Anti-Displacement Action Plan
This plan serves as a roadmap for the City of Boston's work to confront residential, commercial, and cultural displacement over the next two years
READ THE ACTION PLAN & SHARE YOUR FEEDBACK
A Place to Thrive: Anti-Displacement Action Plan for Boston is available and open for public comment through May 3, 2025.
Boston's first citywide Anti-Displacement Action Plan outlines over forty initiatives designed to fill gaps in the City's ongoing efforts to protect residents, small businesses, and cultural institutions from displacement. Over the next two years, the City will implement these initiatives to help stabilize communities and deepen their roots.
Read the plan and share your thoughts via a brief feedback form or email to antidisplacementplan@boston.gov.
ABOUT THE PLAN
In alignment with new planning and strategic initiatives, and in response to extensive community feedback, the City of Boston began developing a comprehensive strategy to address displacement in 2024. With the support of the Planning Advisory Council, a cross-departmental team comprised of Planning, Mayor’s Office of Housing, Office of Economic Opportunity and Inclusion, Mayor’s Office of Arts and Culture, Environment, Energy and Open Space, and Worker Empowerment, devised a coordinated plan to:
- Stabilize residents, including renters and homeowners, so they can anchor and flourish here, while creating space to welcome new neighbors
- Stabilize neighborhood commercial and creative enterprises, enabling their diversity and vibrancy
Since Spring 2024, our team has been working to understand community concerns about displacement, assess the City’s existing efforts to combat displacement, identify key gaps in our approach to stabilizing residents, and develop new protections and tools to address gaps and community priorities.
Major project milestones included:
- December 2024: Summary of Needs released, synthesizing community input and priorities shared through previous and ongoing planning initiatives and major projects.
- December 2024: Existing Toolkit & Progress Report released, summarizing the tools the City currently uses to mitigate residential, commercial and cultural displacement and providing data on how they are working now.
- March 2025: "A Place to Thrive", Boston’s first Anti-Displacement Action Plan released, summarizing new tools the City is proposing to address gaps in our toolbox, how they will be rolled out, and what resources are needed to best stabilize residents and neighborhoods.
- March 2025: A new Displacement Risk Mapping Tool released, an interactive tool that analyzes residential displacement risk citywide, helping to inform future decisions.
REPORTS
reportsEXECUTIVE SUMMARY
- Español (Spanish)
- Kreyòl ayisyen (Haitian Creole)
- 繁體中文 (Traditional Chinese)
- 简体中文 (Simplified Chinese)
- Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese)
- English
- Español (Spanish)
- Kreyòl ayisyen (Haitian Creole)
- 繁體中文 (Traditional Chinese)
- 简体中文 (Simplified Chinese)
- Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese)
EXPLORE BOSTON’S INTERACTIVE RESIDENTIAL DISPLACEMENT RISK MAP
The Mayor’s Office of Housing has developed a new dynamic mapping tool that allows both City staff and residents to assess residential displacement risk at the Census Block Group level for the first time. This Displacement Risk Map fulfills a key priority outlined in the Assessment of Fair Housing, which called for the creation of a “displacement risk tool” to rigorously evaluate displacement risk at the neighborhood level. It was released as part of the Anti-Displacement Action Plan.
LEARN MORE & SHARE FEEDBACK
Submit Your Comments
The City of Boston wants to hear your thoughts on the draft Anti-Displacement Action Plan. The public comment period is open from March 19, 2025 through May 3, 2025. To provide your feedback, you can:
- Fill out a brief feedback form
- Email your comments to antidisplacementplan@boston.gov
- Attend an upcoming event or workshop
Attend an Upcoming Event
Over the course of March and April, staff will hold meetings and workshops related to the draft Action Plan, both as part of ongoing planning efforts and through dedicated forums. Stay tuned!
Feedback and comments will be summarized at the end of the comment period, and posted publicly.
Note on Public Comments: We encourage local stakeholders with substantial feedback to submit written comment letters to ensure your full perspective is received by the City.
Download a Multi-Language Housing Resource Guide
resources- English
- Español (Spanish)
- Kreyòl ayisyen (Haitian Creole)
- Zhōngwén (Traditional Chinese)
- Jiǎnhuàzì (Simplified Chinese)
- "tiếng Việt (Vietnamese)
- Kabuverdianu (Cabo Verdean Creole)
- Russkiĭ âzyk (Russian)
- al-ʿarabiyyah (Arabic)
- Português (Brazilian Portuguese)
- Français (French)
- Soomaali (Somali)
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONSDisplacement: When people are forced to leave their homes and neighborhoods due to external pressures. There are different types of displacement that the City works to address.
