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Showing posts with label Plan Bay Area 2.0. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Plan Bay Area 2.0. Show all posts
Friday, December 21, 2018
Urban Renewal...Means Negro Removal. ~ James Baldwin (1963)
Urban development ("improving the neighborhood) most often means moving out existing residents in favor of new, wealthier ones. Plan Bay Area has displaced tens of thousands of African Americans from around the Bay Area in the name of "environmentalism and social equity". We think people should come first.
Thursday, June 21, 2018
Stop Trying to Get Workers Out of Their Cars
Stop Trying to Get Workers Out of Their Cars
"Smart growth" is dumb about commuting.
If you hate urban sprawl, you're probably familiar with the complaints of the "smart growth" movement: Roadways blight cities. Traffic congestion is the worst. Suburbanization harms the environment. Fortunately, say these smart growthers, there is an alternative: By piling on regulations and reallocating transportation-related tax money, we can "densify" our urban communities, allowing virtually everyone to live in a downtown area and forego driving in favor of walking or biking.
Smart growth proponents have been gaining influence for decades. They've implemented urban growth boundaries (which greatly restrict the development of land outside a defined area), up-zoning (which tries to increase densities in existing neighborhoods by replacing single-family homes with apartments), and "road diets" (which take away traffic lanes to make room for wider sidewalks and bike lanes).
Alas, there are inherent flaws in the "smart growth" approach—beginning with the idea that it makes sense for everyone to live and work in the same small area. In fact, that idea flies in the face of what economists call urban agglomeration.
Urban agglomeration is why there are more jobs in and around big cities. Job seekers have access to a large number of potential employers, which increases each person's likelihood of finding one that can make the best use of her unique talents and skills. The same is true for business owners, who have a much better chance of finding people in a large populous urban area who match their needs.
Transportation turns out to be a key factor in enabling these wealth-increasing transactions. Imagine drawing a circle around the location of your residence, defined by how far you are willing to commute to get to a satisfying job. The larger the radius of that circle, the more potential work opportunities you have. Likewise, a company's prospective-employee pool is defined by the number of people whose circles contain that company's location.
Most people measure that radius in time rather than distance; studies show they are generally unwilling to spend much more than 30 minutes commuting each way on a long-term basis. That means the size of their opportunity circle is critically dependent on how quickly they can get around.
Despite urban sprawl and ever-increasing congestion levels, economists Peter Gordon and Harry Richardson of the University of Southern California have documented, using census data, that average commute times in various metro areas have hardly changed at all over several decades. More recently, Alex Anas of the University of Buffalo modeled what would happen as a result of a projected 24 percent increase in Chicago's metro area population over three decades. He estimated that auto commute times would increase only 3 percent and transit trip times hardly at all. The reason is that people tend to change where they live or work in order to keep their travel times about the same. But this happy result comes about only if the transportation system expands accordingly.
A recent empirical study from the Marron Institute of Urban Management at New York University likewise found that, on average, the labor market of an urban area (defined as the number of jobs reachable within a one-hour commute) nearly doubles when the workforce of the metro area doubles. The commute time increases by an average of only about 7 percent, however—assuming an efficient region-wide transportation network. To achieve higher economic productivity, they recommend fostering speedier rather than slower commuting; more rather than less commuting; and longer rather than shorter commutes.
These policies would expand the opportunity circles of employers and employees, enabling a more productive urban economy. But these are exactly the opposite of the policy prescriptions of smart growth, which generally seek to confine people's economic activity to a small portion of a larger metro area.
One early manifestation of this was the attempt by urban and transportation planners in the '80s and '90s to promote "jobs-housing balance," where each county of a large metro area has comparable percentages of the region's jobs and of its housing. The rationale was that this would reduce "excessive" commuting by enabling people to find work close to their homes. But urban agglomeration theory makes it clear that that is a recipe for a low-productivity urban economy. Census data show that many suburban areas are now approaching jobs-housing balance on their own, but this does not necessarily reduce commute distances—to get to the jobs they want, many people still travel across boundaries.
A fascinating example is Arlington County, Virginia. Since 2000, the number of jobs and the number of working residents in the county have been approximately equal. But it turns out that only 52 percent of those working residents have jobs in the county. Out of 582,000 resident workers, 280,000 commute to adjacent counties or the District of Columbia. And out of 574,000 jobs in the county, 272,000 are filled by workers from other places.
A less extreme version of smart growth says that we should discourage car travel and shift resources heavily toward transit. People should be encouraged to live in high-density "villages" where they can easily obtain transit service to jobs elsewhere in the metro area. The problem with this vision is the inability of transit to effectively compete with the auto highway system.
Simply put, cars work better for workers. A 2012 Brookings study analyzing data from 371 transit providers in America's largest 100 metro areas found that over three-fourths of all jobs are in neighborhoods with transit service—but only about a quarter of those jobs can be reached by transit within 90 minutes. That's more than three times the national average commute time.
Another study, by Andrew Owen and David Levinson of the University of Minnesota, looked at job access via transit in 46 of the 50 largest metro areas. Their data combined actual in-vehicle time with estimated walking time at either end of the transit trip, to approximate total door-to-door travel time. Only five of the 46 metro areas have even a few percent of their jobs accessible by transit within half an hour. All the others have 1 percent or less. Within 60 minutes door-to-door, the best cities have 15–22 percent of jobs reachable by transit.
Meanwhile, Owen and Levinson found that in 31 of the 51 largest metro areas in 2010, 100 percent of jobs could be reached by car in 30 minutes or less. Within 40 minutes, all the jobs could be reached by car in 39 of the cities. Within an hour, essentially every job in all 51 places could be reached by car. The roadway network is ubiquitous, connecting every possible origin to every destination. The contrast with access via transit—let alone walking or biking—is profound.
Photo Credit: thomas-bethge/iStock
Wednesday, July 26, 2017
Amazon's Warehouse Robots and the changing Workplace
Will commute patterns change in the Bay Area when robotics becomes more commonplace?
Of course but don't tell the idiot transportation planners.
Saturday, July 15, 2017
The problem with “smart growth”
The problem with “smart growth”
In San Francisco today, It amounts to ethnic and class cleansing, whatever the rationalization
BY JOHN ELBERLING -
JULY 12, 2017
I think we can all stipulate that in general “Smart Growth” — environmentally-responsible urban development — is good. And in general more housing to meet population growth is needed.
But cities and communities don’t evolve, exist, and develop “in general.”

This comes to mind reading today’s commentary by a prolific local blogger complimenting the current national “Yimby” organizing as fundamentally well-intentioned in urging both.
Perhaps. but the Metropolitan Transportation Commission’s new draft “Plan Bay Area 2040,” for example, which proposes providing that new housing by transforming inner city neighborhoods into such high-density Smart Growth districts, comes with a horrendous human cost: the near-complete displacement of those existing communities’ current black and brown lower-income residents and the destruction of their precious accumulated “social capital.”
Let me be blunt: the MTC proposes the conquest and destruction of long-time Central City Latino and African-American neighborhoods, to be transformed into new bourgeois neighborhoods for a mostly professional White and Asian gentry. and the displaced are literally offered NOWHERE else to go.
This IS Ethnic/Class Cleansing, whatever the rationalization.
