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Sam Tepperman- Gelfant Public Advocates Inc. October 18, 2013 ENVISIONING EQUITABLE AND SUSTAINABLE REGIONS
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1.History and Context – Sprawl and Inequity 2.San Francisco Bay Area – Envisioning and Advocating for A Better Future 3.Tools for Linking Transportation and Land Use OVERVIEW 2 2
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Challenging the systemic causes of poverty and racial discrimination since 1971. Strengthening community voices and achieving tangible legal victories Advancing SOCIAL EQUITY in areas such as: Education Housing Transit PUBLIC ADVOCATES INC. Vital building blocks of thriving communities 3
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1 SUSTAINABILITY AND SOCIAL EQUITY: HISTORY & CHALLENGES 4 4
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Legislative goals: Decrease sprawl Increase TOD/Infill People drive less …decreasing GHG emissions SB 375: SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITIES AND CLIMATE PROTECTION ACT OF 2008 5
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Calls for GHG reduction targets Integrates disjointed regional planning processes Regional Transportation Plan State Mandated Affordable Housing Plans, Regional Housing Needs Assessment (RHNA) …to create Sustainable Communities Strategy SB 375 SCS Transit Housing 6
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7 History shows us that climate change, sprawl, and social equity issues share common origins 7
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BROWN V. BOARD OF EDUCATION 8
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WHITE FLIGHT TO SUBURBS 9
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DISMANTLING OF LOCAL TRANSIT INFRASTRUCTURE 10
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CREATED UNSUSTAINABLE PATTERNS... 11
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... THAT PERSIST TODAY 12
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A HISTORY OF INVESTMENT... WITH DISPLACEMENT
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DISPLACEMENT TODAY 14
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Median home price = $555,000 (on the way back to $700k+) 5+ minimum wage jobs needed to afford 2-bedroom apartment in most SF neighborhoods Oakland lost 1/3 of African American population between 1990 and 2010 7 out of the 10 cities with highest African American population % are in in suburbs & exurbs Marin County: 80% white (region: 52.5% white) SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA: HOUSING 15
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Fare hikes and service cuts in transit Households earning $20-50k devote 63% of budget to housing & transportation (highest % in U.S.) SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA: TRANSIT 16 Subsidies and Race of Riders
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2 ADVOCATING FOR SUSTAINABLE AND EQUITABLE REGIONS 17
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28-Year Transportation (RTP) and Land Use Plan $292 Billion in Transportation Investments 2.1 Million Projected New Residents Planning Process Began in 2010; Plan Adopted July 18, 2013 THE BAY AREA’S SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITY STRATEGY 18
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6 BIG WINS FOR SOCIAL EQUITY 19 Community Power Investment Without Displacement Affordable Housing Economic Opportunity Healthy & Safe Communities Local Transit Service 19
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Leading with Social Equity Embracing a Range of Issues as Interconnected Marrying Grassroots and Policy Organizations Tackling Regional Systems, both Regionally and Locally STRUCTURING FOR SUCCESS 20
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Photo credit: Paloma Pavel
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Distribute Housing Growth Equitably: Increase quality affordable housing options in both urban areas and suburban job centers Protect against Displacement: Ensure that lower-income communities are not displaced by TOD by regional grant incentives (OBAG) Improve Local Transit Service: Fund more of the local transit service on which low- income riders of color depend COMMUNITY VISION: POLICY PRIORITIES 22
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LOW-INCOME IN-COMMUTERS 23
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http://mapping regionalchange.ucdavis.edu/jo bshousingfit20 11 JOBS- HOUSING FIT 24
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Investments and incentives strengthen and stabilize communities vulnerable to gentrification and displacement Plan based on community-identified needs Protect existing tenants and apartments Build new affordable housing Link economic development to local workforce capacity & development Strengthen local public transit Promote and protect neighborhood-serving retail and services Track key indicators to detect gentrification and displacement before it’s too late http://www.publicadvocates.org/document/a-bay-area-agenda-for- investment-without-displacement ACHIEVING INVESTMENT WITHOUT DISPLACEMENT 25