- DIRECT DISPLACEMENT: Refers to a situation where households are forced to move from their homes, due to non-renewal or lack of a lease, eviction, foreclosure, demolition/redevelopment/ substantial renovation of their housing, or physical conditions that make a home uninhabitable, including climate disasters.. Typically this results from actions taken - or not taken - by the property owner, though historically it has also resulted from government action through urban renewal and clearance.
- ECONOMIC DISPLACEMENT: Refers to a situation where current residents of an area can no longer afford to live there due to rising housing costs. This can result from a range of actors and actions, including but not limited to private development, public investment, insufficient supply relative to demand, rising utility costs, and demographic change. This is also sometimes referred to as “indirect” displacement.
- COMMERCIAL/CULTURAL DISPLACEMENT: Similar to residents, the closure or relocation of businesses and cultural enterprises may be the result of direct or economic displacement. They may be adversely impacted by non-renewal or absence of a lease, redevelopment or demolition of their existing premises, or rising rents. When the nature of services and goods sold in a given area shift, existing residents can feel a sense of dislocation or detachment from community.
- GENTRIFICATION: Pattern of neighborhood change in which a previously low-income neighborhood experiences new investment, whether by private or public actors, accompanied by demographic changes, increasing home values and/or rents, and other social and economic changes associated with the physical, cultural, and/or political displacement of existing lower-income residents. Gentrification is acknowledged to also include the ways that climate change, and responses to it, may impact property markets and neighborhood change patterns. Importantly, while the issues are related, not all displacement is linked to gentrification.
- Residents have advocated for greater displacement protections at the local and state level for many years. In response, many new protections and tools have been added to the City’s toolbox. But in the midst of a housing crisis, rising costs and even more pressures on households and small operators, this Administration recognizes the need for a comprehensive plan.
- The City of Boston is also continuing to modernize and update zoning in many areas, creating space to welcome new neighbors, expand our housing supply and support vibrant, mixed-used neighborhoods. We recognize that rezoning can create both new opportunities and new pressures on existing residents and businesses. We want to ensure adequate safeguards are in place to provide stability alongside growth.
No, the Action Plan outlines over 40 new or expanded anti-displacement tools that the City is committed to implementing over the next two years. Boston’s complete Anti-Displacement Toolkit includes these new tools, along with more than 80 existing tools already in use to prevent both direct and economic displacement of residents, businesses, and cultural organizations, as detailed in Boston’s Existing Toolkit & Progress Report.
Residents can view all the tools, both new and existing, in Boston’s Anti-Displacement Toolkit.
We use the broadest definition of “tool”, in line with common practice, and includes four types:
- Programs and resources (e.g. a program to help people to buy homes, or the Metrolist affordable housing search engine),
- People (e.g. an Energy Advocate who helps residents lower their energy costs),
- Financial resources (e.g. our direct investment in public and income-restricted housing), and
- Policies or regulatory powers (e.g. ordinances, zoning.)
Oftentimes, all four are necessary to enable a single intervention.
- Renters: Boston’s Office of Housing Stability is a central resource for tenants facing eviction or needing emergency housing. With services in English and Spanish, it provides tenants with legal support, landlords with counseling, and dispute resolution. Contact them at housingstability@boston.gov or call 617-635-4200.
- Homeowners: The Boston Home Center provides free, confidential foreclosure prevention and intervention counseling in multiple languages, including working with lenders on loan modifications. It also runs multiple home repair programs. Contact them at homecenter@boston.gov or call 617-635-4633.
- Cultural Enterprises: For cultural enterprises and individual artists who are facing displacement, please contact arts@boston.gov. A member from the Cultural Planning Team can set up a conversation with you regarding your space needs and connect you with any available spaces or resources. While no immediate assistance is guaranteed, the Mayor’s Office of Arts and Culture wants to be aware of the magnitude of the displacement threat.
- Small Businesses: For small business owners who are facing displacement, please contact smallbiz@boston.gov using the subject line “Displacement Inquiry”. A member from the Small Business Office will be in touch to discuss your needs and provide the appropriate resources.
The Boston Housing Strategy 2025 is a joint effort of the Mayor’s Office of Housing, Boston Housing Authority and the Planning Department. It lays out priority policies and programs and sets goals through 2025 for expanding housing supply, improving housing stability, increasing equitable access to homeownership, advancing Boston’s climate priorities through housing, and preserving existing affordable housing.
The Housing Strategy calls for development of an Anti-Displacement Action Plan. This Action Plan will focus on residential, as well as commercial and cultural, displacement and draws on the expertise of additional Cabinets, including the Office of Economic Opportunity & Inclusion, the Mayor’s Office of Arts & Culture and the Office of Workforce Development.