The San Francisco exemplar is of course the fierce battle over the future of the Mission District today. The social capital of its vibrant Latino Community, built-up by four generations in the decades since WWII, is unquestionably irreplaceable and without any conceivable alternative new location in the Bay Area — even assuming its Latino residents had affordable housing options not far away, which they actually don’t.
it doesn’t matter this will be accomplished by 21st Century “market forces” facilitated by housing-development-friendly zoning regulations, instead of the redevelopment bulldozers of the 20th Century. The result IS the same. and actually, by its end redevelopment law included strong legal requirements to provide new replacement affordable housing for such displaced communities (maybe THAT is really why Gov. Brown killed redevelopment outright in 2011). Today’s zoning rules do not. The MTC Plan does not.
And the Yimbys actually oppose any such protections for the existing communities. They oppose increasing the requirements for affordable housing in private development too. They claim because any such rules might result in less new (market rate) housing being built overall they must be opposed. For example, the Yimbys oppose the pending AB915 State legislation that would ensure any project getting up to 35% more “bonus” market rate units thanks to State law has to fully comply with local Inclusionary Affordable Housing regulations.
The Smart Growth that DOES achieve the goal of providing more housing WITHOUT the conquest, destruction, and Ethnic/Class Cleansing of lower-income communities is the transformation of former military bases/industrial districts into all-new neighborhoods. In San Francisco, the Shipyard/Candlestick and Treasure Island projects alone will add 20,000 new housing units, 30% of which will be affordable. and Mission Bay, the first such project with 8,000 new units, is now nearing completion.
The problem is, due to their enormous up-front infrastructure and clean-up costs, and pay-as-you-go financing plans, it takes 30 years to complete these mega projects. Why don’t we solve that problem and build them in 15 years instead?
And also instead, rigorously protect our precious vulnerable communities and their residents, starting with the Mission District (and next, the Tenderloin), rather than allow them to be destroyed by “market forces?” Read MORE
Monday, July 10, 2017
The Corrupt "Public-Private" Partnership that wants to control BILLIONS in SF BAY Real Estate
MTC-ABAG- Committee for Housing the Bay Area (CASA)- Jun 28, 2017 - 375 Beale Street S.F.
AGENDA: Future Meeting Schedule & Biography of CASA Members
Saturday, July 1, 2017
Plan Bay Area 2040 public feedback (from MTC)
Thank you to everyone who attended a Plan Bay Area 2040 open house or public hearing in May and submitted comments on the Draft Plan or the Draft Environmental Impact Report (EIR).
On June 9, a summary of what we heard from residents was presented to the Joint MTC Planning and ABAG Administrative Committee. You can review the memo and presentation here, as well as view all correspondence on the Draft Plan and review the public hearing transcripts.
If you submitted a comment on the Draft Plan Bay Area 2040, you can review it here.
If you submitted a comment on the Draft EIR, you can see it here.
These comments will inform the discussion and debate leading up to adoption of Plan Bay Area 2040, which is currently slated for July 26 at 7 p.m.
For more information, visit PlanBayArea.org, email info@PlanBayArea.org, or call415.778.6757.
Editor's Note: Once again, Marin County had the most comments from the public. Overall, however, the response was abysmal. How can MTC and ABAG claim that they have sufficient outreach to the millions of people and businesses affected by this plan?
My guess is when the redevelopment, increased traffic, higher taxes and fees are felt by the average (asleep) voter, there will be a political revolt akin to Prop 13 . Sacramento has been passing legislation stripping us of our property rights and local democracy. Few options will be available except radical change.
I hope so. I'd like to see the state restored to the California Dream instead of the administrative state of Plan Bay Area 2040.
Friday, June 23, 2017
Will this Tech Company help builders destroy neighborhoods in Marinwood?

In November, Jane and Andy Freeman received an unexpected letter in the mail.

A company called CityBldr reached out to notify them that their Shoreline, Wash., home might be worth a lot more than they thought. Intrigued, they gave the Seattle startup a call. They learned that CityBldr software flagged their property as one of a handful that could be sold together for a much higher price than individually. In other words, the whole could sell for considerably more than the sum of its parts.
Working with CityBldr, the Freemans and two other neighbors agreed to sell their properties collectively. With three committed, four additional homeowners signed on, too. This week, all seven homes will go on the market as one unit, targeting developers eager to build more housing inventory for the region’s booming population.
CityBldr zeroed in on the properties for a few key reasons. Combined, they would make plenty of space for a large housing development, they’re located across the street from the Light Rail station going in at 145th St., and the properties fall within a region that was rezoned from single-family to mixed-use residential housing last year.
According to Jane Freeman, her property has the potential to sell for $100-140 per square foot when purchased as part of the assemblage of homeowners. Individually, her 7,000-square-foot lot is currently estimated to be worth about $497,381. Sold on its own, the house would have gone for about $71 per square foot.
“At the lowest, we would be getting for our part of the assemblage a minimum of $700,000,” she said.

CityBldr has been working with about 50 groups of homeowners, like the Freemans and their neighbors, to help them sell their properties collectively. The Seattle startup charges a 6 percent fee for its services, comparable to what a traditional broker would charge. Homeowners can use the website to find out if their property is undervalued for free.
“We tell them what the best and highest use of their property is and what the value is to a builder or developer if their property is underutilized,” he said. “To builders and developers, their core competencies, we learned, weren’t sales and acquisition, they were actually building. They wanted to take these sites and improve them and build them and develop them to best and highest use. They didn’t want to have a tool built for them, to help them go find sites.”
Instead of doing their own scouting, CityBldr is providing that tool for developers and homeowners in the Seattle area and, as of last week, Los Angeles. Copley says the service will expand to 10 markets in the next six months.
To fuel that growth, CityBldr has raised a $1.6 million investment round, led by real estate developer SRM, which is known for building the Seattle Google Campus. A long list of additional investors participated in the over-subscribed round, including Start It Labs, Millenium Global, PWR Financial, Realogics Sotheby’s, and TUNE CEO Peter Hamilton.
Copley hopes CityBldr’s software can eventually be used to help address Seattle’s homelessness and housing affordability issues. CityBldr is working with a handful of Seattle non-profits to advance that agenda.
As for the Shoreline homeowners, CityBldr’s software predicts their parcel will be used to develop 220 units of multifamily housing. “CallisonRTKL is the architect that has drawn up the plans for the site and corroborated that the software’s yield study is accurate,” Copley said. “The site will attract both local and regional developers and builders as well as foreign investors.”
CityBldr, which launched in May of last year, has broader ambitions than helping homeowners upsell their properties. The company aims to help cities identify and understand underutilized land to make more efficient urban planning choices.
“CityBldr’s goal is to create smart cities,” Copley said when the startup launched. “We can use artificial intelligence paired with empathy and create happy, functional, sustainable communities.”
Saturday, June 10, 2017
PREPARING FOR THE INFINITE SUBURB
PREPARING FOR THE INFINITE SUBURB
by Joel Kotkin and Alan Berger 06/01/2017

A Q&A With Alan Berger and Joel Kotkin.
Third in a series of conversations during Infrastructure Week. See the previous Q&A with Dan Katz, Transportation Policy Counsel at Hyperloop One, and Parag Khanna, Geo-strategist and author of Connectography.
The suburbs are back. In April, New York Magazine sounded the alarm that “more and more people are fleeing New York.” Time discovered just a few weeks ago that millennials are moving to the suburbs in droves. Recent studies have shown that millennials associate homeownership with the American dream more so than Generation X or baby boomers. As the world rapidly urbanizes, suburban migration presents an opportunity to define what this growth will look like — and how it might fit in more synergistically with urban cores and rural communities.