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LOCAL TRANSIT: THE LIFE BLOOD OF TRANSPORTATION 26
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TRANSIT OPERATIONS:CO-BENEFITS 27 Every $10 million in transit operating investments yields $32 million in increased business sales. $1 dollar in service cuts resulting from operating deficits yields $10 in local economic harms, from lost wages and productivity and increased transportation costs. Taking public transit instead of driving on a 20-mile round trip work commute saves 4,800 lbs CO2/year – 10% of annual GHG emissions for a two-person two- car household. 27
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INEQUITABLE TRANSIT INVESTMENTS
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SUSTAINABLE PLANNING FOR WHOM? 29 Low-income households will be spending over 74% of their incomes on H+T 36% of households in “communities of concern” will be at high risk of displacement. 29
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2012: STUDYING THE EEJ 30
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Strongest shift to non-auto travel 165,00 more transit boardings per day 83,000 fewer cars on the road 3.5 million fewer miles of auto travel per day Greatest reduction in GHG and toxic air pollutants 1,900 fewer tons of CO 2 emissions per day 568,000 fewer tons of GHG emissions per year Energy savings equivalent to 600,000 gal. of gas/day Better for working families 42% lower risk of displacement Lower H+T cost Shorter commute times 2013: EEJ DECLARED THE “ENVIRONMENTALLY SUPERIOR ALTERNATIVE” 31
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Education and Advocacy Day Broadening Support DATA + ORGANIZING = CHANGE Media & Communications Turnout & Testimony
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KEY IMPROVEMENTS WON Improvements to One Bay Area Grant program to link to local affordable housing and anti-displacement policies and reward local affordable housing approvals. Commitment to inclusive regional public process to allocate Cap & Trade Revenues with at least 25% going to benefit disadvantaged communities First ever commitment by MTC to develop a “comprehensive strategy” to focus on funding transit operations and maintenance Studies of labor policies and best practices 33
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Progressive groups provide strong organizing and political mobilization in face of vocal right-wing anti- planning contingent Substantial equity problems remain Housing growth concentrated in low-income areas Insufficient funding programmed to maintain (or expand) local transit HIGH LEVEL OUTCOMES 34
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3 TOOLS FOR LINKING TRANSPORTATION AND LAND USE 35
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Weighting Social Equity Factors in Allocation of Transit Expansion Funds The Land Use rating factor includes the proportion of existing “legally binding affordability restricted” housing within 1⁄2-mile of proposed station areas to the proportion of “legally binding affordability restricted” housing in the counties through which the project will travel. The Economic Development Effects factor includes “plans and policies to maintain or increase affordable housing” in the project corridor. The Mobility Improvements rating factor assesses the number of incremental trips taken on the proposed project, and assigns additional weight to “transit-dependent persons.” FTA NEW STARTS CRITERIA, AUGUST 2013 36
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The Challenge: how to work regionally on advancing local policies One solution: use regionally administered funds to incentivize local jurisdictions to enact equitable and sustainable policies BUILDING A BETTER CARROT: THE ONE BAY AREA GRANT PROGRAM 37
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The Implementation: The One Bay Area Grant (OBAG) program $320 Million over 4 years ($14.6 billion over 28 years) HCD-certified Housing Element required 50-70% of funding to Priority Development Areas Affordable Housing and Neighborhood Stabilization policies used as evaluation criteria Project selection and funding done at the county level REQUIREMENTS & INCENTIVES: THE ONE BAY AREA GRANT 38
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Tying regional competitive funds to local affordable housing and anti-displacement policies incentivizes a race to the top In the first round of OBAG funding, local grants were contingent on local adoption of a state-certified housing element Relatively small amounts incentivized the worst actors in the region to adopt affordable housing plans OBAG Lessons and Next Steps 39
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Sam Tepperman-Gelfant Senior Staff Attorney, Public Advocates Inc. stepperman-gelfant@publicadvocates.org www.publicadvocates.org Facebook: PublicAdvocates Twitter: @publicadvocates THANK YOU! 40
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