Local landlords and residents used the meeting to press the planning board and consultants on the practical challenges of converting student‑oriented rentals into year‑round family housing, saying conversion costs, interior reorganization and property management differences complicate rehabilitations.
A landlord at the meeting described student rentals as easier to manage than year‑round units, noting seasonal turnover gives time for upgrades and that converting interiors and completing permitting and approvals would be expensive. Consultants and attendees acknowledged those hurdles and suggested incentive tools — including tax stabilization programs and community revitalization tax options — to make rehabilitation and conversion more financially viable.
Why it matters: large concentrations of student housing were cited repeatedly as a factor that reduces the supply of housing suitable for families and year‑round workers. Attendees warned that decisions by the university (for example increasing on‑campus housing) or continued enrollment shifts could leave more units vacant or accelerate conversion pressures.
Discussion highlights: landlords emphasized differences in rent collection, maintenance demands and tenant screening between student and year‑round markets; consultants pointed to existing statutory incentives and local tax stabilization as possible tools. Residents and consultants also discussed the physical suitability of older buildings for non‑student households — e.g., many conversions would require interior reconfiguration to create more living space rather than four‑plus small bedrooms.
Next step: consultants will incorporate community input into the draft housing chapter and present it to the planning board; the town will share materials on its website and encourage further written comments.