Alan Berger (left) and Joel Kotkin (right), co-authors of Infinite Suburbia
The truth is that the suburbs never fell from favor, we just stopped noticing that they became another form of the city. The shape of suburbia is an obsession for MIT professor Alan Berger and his co-author Joel Kotkin. Alan runs the MIT Norman B. Leventhal Center for Advanced Urbanism and teaches in the Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, while Joel is a writer and Professor of Urban Studies at Chapman University in California. Prof. Berger is also a judge for our Hyperloop One Global Challenge.
The two of them accurately highlighted this suburban resurgence long before it was popular, so we picked their brains about how they foresee emerging technology like Hyperloop playing a role in the trend. We discussed how new transportation modes might support suburban mobility and, perhaps, reshape suburbia as we know it.
H1: We hear you have an upcoming book called Infinite Suburbia. What does “Infinite Suburbia” mean?
Alan: The book’s title is meant to be polemical and measurable. Global urbanization is heading towards infinite suburbia. Around the world, the vast majority of people are moving to cities not to inhabit their centers, but to suburbanize their peripheries. Why? For many reasons, and almost always by their own choosing. Thus, when the United Nations projects the number of future “urban” residents, or when researchers quantify the amount of land that will soon be “urbanized,” these figures largely reflect the unprecedented suburban expansion of cities. By 2030, an estimated nearly half a million square miles (1.2 million square kilometers) of land worldwide will become urbanized, especially in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. In the United States alone, an additional 85,000 square miles (220,000 square kilometers) of rural land will be urbanized between 2003 and 2030 . Given that these figures represent the conversion of currently rural land at the urban fringe, these lands are slated to become future, seemingly infinite suburbias.
Joel: In the United States, 69 percent of the population lives in suburbs. As late as 2010, over 75 percent of American jobs lay outside the urban core. Many other developed countries are also majority-suburban. In the global South, it is estimated that 45 percent of the 1.4 billion people who will become new urban residents will settle in peri-urban suburbs — areas where urbanized and rural areas meet . The sheer magnitude of land conversion taking place, coupled with the fact that the majority of the world’s population already lives in suburbs, demands that new attention and creative energy be devoted to the imminent suburban expansion.

H1: You point to suburbia as a truly global phenomenon. What does this say about common values across cultures?
Joel: This reflects essential human desires for personal space, contact with nature, safety and, in some cases, better educational options. Dense cities are attractive particularly to those with high incomes and those without children. When people get into their thirties, and start contemplating a family, or simply a quieter life, they usually head to suburbia.
H1: Why do the suburbs get such a bad rap?
Joel: It started early on in Britain, where suburbs offended many of the same people who are offended now — the intelligentsia, artists and gentry. Suburbs have been associated with crassness, ugliness and blamed for the decline of cities. Unlike urban cores, suburbs have few boosters; most media and major academic institutions are clustered in denser, inner city areas. Planning departments have long ignored them, or tried to figure out how to undermine them. Now, the greens are also a factor, weighing against suburban life. Simply put: everyone of consequence generally hates them, except for the vast majority of metropolitan residents who live there.
H1: What do you think earlier proponents of moving from cites got wrong, how can we harness new technology in a way that offers greater choice and sustainability?
Joel: The initial problems came from not confronting such issues as quality of life, social space and walking opportunities. Some tract suburbs provided better, often more affordable housing, but with little in the way of social amenities. Fortunately this is changing in many new developments, as can be seen in places like Woodlands and Cinco Ranch outside Houston, or Valencia and Irvine in Southern California.
Alan: My research group at MIT is currently working on a project that envisions the future of the American suburb past 2060. We have focused on the continued development of polycentricity in metropolitan areas and a tendency to expand in space as transportation technology, infrastructure, and policies allow. The framework of polycentricity will be carried forward because of spatial economics and the lowering cost of distance to affect location decisions. This future could plausibly include Level 5 autonomy (no human intervention required) for most vehicles in operation, where all driving situations can be handled by an autonomous driving system (car, truck, or all-terrain vehicle). Zero carbon emissions and Level 5 automation are absolutely in the near future, probably before Generation Z is buying cars for themselves.
Personal transportation modes will remain dominant in suburbia, but shared automobiles will transform the need for bus/rail service in suburbs. All of this assumes that consumer adoption and regulatory approval are achievable and that there is ubiquitous, reliable, and secure, low-cost wireless connectivity to the Internet-of-Things. Research suggests that level 5 autonomy will lead to 80% accident reduction.
The new spatial economics of automation will create huge environmental dividends. Reduced paving will lead to less urban flooding, less forest fragmentation, soil conservation, more groundwater recharge, and more landscape to use for common goods. Total automation will radically change the daily needs of various population segments. I can imagine increased long-distance commuting and mobile office vehicles, drone delivery for many errands, on-demand care and newly mobile elderly segments, and the elimination of drunk driving to name a few.

H1: Alan, you’re one of our esteemed judges for the Hyperloop One Global Challenge. Reviewing the applications – or engaging with teams and stakeholders at the event – what was one of the biggest surprises for you?
Alan: At a recent review of the U.S. finalist proposals in Washington D.C., I was pleasantly surprised by what I would describe as ‘regional optimism’. There was great enthusiasm and acknowledgement that we need to disrupt the broken transportation systems that are not serving emerging regional economies well. For instance, many individual cities talked about how connecting with regional partners would rejuvenate cities well beyond their own borders. There was a palpable energy to fix things and to pragmatically solve big problems that have national implications, not just local ones. It is truly rare to be in a room all day (literally 9 straight hours) with state and local agency heads from all over the U.S., the people in the day-to-day regulatory and political trenches of their cities, and hear them dream about the future in such uninhibited ways.
H1: You’re at a dinner party and a colleague proclaims Hyperloop only makes sense for intercity transport. How do you respond?
Alan: I would politely tell my colleague she needed to think about the broader applications of the infrastructure. The Hyperloop's value is exponentially greater than that of the technology itself. Like other new infrastructure, it will be joined with other innovations — 'packetized' — creating a multiplier effect. In the case of the Hyperloop, when a pod reaches its exit it will begin to function as an autonomous vehicle and completely solve the ‘last mile’ problem. The passenger will continue to ride in the same car until it reaches its final destination. What a “city” is will be redefined in the extended regional context of commuting extra long distances in short times.
H1: You’ve mentioned that even though more than 70 percent of people in the U.S. live in suburban areas —the suburbs are still growing. How can the U.S. successfully accommodate growing suburban interest and what can be done to invest in/revitalize/repurpose existing suburban infrastructure?
Joel: The key thing is to take advantage of new technologies. An overwhelming dependence on the personal car, and the ineffectiveness of rail transit (as can proved in declining market shares in many markets) — means some new approaches are necessary that are more effective and less costly. Billions have been spent on light rail and subways in dispersed urban areas like Los Angeles, Houston, Dallas and Atlanta but this has not increased transit share. New technologies will soon make these systems even less relevant and useful.
Alan: Joel is absolutely correct that tech innovations will change the infrastructural situation in suburbia. I think the key issue here is how we define and fund old vs. new infrastructure. There's little recognition that we need new forms of transport, and that building new infrastructure is not the same as modernizing old infrastructure. Of course, repairing bridges and helping to maintain state and national infrastructure are roles the federal government should and must continue to play. Despite that, the federal government needs to step into the future if America is going to continue to be the great transportation innovator that developed our magnificent web of trains, planes and automobile routes on a scale never seen or even imagined before.
In addition to new forms of infrastructure, government needs to re-think transportation capital. Our federal funding model is stuck in the 1950s, servicing city cores with inefficient mobility. There aren't any signs that it's going to finance the innovative infrastructure projects we need for more spread out city forms. Private investors are best positioned to understand and act on the future growth dynamics that will make these new modes succeed.
