Wednesday, November 16, 2011

ClimatePlan Weekly Update - November 16th, 2011

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Announcements and Resources

 

Will the Metropolitan Transportation Commission rethink some of the largest transportation projects on the books?

TransForm Blog - November 2nd, 2011

By Stuart Cohen

This Friday, November 4, staff at the Metropolitan Transportation Committee will release a groundbreaking analysis that could call into question some of the biggest transportation projects on the books.  This "project performance assessment" dives deep into 80 of the largest projects that are being considered for inclusion in the 2013 Regional Transportation Plan (RTP).  The question is, how good is their assessment?

Link to blog 

 

Land of Risk/Land of Opportunity

UC Davis Center for Regional Change - November 2011

The report uses an innovative new tool, called the Cumulative Environmental Vulnerabilities Assessment (CEVA), to identify the locations and populations within the Valley that are at greatest risk and that require immediate protection. Using CEVA, CRC researchers documented that the most extreme concentrations of environmental hazards populations tend to be located in communities where the people have the least political, social, and economic resources to prevent or mitigate these risks.

Link to report website 

Download Full Report 

 

San Diego Affordable Housing Parking Study

Submitted to the City of San Diego - November 2011

The purpose of the affordable housing and parking study is to determine the links between affordable housing variables (income levels, household age, transit accessibility, land use context, and housing type) and parking demand. The goal of this project is to develop a regulatory framework that tailors parking requirements for affordable housing projects that is sensitive to their context and other key factors that determines the parking demand and increase the use of alternative modes of transportation for each project.

Download Full Report 

 

Check the events calendar to the right for info on upcoming meetings, workshops, webinars and more.

 


Recent News

 

Downtown advocates urge transit over cars

San Diego Union Tribune - November 15th, 2011

By Robert J. Hawkins

When Kris Michell, president of the Downtown San Diego Partnership, articulates a vision for the urban center, it doesn't include a whole lot of automobiles. "Downtown should be all transit," Michell stated flatly during a forum on transit hosted by the San Diego Taxpayers Association on Tuesday.

Link to article 

 

TTI Study: California roads top fuel-waste list

The Wall Street Journal - November 15th, 2011

Californians are among the top fuel-wasting drivers in the nation, burning up more than 38 million gallons in the most congested roadways last year, according to a report released Tuesday. The study by the Texas Transportation Institute examined 328 of the most congested stretches of highway in the nation and ranked roadways based on the amount of fuel wasted due to congestion. Seven of the top 10 fuel-wasting stretches were in Los Angeles

Link to article  

Senate Bill May Weaken Smaller Metros, Empower State DOTs

Streetsblog Capitol Hill - November 14th, 2011
By Tanya Snyder
In Indiana, the state DOT wants to build a 142-mile extension of Interstate 69, but the Bloomington metropolitan planning organization won't allow it - the group had written the road out of its three-year transportation plan and members are standing firm, refusing to write it back in. These local MPOs often (though not always) see the importance of things like urban transit and active transportation where states too often focus on big road-building projects. There are 384 MPOs in the country. Two-thirds of them represent communities of less than 200,000 people. And there's an existential threat to all of those MPOs in the new Senate transportation bill.
Link to article

Firms turning to environmental law to combat rivals

Los Angeles Times - November 14th, 2011

By Nicholas Riccardi

California's landmark act on environmental quality is credited with preserving scenic landscapes but is now slowing key projects and spawning a flurry of litigation. To halt a competing project near USC, Conquest Student Housing turned to a legal weapon that one of its co-owners allegedly compared to a crude bomb: cheap and destructive. Conquest owned 17 buildings that rented to USC students. When the developer Urban Partners proposed erecting a new complex to house 1,600 students, Conquest sued under California's landmark environmental law.

