MADISON, Wis. – Multiple city agencies are working together ahead of this year's Mifflin Street Block Party.Around 10,000 people are expected to attend the annual celebration.Building InspectionBuilding inspectors started checking the area in…
Plan Commission March 16th 2026
postedI voted yes!
Tonight I voted yes on 227 units of affordable housing at 5555 Odana Road and 5534 Medical Circle — and I want to explain why, including what happened in that room.
At every Plan Commission meeting, we are required to ask: Who benefits? Who is burdened? Who does not have a voice at the table? Tonight those questions were put to the test.
Bear Development brought us a fully income-restricted affordable housing project — 227 apartments, every unit rent-restricted, every household at or below 60% of area median income, with public financing already assembled. It is exactly what Madison's housing goals demand.
What we also heard tonight was opposition from parents of a neighboring childcare center arguing the project posed a danger to their children. I want to be honest about what that was: a pattern this city has seen before, where schools, parks, and childcare centers get invoked as reasons to keep affordable housing — and the families who need it — out of established neighborhoods. Madison - like many cities- redlined its neighborhoods.
We have one of the tightest rental markets in the country. We do not get to call ourselves a city committed to equity and then flinch when it matters.
I did support one condition: requiring Bear Development to submit a construction management plan that protects childcare drop-off and pick-up hours during the build. That is a legitimate concern. Using it to block housing for 227 low-income families is not.
The families who will live in this building are not a threat to this neighborhood. They are this neighborhood.
I voted yes. Watch my full statement in video. This agenda item starts at 1:58.