H1: Before “sprawl” became a contested word, Frank Lloyd Wright was famous for calling for more decentralization and opportunities for individuals to move away from the city. On the introduction of the automobile he wrote, man is “like a bird born in captivity, which finds the door opened. Soon he will learn that he can fly; and when he learns that he is free, he is gone.” In what ways do emerging technologies today have the power to give people greater choice to decide where to live, work, and experience leisure time?
Alan: Wright’s Broadacre City should be reimagined with a Hyperloop! But seriously, we can't sacrifice the need for environmental safeguards, or for safety and security in infrastructure. Neither should the federal government dictate things like location choice by telling people where to live. Our government has to be a partner, not an obstacle in these arenas. It should be developing streamlined, efficient, modern regulations that enable the rapid growth of new transportation technologies — technologies that are themselves key to an environmentally sustainable future. Government should refocus the federal funding apparatus, this time as an active participant in public-private partnerships — the so-called Three Ps.
Joel: The new systems, like Uber and Lyft, allow suburbanites greater flexibility at the same time the internet provides opportunity to turn the home into a primary workplace. In the future, the move towards Hyperloop technology and automated vehicles will further shatter the isolating aspects of suburban living. The beauty of suburban living — quiet, safe, allowing space — really evolves if you can strip out the maddening commute by car or even train.
This piece first appeared on the Hyperloop One blog.
Alan Berger is Professor of Landscape Architecture and Urban Design at Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he teaches courses open to the entire student body. He is founding director of P-REX lab, at MIT, a research lab focused on environmental problems caused by urbanization, including the design, remediation, and reuse of waste landscapes worldwide. He is also Co-Director of Norman B. Leventhal Center for Advanced Urbanism at MIT (LCAU).
Joel Kotkin is executive editor of NewGeography.com. He is the Roger Hobbs Distinguished Fellow in Urban Studies at Chapman University and executive director of the Houston-based Center for Opportunity Urbanism. His newest book is The Human City: Urbanism for the rest of us. He is also author of The New Class Conflict, The City: A Global History, and The Next Hundred Million: America in 2050. He lives in Orange County, CA.
Friday, June 9, 2017
AMERICA'S MOST SUBURBANIZED CITIES
AMERICA'S MOST SUBURBANIZED CITIES
by Wendell Cox 06/07/2017

Recently, The Wall Street Journal and Newsday, in a photographic spread, trumpeted the 70th anniversary of Levittown, the New York suburban development that provided the model for much of the rapid suburbanization that occurred after the Second World War in the United States. Levittown's production line building also set the stage for the similar suburbs of cities in Canada, Australia, New Zealand and elsewhere.
Over the last seven decades, the United States has become a predominantly suburban nation. In 2011-2015, 85 percent of the population in the 53 major metropolitan areas (over 1,000,000 population) lived in the suburbs or exurbs. This is based on analysis at the small area level (zip code tabulation areas) from the American Community Survey that classifies population based on demographic data (Figure 1).

Generally similar findings have been made about Canada and Australia by research teams led by Professor David L. A. Gordon of Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. Gordon and his Canadian team pioneered this type of analysis, which is not dependent on core municipality versus surrounding area analysis. Core municipalities often do not reflect the realities of metropolitan areas because they vary so greatly in their share of metropolitan area population. For example, the city of Atlanta has only 8 percent of the metropolitan area population, while San Antonio has more than 60 percent of the metropolitan area population.
Suburban Nation: United States
Many people, including urban analysts, are unaware of the extent to which American cities have become suburbanized. But the former mono-centricity that characterized most metropolitan areas at the end of World War II has been replaced first by multi-centered suburban employment development (polycentricity) and more recently by dispersion of employment. As early as 2000, more people worked in dispersed worksites in the major metropolitan areas, including New York, than in the downtowns (CBD's) and suburban office centers, according to research by Bumsoo Lee and Peter Gordon. City Sector Model analysis shows that CBDs lost two percent of their market share from 2000 to 2015, based on a City Sector Analysis of County Business Patterns data. It seems likely that the trend of dispersion has continued (Figure 2).

We took a look at the population distribution of the 53 major metropolitan areas (those with more than 1,000,000 population) to rate down by the extent to which they are suburban. The City Sector Model classifies the population of any area where there is an employment density of 20,000 or more as a CBD considers the urban core inner ring to have population densities exceeding 7500 per square mile. Such densities were characteristic of pre-automobile urban areas in the United States. According to estimates prepared by the Urban Land Institute, in 1920 the 24 urban areas with more 250,000 residents had an average population density of 7500.
As it turns out, 10 metropolitan areas have virtually no urban core population by this definition. To rank these metropolitan areas by their extent of suburbanization, we broke the 10 way tie by ranking the metropolitan areas by the extent of their exurban population. Exurban areas have very low population densities (250 per square mile or less) and are generally outside the urban area, which includes all contiguous built up area, surrounded by rural territory.
Seven of the 10 most suburban cities are in three states. Three are in Florida and two each in North Carolina and Arizona. They are listed in the Table 1, and data is provided for all 53 in Table 2.
Table 1
Most Suburban Cities: (Metroplitan Areas)
1 Charlotte, NC-SC
2 Riverside-San Bernardino, CA
3 Raleigh, NC
4 Orlando, FL
5 Birmingham, AL
6 Jacksonville, FL
7 Phoenix, AZ
8 San Antonio, TX
9 Tampa-St. Petersburg, FL
10 Tucson, AZ
Out of 53 with more than 1,000,000 population
The Most Suburban: Charlotte, NC-SC
Charlotte turns out to be the country’s most suburban metropolitan area. The exurban commuting patterns of Charlotte expanded substantially over the 2000 to 2010 decade, which resulted in the largest geographic expansion of any major metropolitan area. Its exurban population is 51 percent and its urban population density is approximately 1,700.
2nd Most Suburban: Riverside-San Bernardino, CA
Second ranked Riverside-San Bernardino, which in many ways is an extension of the Los Angeles metropolitan area (and is included in the Los Angeles combined statistical area), ranked as the second most suburban city. However, like other California cities, Riverside-San Bernardino is comparatively dense as an urban area, ranking above both Chicago and world renown densification model Portland as the 11th densest major urban area in the nation.
3rd Most Suburban: Raleigh, NC
At the opposite end of the density scale is third ranked Raleigh, a high tech center with an exurban population of 42 percent. Raleigh has an urban area population density of approximately 1,700, about the same as top ranked Charlotte and 16th ranked Atlanta.
4th Most Suburban: Orlando, FL
Fourth ranked Orlando has an exurban population of 34 percent and is suburban by nature. This is not surprising considering that it is virtually all new, having principally been developed since Walt Disney World made its decision to locate there and other entertainment venues followed.
5th Most Suburban: Birmingham, AL
Fifth ranked Birmingham, Alabama's largest city, had far slower growth than most major metropolitan areas of the South. In 1950, the metropolitan population was approximately 20 percent behind Atlanta, according to the 1950 census. Now, virtually all-suburban Atlanta has grown to nearly 5 times that of Birmingham since that time. Even so, Birmingham has expanded to have the lowest density of any principal urban area in a major metropolitan area.
6th Most Suburban: Jacksonville, FL
Sixth ranked Jacksonville, another all-suburban metropolitan area has an exurban population of 25 percent.
7th Most Suburban: Phoenix, AZ
Phoenix, like Orlando is virtually all a postwar product. With its 100 percent suburban population, 19 percent of it is in the exurbs ranking Phoenix as seventh most suburban. Phoenix is the largest among the all-suburban cities, with more than 4.6 million residents and is likely to displace San Francisco to become the nation's 11th largest metropolitan area this year, and could take 10th position away from Boston by the 2020 Census.