Link to article   

 

L.A. Vision, U.S. Promise: Implications of the America Fast Forward Proposal

Planetizen - November 14th, 2011

By Allison Brooks and Darnell Chadwick Grisby

The vision laid out by Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and other civic leaders includes light rail linked to an expansive bus network connecting the cultural homes of the African-American, Latino, and Asian-American communities; a "subway to the sea" that runs through a heavily congested but jobs rich corridor, and a beautiful intermodal transit hub in a reinvigorated downtown. When Mayor Villaraigosa asked the federal government to loan the region money to accelerate this vision- making it happen in ten years instead of thirty-it captured the imagination of national policymakers and community stakeholders alike.

Link to article   

 

California can't afford not to build high-speed rail system

Merced Sun-Star - November 12th, 2011

Opinion -- By Bob Balgenorth

California urgently needs high-speed rail now, and the recently released draft 2012 Business Plan from California High-Speed Rail Authority spells out how we can finally make this long dream a reality. Our economy needs a more modern, efficient transportation system now. Our environment needs cleaner modes of transportation now. And our workers need the hundreds of thousands of good new jobs high-speed rail will bring right now. Not in a few years -- now!
Link to article

Want to Sell Voters on Transit? Keep It Simple

Streetsblog Network - November 10th, 2011
By Angie Schmitt
What makes a local transit referendum successful? Studies have shown that developing consensus among business and environmental leaders is important. Also critical, argues Ben Schiendelman at Seattle Transit Blog, is developing a strong, clearly-articulated marketing campaign. According to Schiendelman, the question that is foremost in voters' minds when they step into the ballot box is, "How much will I get, and how much will I pay?"
Link to article 

Another way to fight obesity: city planning

The Bakersfield Californian - November 10th, 2011

Opinion

A new study reveals that the number of Kern County children who are overweight or obese rose nearly 6 percent between 2005 and 2010, while the statewide rate fell 1.1 percent over the same period. The Center's studies have recommended various policy solutions to address these problems. One idea is to implement zoning changes that would limit new fast food restaurants in neighborhoods where there is already an overabundance, or provide incentives for grocery or produce stores to locate in neighborhoods that don't have one. Another suggests including the health implications of an establishment in the community design and permitting process.

Link to article  

 

Regional Agencies Taking Slow Walk Towards Sustainable Funding

Streetsblog Los Angeles - November 9th, 2011

By Damien Newton

In recent weeks, regional transportation agencies in Southern California have made some slow moves towards embracing a more sustainable transportation network throughout the Southland.  Local "Metropolitan Planning Organization" the Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG) is poised to pass a long term plan that would dramatically increase bicycle and pedestrian funding while its sister agency in San Diego passed the first regional funding plan complying with the state's ground breaking greenhouse gas emissions law SB 375

Link to blog

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Upcoming Events
  

 

Who Drives, Who Pays? Benefits, Burdens, and Equitable Strategies for Funding Transportation

Hosted by Boards and Commission Leadership Institute - Urban Habitat

November 16th, 6pm - 8pm

East Bay Community Foundation

Frank Ogawa Plaza, Oakland

Click here for more information and to RSVP
 

Federal and State Transportation Planning: How to Win Reform

Hosted by Transportation For America, East Yard Communities for Environmental Justice, and Coalition for a Safe Environment

November 17th, 8:30am - 3pm

555 W. Temple Street

Los Angeles, CA

Click here for more information and to register 
  

Faith, Food, and Farming

Hosted by Catholic Charities of the Diocese of Stockton and National Catholic Rural Life Conference

November 19th, 8am - 3pm

Robert Cabral Ag Center

2101 East Earhart Avenue

Stockton, CA

Click here for more information

New Partners for Smart Growth Conference
Hosted by Local Government Commission
February 2nd - 4th
San Diego Sheraton Hotel and Marina
San Diego, CA
Click here for more information and to register 
 
Weekly Update is a compilation of news articles and announcements related to climate change and land use in California.  Contact Chanell Fletcher at chanell@climateplanca.org for more information or to submit an article/event. 

sdparkingreportdraft110111.pdf Download this file

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