensive state to live in besides Hawaii plus factor in the morons on Beacon Hill just voted to make lawful gun owners felons in waiting with blatantly unconstitutional gun laws. This state sucks period. Terrible roads , high taxes ,crime , housing prices only wealthy can afford , rents through the roof! It’s no wonder Mass residents are fleeing more-and-more each year.

  2. Gary

    July 23, 2024 at 11:22 am

    “Thinking”
    Excellent points by ‘FED UP’, other reasons people leaving the State, it is ‘California East!’
    People’s ‘Constitutionals Rights’ are “Optional” when it comes to the #2nd Amendment, States new
    Gun Laws. Eventually it will be overturned by the SCOTUS, but MA Taxpayers will pay significantly for the State to defend it. Fried Foods harm more people than Guns.

    MA now one of the most ‘Expensive States to live in’, plus do to this Awful Economy some on Fixed Incomes only having one Meal a Day, and Cereal is now their main food option.

    Plus the Gov.Healey Admin/Billions for “Open Borders” Folks, most Family’s now House holds three jobs, keep ‘Paying the Freight for the DEMS lunacy!’

    ”Their goes another” ”UHAUL Leaving Blue State ‘Massghanistan’!”
    “Massachusetts Democrat Governor Maura Healey ‘Approves Millions in New Spending’ on ‘Illegal Immigrants’ as Residents Flee State”
    https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2024/05/massachusetts-democrat-governor-maura-healey-approves-millions-new/

  3. Gary

    July 23, 2024 at 11:28 am

    It’s the Dems, Economy, especially “Massghanistan”!
    Taxpayers keep on PAYING the FREIGHT, or move?
    Most are moving, soon just Rich & Poor in ‘Massghanistan”.

    ”WELCOM BACK PRES. CARTER YEARS!,SPEECH, ECONOMY, FOR THOSE WHO REMEMBER!”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ryJTLdJ6kRI

  4. Gary

    July 23, 2024 at 11:42 am

    “Read It And Weep USA/MA Hard Working Taxpayer’s”

    ”Here’s what a Kamala Harris administration could mean for your Wallet”
    With Kamala Harris as the front-runner to replace President Joe Biden as the Democratic nominee in the 2024 election, here’s what to know about where she stands on key money issues.

    Harris has supported legislation and advocated for policies regarding retirement, taxes, workers’ compensation and more.
    https://www.cnbc.com/2024/07/22/heres-what-a-kamala-harris-administration-could-mean-for-your-wallet.html

  5. JB

    July 23, 2024 at 3:06 pm

    The Dems in this State just keep passing laws and give aways that make the cost of living higher for anyone with a job. No wonder working people are bailing out at an alarming rate. Not only that but there actions take away freedom one inch at a time. Their theory is that if they just increase the heat a little at a time no one will notice that the water is cooking them till it is too late.

  6. RedPilled

    July 23, 2024 at 8:58 pm

    Massachusetts is now the second most expensive state to live in only Hawaii is more expensive. My family has already made a decision to leave as soon as our youngest child graduates high school next year. If it weren’t for that we would have left already.

  7. ?

    July 24, 2024 at 7:16 am

    All I now is if harris wins I’m out of Massachusetts and probably the United states. We are tried of working to death for absolutely nothing. Taxes are killing us and nothing not a damn thing has been put back into the community it just gets recycled back into the governments pockets.

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