8th Most Suburban: San Antonio, TX
San Antonio, ranked as eighth most suburban, with an exurban population of 17 percent.
9th Most Suburban: Tampa-St. Petersburg, FL
Tampa – St. Petersburg ranks as the ninth most suburban city, with a 14 percent exurban population. Like San Antonio, Tampa has a comparatively strong downtown area, but its inner densities do not reach the levels necessary for population to be classified as urban core.
10th Most Suburban: Tucson, AZ
Tucson, the newest entry among the nations 53 major metropolitan areas takes the 10th position and rounds out the cities that are 100 percent suburban.
Other Cities
Nashville and San Jose ranked 11th, but are very different. Nashville, as the capital of Tennessee, has a comparatively strong CBD, but the urban area is one of the least dense. On the other hand, San Jose, which is really an extension of the San Francisco metropolitan area and a part of the San Francisco Bay combined statistical area has a weak CBD, but a very high urban area density. San Jose ranks after only Los Angeles and San Francisco in its urban density and ahead of the sprawling New York urban area.
There are a total of 34 metropolitan areas that are 95 percent or more suburban. These include examples such as Atlanta, at 99.2 percent San Diego at 98.9 percent Sacramento at 98.3 percent, Austin and 97.9 percent, Denver at 96.9 percent and Portland at 90.0 percent.
Los Angeles, with the nation's densest urban area, is 89.4 percent suburban, nearly matched by Seattle's 89.3 percent.
A number of older cities are overwhelmingly suburban as well, such as St. Louis at 88.4 suburban, Minneapolis-St. Paul at 86.8 percent, Washington at 83.3 percent, and Milwaukee at 76.6 percent. Chicago, Philadelphia, Providence, San Francisco – Oakland and Buffalo are all more than 70 percent suburban.
Boston and New York are considerably less suburban than the other 51 major metropolitan areas. Boston is 64.3 percent suburban, while New York is the only major metropolitan area that has a larger urban core population than its suburban and exurban area. New York is only 46.7 percent suburban.
Fast Growing and Automobile Oriented
As with all suburban areas, these suburban cities are automobile oriented. The journey to work transit market shares average 1.7 percent, one third of the national average for all areas. They are also among the fastest growing, with six ranking in the top 10 for 2010 to 2016 growth. A close look shows that the American urban form is changing, but not in ways commonly discussed among planners, urban land speculators and many academics.
Table 2
Cities (Metropolitan Areas) Ranked by Extent of Suburbanization
Major Metropolitan Areas: 2011-2015
Share (%) of Metropolitan Population by Sector
Rank Metropolitan Area % Suburban CBD Urban Core: Inner Ring Earlier Suburbs Later Suburbs Exurbs
1 Charlotte, NC-SC 100.0% 0.0% 0.0% 10.2% 39.2% 50.6%
2 Riverside-San Bernardino, CA 100.0% 0.0% 0.0% 28.9% 29.6% 41.5%
3 Raleigh, NC 100.0% 0.0% 0.0% 7.4% 56.8% 35.8%
4 Orlando, FL 100.0% 0.0% 0.0% 15.7% 50.6% 33.7%
5 Birmingham, AL 100.0% 0.0% 0.0% 41.6% 25.2% 33.2%
6 Jacksonville, FL 100.0% 0.0% 0.0% 25.6% 49.0% 25.4%
7 Phoenix, AZ 100.0% 0.0% 0.0% 29.1% 52.0% 18.9%
8 San Antonio, TX 100.0% 0.0% 0.0% 38.6% 44.1% 17.3%
9 Tampa-St. Petersburg, FL 100.0% 0.0% 0.0% 44.2% 41.7% 14.1%
10 Tucson, AZ 100.0% 0.0% 0.0% 46.9% 41.0% 12.2%
11 Nashville, TN 99.8% 0.2% 0.0% 24.4% 36.9% 38.5%
12 San Jose, CA 99.8% 0.1% 0.1% 77.5% 9.3% 13.0%
13 Houston, TX 99.6% 0.4% 0.0% 33.2% 50.0% 16.4%
14 Dallas-Fort Worth, TX 99.5% 0.2% 0.3% 33.7% 43.1% 22.7%
15 Virginia Beach-Norfolk, VA-NC 99.5% 0.0% 0.5% 45.9% 38.0% 15.7%
16 Atlanta, GA 99.2% 0.2% 0.6% 14.8% 70.8% 13.6%
17 San Diego, CA 98.9% 0.0% 1.1% 61.3% 30.9% 6.7%
18 Sacramento, CA 98.3% 0.0% 1.7% 37.7% 40.9% 19.8%
19 Memphis, TN-MS-AR 98.1% 0.0% 1.9% 39.9% 35.3% 23.0%
20 Austin, TX 97.9% 0.4% 1.7% 15.4% 63.0% 19.6%
21 Las Vegas, NV 97.6% 0.4% 2.0% 16.2% 77.7% 3.8%
22 Oklahoma City, OK 97.2% 0.4% 2.4% 34.1% 32.6% 30.6%
23 Miami, FL 97.1% 0.3% 2.6% 50.0% 44.8% 2.4%
24 Denver, CO 96.9% 0.5% 2.7% 42.7% 42.7% 11.4%
25 Grand Rapids, MI 96.5% 0.0% 3.5% 33.0% 15.4% 48.0%
26 Salt Lake City, UT 96.5% 0.0% 3.5% 47.9% 39.2% 9.3%
27 Richmond, VA 95.6% 0.0% 4.4% 38.5% 38.4% 18.6%
28 Columbus, OH 95.3% 0.0% 4.7% 28.5% 38.6% 28.3%
29 Indianapolis. IN 95.0% 0.3% 4.6% 27.3% 42.6% 25.2%
30 Kansas City, MO-KS 94.8% 0.2% 5.0% 37.5% 26.9% 30.4%
31 Detroit, MI 93.7% 0.1% 6.1% 60.2% 16.6% 17.0%
32 Louisville, KY-IN 91.2% 0.5% 8.3% 44.5% 26.0% 20.8%
33 Cincinnati, OH-KY-IN 90.0% 0.6% 9.4% 40.3% 27.9% 21.8%
34 Portland, OR-WA 90.0% 0.7% 9.3% 36.0% 39.7% 14.3%
35 Los Angeles, CA 89.4% 0.4% 10.1% 76.1% 5.3% 8.0%
36 Seattle, WA 89.3% 1.1% 9.7% 35.9% 40.7% 12.6%
37 New Orleans. LA 89.1% 0.2% 10.7% 50.3% 7.0% 31.8%
38 Hartford, CT 88.7% 0.1% 11.2% 77.4% 1.0% 10.3%
39 Rochester, NY 88.6% 0.3% 11.1% 46.8% 7.9% 34.0%
40 St. Louis,, MO-IL 88.4% 0.1% 11.5% 39.6% 26.1% 22.7%
41 Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN-WI 86.8% 0.5% 12.7% 31.4% 33.7% 21.7%
42 Baltimore, MD 84.3% 1.4% 14.3% 42.0% 20.6% 21.8%
43 Pittsburgh, PA 84.1% 1.3% 14.5% 56.0% 5.0% 23.1%
44 Washington, DC-VA-MD-WV 83.3% 1.6% 15.1% 28.2% 36.6% 18.4%
45 Cleveland, OH 78.3% 0.0% 21.7% 48.5% 13.6% 16.2%
46 Milwaukee,WI 76.6% 1.6% 21.7% 50.7% 10.5% 15.4%
47 Chicago, IL-IN-WI 74.2% 1.2% 24.6% 44.9% 18.5% 10.8%
48 Philadelphia, PA-NJ-DE-MD 74.1% 0.9% 25.0% 50.5% 15.1% 8.5%
49 Providence, RI-MA 73.9% 0.6% 25.5% 47.9% 2.8% 23.1%
50 San Francisco-Oakland, CA 73.0% 3.3% 23.7% 54.0% 7.6% 11.4%
51 Buffalo, NY 71.0% 0.3% 28.7% 51.3% 3.1% 16.6%
52 Boston, MA-NH 64.3% 3.2% 32.5% 48.6% 3.6% 12.2%
53 New York, NY-NJ-PA 46.7% 6.5% 46.8% 35.2% 5.5% 6.0%
Derived from American Community Survey using City Sector Model
Wendell Cox is principal of Demographia, an international public policy and demographics firm.
