The Cambridge Housing Authority is buying a large parcel of vacant land on Porter St. in the Wellington-Harrington neighborhood and could build approximately 50 units of low-income housing there, officials of the public housing agency said Wednesday. CHA will pay $7.2 million for the property and expects to spend almost $3 million more for pre-development work.
Itโs the third property the CHA has bought in the past two years, and another could be coming. On Wednesday the agencyโs commissioners held an executive session during their regular meeting to discuss a property acquisition.
The Porter St. site runs from 16 to 28 Porter St. and is 12,916 square feet. Itโs only 300 feet from The Verge, a luxury apartment building at 2 Medford St. in Somerville, where two-bedroom apartments are renting โin the range of $4,300,โ a CHA memo on the purchase said.
The location of the parcel CHA is buying โnear transit and public amenities is ideal for a site for deeply affordable family housing,โ the memo said, referring to bus and subway lines, a shopping plaza, the Valente library and the King Open and Cambridge St. Upper public schools. But the neighborhood is a โhigh-cost areaโ where the median asking rental cost last summer was $3,400, which would require a household income of $138,000 to afford, the memo said.
CHA plans to finance the land purchase and pre-development costs with $6 million from the Cambridge Affordable Housing Trust, which funnels city money to affordable housing projects, and a $4.2 million loan from the agencyโs own coffers. The authority didnโt provide a timeline for when it will begin work on the project and Margaret Moran, deputy executive director for Planning and Development, said the agency was โland-banking.โ
This meeting was the last for Executive Director Michael Johnston, 65, who is retiring Friday for health reasons after 34 years at CHA. A cascade of praise from residents and staff that began March 19, when commissioners named planning director Clara Fraden to head the agency, continued at the meeting. One example: tenants at Millers River, the East Cambridge development for older and/or disabled people, interrupted their bingo game to thank Johnston on Zoom for his work to rehabilitate the high-rise building.

Johnston also received a written message of praise from Rep. Ayanna Presley, presented to him at the meeting. The commissioners approved a lengthy resolution with numerous โwhereasโ paragraphs listing Johnstonโs accomplishments at CHA. For his part, he thanked the board and his deputy executive director, Brenda Downing.
HUD targets โmixed familiesโ
On a serious note, Johnston warned of new threats from the Trump administration: โAs I exit I have three items that have come out from HUD (U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development).โ
One is a rule that would bar โmixed familiesโ โ households where at least one person has required immigration status but others do not โ from living in federally supported housing. CHA has 42 families in that category who now could lose their homes.
โThis is a horrendous rule,โ Johnston said. โThis isnโt something we believe in.โ
The other two changes proposed by HUD are not mandatory, Johnston said. One would allow housing authorities to set time limits for housing subsidies and the other would permit authorities to require tenants to work.
CHA will prepare and submit comments on the three proposed changes, Johnston said. As for the work requirement, โhere in Cambridge families work,โ he said. โThe last time we ran the numbers, most families have multiple wage earnersโ or one worker with multiple jobs.โ

