Housing & Communities

Making Housing Affordable and Revitalizing Communities

Nick’s vision to make Baltimore County more affordable, inclusive and modern for everybody starts with housing. You can read Nick’s full plan — The Dream and Deliver Framework — here. It is the most comprehensive housing plan in the County’s history.

Check out Nick’s One County Initiative to see his vision for your community here.

Baltimore County has something for everybody—from 200 miles of tidal shoreline and hiking trails to a global logistics hub and leading colleges and universities.  And it used to be that families from all walks of life could come and start a life here and help write the next chapter of Baltimore County’s story.  However, that promise is slipping away.  

Too many families are being squeezed by rising costs, low wages and a housing crisis that’s pushing dreams out of reach and forcing hard choices every single day. For many residents the reality is that some families end up homeless. See Nick’s plan for addressing homelessness in Baltimore County. 

Today, one third of Marylanders spend over a third of their income on housing—or are “cost burdened.”  For renters, over half of them are cost burdened, with the average age to buy their first home at 40.  This ranks us 43rd in the country for housing affordability. 

But it’s not just those who are looking for homes that suffer.  It’s those who are happy with their homes too.  Just last year, we saw property tax assessments jump by 25% in Baltimore County.  This isn’t sustainable and will push out neighbors on fixed incomes.  

Our housing challenges are the consequence of a political culture that clings to outdated systems. From “councilmanic courtesy” to our “APFO” law, these rules have fractured our ability to plan as One County and forced families to struggle.

Under the status we have seen:

Families are stretched thin. Our children are not performing at their best because of having to move regularly, as college students graduate and move away.  Public servants—nurses, teachers, police officers, firefighters—can’t afford to live in the communities they serve, lowering morale. And seniors can’t live close to their grandkids or age in the communities they’ve built.

This is a crisis. We cannot afford more of the same.

Fix the Broken System

Baltimore County’s housing crisis is not just about supply. It is also about a government process that is slow, fragmented and unpredictable. Today, projects can take years to navigate through overlapping departments, unclear standards and political interference.

Nick’s plan modernizes County government so it works for residents and communities again.

End the Politics of “Councilmanic Courtesy”

On day one of his administration, Nick will pursue legal action challenging “Councilmanic Courtesy,” the outdated practice that allows individual councilmembers to exercise near-total control over development decisions in their districts.

Baltimore County cannot plan as One County if every district operates like a separate fiefdom.

Reform APFO and Restore Smart Planning

The County’s current APFO law has become a weapon against housing and revitalization.

Nick will:

The solution to overcrowding is not to stop building housing. The solution is to invest in infrastructure while planning responsibly for growth.

Modernize Permitting and Planning

Baltimore County’s permitting and planning systems have not kept pace with the modern world.

Nick will:

Government should move at the speed of business while remaining transparent and accountable to the public.

Create HousingStat and Radical Transparency

HousingStat begins as a comprehensive assessment of housing needs that tracks housing demand, housing costs and housing types through public facing interactive dashboard.

Build More Housing People Can Actually Afford

Baltimore County needs more housing of every kind if we are serious about lowering costs and preserving the promise of the American Dream for working families.

That means building mixed-income communities, expanding starter home opportunities, supporting accessible housing and creating housing options for seniors, young families and public servants.

Build Mixed-Use Communities

Most modern jurisdictions understand that people want to live, work, play and learn in the same place. Nick envisions transforming aging commercial corridors and underused properties into vibrant mixed-use communities that create housing, jobs and community amenities together.

This includes areas like:

These projects will prioritize walkability, sustainability, green space and transit access while respecting the identity of surrounding communities.

Nick will:

Expand Starter Homes and Workforce Housing

Baltimore County must once again become a place where working families can afford to buy a first home.

Nick’s plan prioritizes “missing middle” housing and attainable homeownership opportunities by:

If paired with strategic redevelopment efforts, these reforms can help deliver attainable homes for working families at price points far below the current market.

Prioritize Affordable and Accessible Housing

Affordable housing should not be segregated from the broader housing market or hidden from opportunity.

Nick’s plan includes:

The goal is simple: create communities where seniors can age in place, people with disabilities can access housing with dignity and working families can afford to stay in Baltimore County.

Revitalize Communities Through Smart Growth

Baltimore County has too many communities and commercial corridors that have been left behind for decades.

Nick’s housing plan is not just about building units. It is about revitalizing neighborhoods, restoring community pride and unlocking investment across every part of the County.

Prioritize Post-World War II Communities

Communities like Dundalk, Essex, Lansdowne and Baltimore Highlands contain some of the most affordable housing stock in the County, but they desperately need reinvestment.

Nick will:

Make the Master Plan Matter

The Master Plan should be a blueprint for decision-making, not a document that sits on a shelf.

Nick will:

Growth should happen intentionally, transparently and in partnership with the community.

Expand Opportunities for Community Investment

Baltimore County must become a place that welcomes investment that strengthens communities, expands housing opportunities and revitalizes aging corridors.

Today, too many worthwhile projects struggle to move forward because the County lacks a clear, modern and transparent strategy for supporting redevelopment. Nick’s plan changes that by using proven financial tools to unlock investment while ensuring communities directly benefit from growth.

Nick will:

Other jurisdictions across Maryland already use these tools to drive investment and revitalize communities. Baltimore County should be leading the way, not falling behind.

When paired with stronger planning, faster permitting and community-driven redevelopment strategies, these tools can help transform aging commercial corridors and underutilized properties into thriving places where families can afford to live, work and build their future.

Restore Pride in Our Communities

Strong communities are not built through neglect. They are built through shared standards, civic pride and a local government that responds when residents ask for help.

Too often, residents feel like obvious quality-of-life issues — illegal dumping, abandoned properties, overgrown lots, illegal signage and chronic code violations — go unresolved for far too long. That erodes trust in government and weakens the sense of place that makes neighborhoods feel safe, welcoming and connected.

Nick’s plan restores a culture of accountability and partnership between the County and the community.

Nick will:

This is not about punishing communities. It is about supporting them.

Every neighborhood deserves to feel cared for, respected and invested in. By improving responsiveness, coordination and enforcement, Baltimore County can help restore community pride and strengthen the quality-of-life residents deserve.

A County Where Families Can Stay

This plan is about more than housing policy.

It is about whether the next generation can afford to stay in Baltimore County. Whether seniors can age in place. Whether teachers, nurses and first responders can live near the communities they serve. Whether young families can still believe that hard work leads to opportunity.

Baltimore County should once again be a place where people can build a life, raise a family and feel confident that their children can do the same.

That future is still possible. But we must choose it together as One County.

Local governments must hunt for smart growth | GUEST COMMENTARY

We must dispel the myth that local governments should be passive actors in development projects, Nick Stewart and Tom Coale write.

This practice is holding Baltimore County’s future hostage | GUEST COMMENTARY

Baltimore County Council’s “councilmanic courtesy” is suffocating the region’s future prospects, writes Nick Stewart.