Thursday, June 1, 2017
MTC sends information about Plan Bay Area AFTER comments are due.
Received this note from MTC on June 1, 2017 the very day that public comments are due:
================================================
Hi –
Thank you for attending the Open House and Public Workshop on Plan Bay Area 2040 in Mill Valley on Saturday, May 20th. At the open house, you asked for a copy of the presentations. The materials are now posted online at:
Let me know if you have any further questions.
Below are the presentations. Send your comments to info@planbayarea.org
Below are the presentations. Send your comments to info@planbayarea.org
My Comments to Plan Bay Area 2040 (due today!)
Dear Planners and Politicians of Plan Bay Area 2040:
I am writing you today to express my comments about Plan
Bay Area 2040 which presumes to guide the entire San Francisco Bay Region to a
better future WITHOUT citizen input. Like
my 6000 neighbors in Marinwood –Lucas Valley in unincorporated Marin, I already
have a plan for the next twenty five years of my life and Plan Bay Area 2040 it
isn’t. I believe that America’s promise
of “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” does not need a bureaucracy to
implement. Sadly, MTC and ABAG disagrees and has laid out a
plan which at its outset promises to diminish the middle class and make
transportation and housing more expensive.
In my community of Marinwood in unincorporated Marin, 80%
of the RHNA allocations for Marin were placed in just 3 square miles of the
possible 840 square miles. Our bedroom
community has been identified as the preferred location for housing despite our
lack of shopping and employment opportunities. Plan Bay Area offers us nothing except
grief and higher taxes. We have
chronicled much of it on www.savemarinwood.org
Here is a list of issues of concern in no particular
order.
1.)
Plan Bay
Area 2040 will lead to displacement of tens of thousands of people, destroy the
social fabric of hundreds of communities and neighborhoods. It will hit
ethnic communities the hardest due to economic and race criteria as a basis for
community redevelopment . It takes
decades for communities to emerge and only a few years to destroy. Hunters point, San Francisco Mission, the Filmore District are just a few examples
of dislocation of communities. Marin
City, a traditionally minority community
is slated for redevelopment in Marin.
Generations of African Americans have been born, raised, married and
passed in this tight knit community. It is a source of strength and pride for
its residents. Now, developers have an
eye on this well located community to put market rate and luxury housing which
will push out old residents due to construction and economic pressures. It is wrong and immoral and at its heart,
racist as it presumes that to “improve” the community, housing opportunities
must be made available for Caucasians.
I filmed many community meetings there.
Here is a small sample. https://youtu.be/flcxZPLuGtI?list=PL_BuJGc-hEs7RhcIg2ff79CAWaG2iKulD
2.)
Plan Bay
Area 2040 fails to anticipate innovation in the changing workplace due to
automation. No one can predict the
future but that doesn’t seem to stop planners from trying.
We know the vast changes that
have come to our own lifetimes due to technical innovation but we could have
hardly predicted how the pattern of life would change with advent of personal
computers, the internet and bioscience.
Future innovations in science, medicine, robotics and transportation are
likely to change the direction of the Bay Area in ways we cannot even
imagine. It is foolish to plan a
transportation system without considering the impact of self driving cars, narrow
vehicles, self chaining cars and changing demographics in the Bay Area due to
the high cost of government.
3.)
Plan Bay
Area 2040 fails to account for the near certainty of an earthquake and other
natural disasters that could lead to the displacement and disruption of
thousands of people’s lives. Survivors
from such an event will need new homes.
Where will they live?
4.)
Plan Bay
Area 2040 does not adjust for the business cycle and recessions. No growth happens at a regular rate as PBA
2040 suggests. In fact, the boom and
bust cycles in San Francisco has been happening since its founding.
5.)
Plan Bay
Area 2040 fails to assume the drag on construction and business formation
created by high housing development fees and taxation. California is one of the highest taxed
states in the USA. Marin County is one of the highest taxed counties in
California. This makes Marin County a poor choice
to build or expand a business. PBA 2040
assumes unlimited growth without considering the effect of low cost
jurisdictions. Without business, there
is no job growth. The overly optimistic
assumption of job growth in Marin by the MTC is unsupported by historical jobs
data.
6.)
Plan Bay
Area 2040 Urban Sim model is error prone and proven to be unreliable. Since Urban Sim has been in use for Plan Bay
Area, staff at the MTC has been given feedback that it has huge errors. For example, the cities of Sausalito and
Corde Madera have “lot inventory” in FEMA flood zones and areas that are not
economic to develop. In Marinwood Lucas
Valley, landslide risk and steep
hillsides limit large scale developments.
Urban Sim is too inaccurate to use as a planning tool.
7.)
Sea Level
rise is ignored as a limiting factor in Plan Bay Area 2040. Freeways, housing developments and rail
tracks are predicted to be under water in 2040.
If Plan Bay Area 2040 has been created to thwart climate change, why
isn’t Sea level rise taken seriously? We
know that due to improved efficiency of automobiles that GHG targets have been
met WITHOUT Plan Bay Area. Will sea
level change happen or not? Guessing an
outcome that will cost citizens billions of dollars and destroy communities is
not acceptable.
8.)
Quality
of life is not considered in Plan Bay Area 2040. Planners assume that the sun will always
shine, San Francisco Bay Area will lead the world technology markets and public
transit will never break down. They
never consider that public transit, for example, will cost the local economy
jobs and economic output. They never
consider the working mom who cannot take public transit and care for her
children or that the high cost of living will not enable families to provide a
decent quality of life.
9.)
Infrastructure
upgrades will be needed but no funding source has been identified in Plan Bay
Area 2040. When communities expand, they need new schools, sewer systems
and expanded government services. Who
will pay for this expansion? Since taxes
are among the highest in the nation now, will middle class families be willing
to pay more taxes for the “privilege” of high density housing? Probably
not. It will invite emigration to
neighboring states.
10.) Local democratic representation is ignored
in favor of a centralized bureaucracy that is unaccountable to local concerns
in Plan Bay Area 2040. This model
of governance has been proven a failure across the United States and the
globe. It is antithetical to our
democratic traditions and
disenfranchises citizens. Many will flee the Bay Area in favor of local
governments that recognizes a citizen’s right to self government.
11.) Outreach in Plan Bay Area 2040 has been
insufficient and ignored the number one constituency of voters- working
families. The “Plan Bay Area” club of
politicians, bureaucrats and special interest groups do not represent the
majority opinion. Most people are
blissfully unaware of Plan Bay Area 2040 but rest assured they will learn- and
rebel once the plans are felt by the average voter. Marin County, for example was only given one
public meeting barely a week prior to public commentary deadline. Only a handful a people of the 500,000 Marin
residents attended. Surely, the
Planners at MTC are deluding themselves if they think people won’t notice. Those of us who attended the meetings noted
how flimsy the arguments of Plan Bay Area are.
