Massachusetts

Former Worcester City Manager Named New Massachusetts Housing Secretary

He had left his post as a chancellor at Dean College in Franklin last month, saying at the time that he was "not sure where life's journey will take me next"

State House News Service

Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey on Monday named Edward Augustus as state housing secretary, turning to a former state senator and Worcester city manager to serve as point person on one of her top priorities.

The governor created the position earlier this year after she promised to make housing a priority on the campaign trail.

“Ed Augustus is the leader Massachusetts needs to take the helm of our new Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities and drive an ambitious, collaborative strategy to increase housing production and lower costs across the state,” Healey said in a statement. “He left Worcester a stronger city than it was a decade ago, with booming economic development in the downtown and thousands of new housing units. Importantly, he is intimately familiar with local government and knows what it takes to collaborate with municipalities to move our state forward on our housing goals.”  

In striving to boost housing production, Augustus will face the same challenges as others before him: addressing local resistance to growth, navigating zoning bylaws and ordinances that vary from community to community, and working with the Legislature to enact new housing policies.

“I’m honored that Governor Healey and Lieutenant Governor Driscoll have placed their faith in me to lead the new Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities. Massachusetts' housing crisis impacts every single community in our state, but we know what the solution is – build more housing,” Augustus said. “This administration recognizes that there is no one-size-fits-all strategy to achieving this and that we must work closely with communities to deploy a diverse toolbox of options to meet their unique needs. That’s what this new secretariat will be committed to doing.” 

Healey pledged last fall to split the housing and economic development secretariat into two if she were elected, and the administration has often pointed to the housing secretary position as critical to efforts to addresss the housing affordability and availability crisis across the state.

"We think it's certainly going to be a chief reason we're going to be able to meet or hopefully close the gap on the 200,000 housing units that we are short in Massachusetts," Lt. Gov. Driscoll said about the position in February.

Augustus left his post as a chancellor at Dean College in Franklin last month, saying at the time that he was "not sure where life's journey will take me next," MassLive reported.

Before his stint at Dean College in Franklin, where he worked for less than a year, Augustus roamed the halls of both Worcester City Hall and the State House. He served as Worcester city manager for eight years, from 2013 through mid-2022, his LinkedIn says.

Over his eight years as city manager, he oversaw over $90 million in renovations to the city's public parks and led a downtown resurgence effort, according to a release from Dean College, from when the college named Augustus chancellor.

Augustus represented Worcester's 2nd District in the Senate for two terms, from 2005 until 2008 where he chaired the Committee on Bills in the Third Reading and Joint Committee on Election Laws, and vice-chaired the committees on education, veterans and federal affairs, and public service. He won his Senate seat in 2004 by defeating GOP candidate Robi Blute to fill Guy Glodis' former seat in the Senate.

He was Congressman Jim McGovern's chief of staff, worked in former President Bill Clinton's U.S. Department of Education, and served as director of government and community relations for the College of the Holy Cross, the Dean College release says.

The Healey plan to split the Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development into two separate offices, an Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities and an Executive Office of Economic Development, will take effect on May 30.

Michael P. Norton contributed to this report.

Copyright State House News Service
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