There will be a steep political price to pay for manipulating the
public.
12.) The regressive taxation to be implemented
in Plan Bay Area 2040 will hurt lower and middle class citizens the hardest. VMTs, bridge tolls, congestion fees, toll
roads will create greater social inequity than ever before. Workers, business and the labor force who
must rely on personal transportation will be forced to pay the highest
cost. This will definitely reduce
economic output and incentivize people to flee the state.
It will be far better to allow Plan Bay Area 2040 the
chance to achieve TRUE public approval with a full engagement process known as
VOTING. The central planning scheme is
only as strong as the public support.
A vote of “no plan” is far superior to the costly,
centrally planned nightmare known as Plan Bay Area 2040.
Respectfully,
Stephen Nestel
Marinwood, CA 94903
A youtube playlist featuring many of the Plan Bay Area
many moments can be seen at
Monday, May 29, 2017
Your comments on Plan Bay Area 2040 needed.
Informational Status Report on the Draft Plan Bay Area 2040
The Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) and the Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) recently released the first quadrennial update of Plan Bay Area (Plan Bay Area 2040 Draft Plan) and a Draft Environmental Impact Report. The Draft Plan is a limited and focused update of the initial Plan Bay Area approved by MTC and ABAG in 2013. On May 23rd, Brian Crawford, Director of the Marin County Community Development Agency, gave a brief verbal status report on the Plan Bay Area 2040 Draft Plan and its process.
Here is a link to Mr. Crawford's presentation:
Draft Plan Bay Area 2040 Projections for Marin County between 2010 and 2040:
The Draft Plan Bay Area 2040 Preferred Scenario is a forecast for Unincorporated Marin's household and employment growth by the year 2040. The Draft Preferred Scenario for Unincorporated Marin was first presented in August 2016 and is shown below:
In October 2016, the Marin County Board of Supervisors sent in a letter asking for revisions to the projections of the Draft Preferred Scenario. In March 2017, an updated Preferred Scenario for Unincorporated Marin came out with the Draft Plan Bay Area 2040 and is shown below:

The Plan Bay Area 2040 Scenario Projection of Unincorporated Marin Household Growth has dropped from 3150 households (August 2016 Scenario) to 2200 households (March 2017 Scenario).
The Plan Bay Area 2040 Scenario Projection of Unincorporated Marin Job Growth has dropped incrementally from 3850 (August 2016 Scenario) to 3800 (March 2017 Scenario).
Although the March 2017 projections are lower than the August 2016 projections, the updated projections still exceed Marin County's historic growth patterns. They also exceed the original 2013 Plan Bay Area projections, which were unrealistically high. Please scroll down to read a list of other problems with Plan Bay Area that we sent out in a prior email.
Attached is a letter, dated October 1, 2016, from Sustainable TamAlmonte to the Marin County Board of Supervisors commenting on the August 2016 Draft Preferred Scenario for Unincorporated Marin. Our letter demonstrates that the projections were unrealistic and too high.
Below are comments that the Marin County Supervisors made about the Plan Bay Area 2040 update. Unfortunately, the Supervisors appear to be complacent and seem to accept the regional plan. There was no prolonged discussion showing concerns.
Abbreviated comments made by the Supervisors:
- Katie Rice: This plan update is an improvement over the 2013 Plan Bay Area.
- Dennis Rodoni: The projection of household growth is reasonable.
- Damon Connolly: Local needs and perspectives should be advocated for to keep Marin County's unique character and at the same time meet our housing needs.
- Judy Arnold: Every day, 65,000 cars come into Marin because workers cannot afford to live here. Yet, at some point, we will no longer have space for housing.
Here is the remaining schedule for the adoption process of the Draft Plan Bay Area 2040 (an update of the original Plan Bay Area adopted in 2013):

The Supervisors unanimously approved Brian Crawford's informational status report.
Best regards,
Sharon
The Plan Bay Area 2040 update has the same problems that the original 2013 Plan Bay Area had:
1) The cost effectiveness of Plan Bay Area is abysmal, with costs of implementing Plan Bay Area far surpassing any benefits achieved;
2) Plan Bay Area isn’t needed to meet SB 375’s greenhouse gas reduction requirement - The only provisions of Plan Bay Area that significantly lower green house gases are from the California Air Resources Board green house gas plan and MTC climate initiatives, which could exist without the regional plan. Moreover, new construction, which Plan Bay Area mandates, is one of the biggest contributors to greenhouse gases. The adverse climate change impacts of the plan related to the construction process are unsustainable, at a time when we need a smaller environmental footprint, a reduction in the use of building materials, electricity, and fuel. It takes up to 80 years for an urban village mixed-use building at maximum greenness to overcome climate change impacts from its own construction;
3) Plan Bay Area makes housing and transportation less affordable - Rather than reducing the combined housing and transportation costs for low and lower middle income households, implementation of the plan would increase these costs from 67% to 69% of low and lower-middle incomes;
4) Plan Bay Area displaces many lower income households;
5) Plan Bay Area does nothing to stop the hollowing out of the middle class. - The plan's forecast predicts; "The 'hollowing out' of the middle is projected to continue over the next 25 years. Household growth will be strongest in the highest income category, reflecting expected strength of growth in high wage sectors combined with non-wage income (interest, dividends, capital gains, transfers). Household growth will also be high in the lowest wage category, reflecting occupational shifts, wage stagnation, and retirement of seniors without pension assets";
6) Plan Bay Area’s forecast of Jobs, Population, and Housing for Marin County is unrealistic;
7) Implementation of Plan Bay Area would cause multiple significant unavoidable adverse environmental impacts, resulting in increased risk of severe environmental harm and serious jeopardy of public health and safety. - The impacts would be unavoidable either because mitigations will not reduce the impacts to less-than-significant or else because the regional agencies cannot require local jurisdictions to impose the mitigation measures. Moreover, the mitigations are unfunded;
8) Plan Bay Area promotes unfunded mandates - Plan Bay Area does not identify or address how communities will fund the expansion of public infrastructure and services necessary to accommodate the plan’s projected growth. There is no funding in place to address the significant adverse impacts that the plan will create. The local jurisdictions and tax payers are expected to pick up the tab, when they don’t even have enough available funds to properly provide for the existing demands;
9) Plan Bay Area reduces local control (with a carrot & stick approach);
10) Plan Bay Area does not respect environmental constraints and limits to growth; and
11) Plan Bay Area furthers CEQA exemptions and streamlining.
For additional observations about Plan Bay Area 2040, please read Richard Hall's below article.
Marin Post Article by Richard Hall:
Plan Bay Area is back: an opportunity for Marin to voice opposition
Richard Hall — San Rafael May 8, 2017 - 3:05 PM
Plan Bay Area is back - this time it's called Plan Bay Area 2040 and we have our first (and perhaps only) opportunity to speak about it at a workshop to be held on the morning of Saturday May 20th. Perhaps it will be theater like before (probably) - but this is our one opportunity for Marin to voice opposition.
- the new plan leads with "we have a housing crisis that requires immediate attention" when really we have an infrastructure crisis requiring attention; we have not kept our infrastructure, especially roads, growing in pace with population. New infrastructure projects focus on rail which people do not prefer and faces adoption challenges.
- Plan Bay Area spent $57 billion to plan for growth in the Bay Area, while taxpayers now pay 12 cents higher and escalating gas taxes to pay simply to maintain road infrastructure without this infrastructure keeping up with needs; for instance even with current funding the Vallejo 37 corridor will not be expanded until the year 2088!
- this is leading to a reduction in quality of life; Marin is built around one overwhelmed arterial - highway 101, while growth in Marin is slow in Sonoma it is not and this is making 101 traffic worse
- the presence of the SMART train is driving and accelerating growth through policy and MTC driven programs; it needs population growth to achieve sustainable ridership
- adding people, which Plan Bay Area drives towards exacerbates the issue
- allocating funding to accelerate and exacerbate growth overlooks major existing acute issues
- Plan Bay Area should be focusing on serving existing taxpayers instead of serving lobbying groups seeking rapid growth.
- Plan Bay Area seeks to solve a plethora of issues including social equity and transportation but in so doing fails to achieve anything. It seeks to shift people to transit, but data shows people are not adopting transit. It is failed social engineering and has not achieved anything but serving those who seek growth
Richard Hall
In October 2016, the Marin County Board of Supervisors sent in a letter asking for revisions to the projections of the Draft Preferred Scenario. In March 2017, an updated Preferred Scenario for Unincorporated Marin came out with the Draft Plan Bay Area 2040 and is shown below:
The Plan Bay Area 2040 Scenario Projection of Unincorporated Marin Household Growth has dropped from 3150 households (August 2016 Scenario) to 2200 households (March 2017 Scenario).
The Plan Bay Area 2040 Scenario Projection of Unincorporated Marin Job Growth has dropped incrementally from 3850 (August 2016 Scenario) to 3800 (March 2017 Scenario).
Although the March 2017 projections are lower than the August 2016 projections, the updated projections still exceed Marin County's historic growth patterns. They also exceed the original 2013 Plan Bay Area projections, which were unrealistically high. Please scroll down to read a list of other problems with Plan Bay Area that we sent out in a prior email.
Attached is a letter, dated October 1, 2016, from Sustainable TamAlmonte to the Marin County Board of Supervisors commenting on the August 2016 Draft Preferred Scenario for Unincorporated Marin. Our letter demonstrates that the projections were unrealistic and too high.
Below are comments that the Marin County Supervisors made about the Plan Bay Area 2040 update. Unfortunately, the Supervisors appear to be complacent and seem to accept the regional plan. There was no prolonged discussion showing concerns.
Abbreviated comments made by the Supervisors:
- Katie Rice: This plan update is an improvement over the 2013 Plan Bay Area.
- Dennis Rodoni: The projection of household growth is reasonable.
- Damon Connolly: Local needs and perspectives should be advocated for to keep Marin County's unique character and at the same time meet our housing needs.
- Judy Arnold: Every day, 65,000 cars come into Marin because workers cannot afford to live here. Yet, at some point, we will no longer have space for housing.
Here is the remaining schedule for the adoption process of the Draft Plan Bay Area 2040 (an update of the original Plan Bay Area adopted in 2013):
The Supervisors unanimously approved Brian Crawford's informational status report.
Best regards,
Sharon
The Plan Bay Area 2040 update has the same problems that the original 2013 Plan Bay Area had:
1) The cost effectiveness of Plan Bay Area is abysmal, with costs of implementing Plan Bay Area far surpassing any benefits achieved;
2) Plan Bay Area isn’t needed to meet SB 375’s greenhouse gas reduction requirement - The only provisions of Plan Bay Area that significantly lower green house gases are from the California Air Resources Board green house gas plan and MTC climate initiatives, which could exist without the regional plan. Moreover, new construction, which Plan Bay Area mandates, is one of the biggest contributors to greenhouse gases. The adverse climate change impacts of the plan related to the construction process are unsustainable, at a time when we need a smaller environmental footprint, a reduction in the use of building materials, electricity, and fuel. It takes up to 80 years for an urban village mixed-use building at maximum greenness to overcome climate change impacts from its own construction;
3) Plan Bay Area makes housing and transportation less affordable - Rather than reducing the combined housing and transportation costs for low and lower middle income households, implementation of the plan would increase these costs from 67% to 69% of low and lower-middle incomes;
4) Plan Bay Area displaces many lower income households;
5) Plan Bay Area does nothing to stop the hollowing out of the middle class. - The plan's forecast predicts; "The 'hollowing out' of the middle is projected to continue over the next 25 years. Household growth will be strongest in the highest income category, reflecting expected strength of growth in high wage sectors combined with non-wage income (interest, dividends, capital gains, transfers). Household growth will also be high in the lowest wage category, reflecting occupational shifts, wage stagnation, and retirement of seniors without pension assets";
6) Plan Bay Area’s forecast of Jobs, Population, and Housing for Marin County is unrealistic;
7) Implementation of Plan Bay Area would cause multiple significant unavoidable adverse environmental impacts, resulting in increased risk of severe environmental harm and serious jeopardy of public health and safety. - The impacts would be unavoidable either because mitigations will not reduce the impacts to less-than-significant or else because the regional agencies cannot require local jurisdictions to impose the mitigation measures. Moreover, the mitigations are unfunded;
8) Plan Bay Area promotes unfunded mandates - Plan Bay Area does not identify or address how communities will fund the expansion of public infrastructure and services necessary to accommodate the plan’s projected growth. There is no funding in place to address the significant adverse impacts that the plan will create. The local jurisdictions and tax payers are expected to pick up the tab, when they don’t even have enough available funds to properly provide for the existing demands;
9) Plan Bay Area reduces local control (with a carrot & stick approach);
10) Plan Bay Area does not respect environmental constraints and limits to growth; and
11) Plan Bay Area furthers CEQA exemptions and streamlining.
For additional observations about Plan Bay Area 2040, please read Richard Hall's below article.
Marin Post Article by Richard Hall:
Plan Bay Area is back: an opportunity for Marin to voice opposition
Richard Hall — San Rafael May 8, 2017 - 3:05 PM
Plan Bay Area is back - this time it's called Plan Bay Area 2040 and we have our first (and perhaps only) opportunity to speak about it at a workshop to be held on the morning of Saturday May 20th. Perhaps it will be theater like before (probably) - but this is our one opportunity for Marin to voice opposition.
- the new plan leads with "we have a housing crisis that requires immediate attention" when really we have an infrastructure crisis requiring attention; we have not kept our infrastructure, especially roads, growing in pace with population. New infrastructure projects focus on rail which people do not prefer and faces adoption challenges.
- Plan Bay Area spent $57 billion to plan for growth in the Bay Area, while taxpayers now pay 12 cents higher and escalating gas taxes to pay simply to maintain road infrastructure without this infrastructure keeping up with needs; for instance even with current funding the Vallejo 37 corridor will not be expanded until the year 2088!
- this is leading to a reduction in quality of life; Marin is built around one overwhelmed arterial - highway 101, while growth in Marin is slow in Sonoma it is not and this is making 101 traffic worse
- the presence of the SMART train is driving and accelerating growth through policy and MTC driven programs; it needs population growth to achieve sustainable ridership
- adding people, which Plan Bay Area drives towards exacerbates the issue
- allocating funding to accelerate and exacerbate growth overlooks major existing acute issues
- Plan Bay Area should be focusing on serving existing taxpayers instead of serving lobbying groups seeking rapid growth.
- Plan Bay Area seeks to solve a plethora of issues including social equity and transportation but in so doing fails to achieve anything. It seeks to shift people to transit, but data shows people are not adopting transit. It is failed social engineering and has not achieved anything but serving those who seek growth
Richard Hall
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