Regional Agencies Smart Growth Strategy Bay Area Alliance for Sustainable Development Regional Livability Footprint Project : Regional Agencies Smart Growth Strategy Bay Area Alliance for Sustainable Development Regional Livability Footprint Project Sonoma County
September 22, 2001 SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Sonoma County Co-SponsorsFaith-Based Coalition of Sonoma CountyGolden Gate TransitLeadership InstituteLeague of Women Voters of Sonoma CountyNorth Bay Association of RealtorsNorth Bay Labor Council AFL-CIOSanta Rosa Chamber of CommerceSonoma Co. Mayors & Councilmembers AssociationSonoma County Transportation AuthoritySonoma County TransportationLand Use CoalitionSpecial thanks to the City of Santa Rosa for providing food and refreshments. : Sonoma County Co-Sponsors Faith-Based Coalition of Sonoma County Golden Gate Transit Leadership Institute League of Women Voters of Sonoma County North Bay Association of Realtors North Bay Labor Council AFL-CIO Santa Rosa Chamber of Commerce Sonoma Co. Mayors & Councilmembers Association Sonoma County Transportation Authority Sonoma County Transportation Land Use Coalition Special thanks to the City of Santa Rosa for providing food and refreshments. SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide3 : SMART GROWTH STRATEGY
Regional Agencies
Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG)
Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC)
Bay Area Air Quality Management District (BAAQMD)
Bay Conservation and Development Commission (BCDC)
Regional Water Quality Control Board (RWQCB)
SPONSORING AGENCIES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide4 : REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Bay Area Alliance for Sustainable Development
45 Member Organizations
Steering Committee consists of organizations representing the
Three E’s of Smart Growth and Sustainable Development:
Government: Association of Bay Area Governments
SPONSORING AGENCIES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Prosperous Economy: Bay Area Council
Quality Environment: Sierra Club
Social Equity: Urban Habitat Program
Slide5 : 1 million new jobs
1 million more people
265,000 daily in-commuters to the region
150% increase in aggregate traffic congestion
Conversion of up to 25,000 acres of currently undeveloped land in Sonoma County
44% decrease in households able to afford the median priced home from 1995 to 2001 CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES BAY AREA TRENDS SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Through 2020 1995 to 2001
Slide6 :
Natural Increase
(“Our own children”)
Net Migration
(“Other People”)
CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES REGIONAL POPULATION GROWTH 50%
50% (approximate figures) SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide7 : Expand housing?
Constrain future job growth?
Expand infrastructure to handle
in-commuters?
Find a smarter way to grow CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES CHOICES ABOUT FUTURE GROWTH SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide8 : PHILOSOPHY Broad participation Bottom-up Build on local efforts CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide9 : Smart growth land use changes supported by local governments.
A regional incentive package and implementation strategies.
A set of smart growth land use projections. GOALS CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide10 : The Three E’s of Smart Growth and
Sustainable Development:
SMART GROWTH PRINCIPLES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Prosperous Economy
Quality Environment
Social Equity
Slide11 : Efficiently accommodate projected growth.
Provide sufficient affordable housing.
Revitalize central cities and older suburbs.
Reduce single occupant vehicle trips.
Preserve open space and agricultural land.
Foster equitable economic development while minimizing displacement.
SMART GROWTH PRINCIPLES CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide12 : Mixed use
Mixed incomes
Development near transit
Increased density
Infill and revitalization
Efficient design for edge development DEVELOPMENT CONCEPTS CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide13 : PROCESS Public Workshop Round 1
September and October 2001 Distillation
and Analysis Public Workshop Round 2
March and April 2001 Final Steps CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide14 : Smart growth principles
Land use mapping
exercise
Regulatory changes and incentives PUBLIC WORKSHOPS - ROUND ONE CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide15 : HOUSING UNITS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . JOBS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PROXIMITY OF HSG. TO TRANSIT . . . . . PROXIMITY OF JOBS TO TRANSIT . . . . . OPEN SPACE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PEDESTRIAN QUALITY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PLACE3S: ANALYTICAL & MAPPING POWER OF GIS CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT WATER CONSUMPTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Slide16 : Three region-wide thematic alternatives
Analysis of alternatives and existing trends:
DISTILLATION & ANALYSIS Housing Affordability
Jobs/Housing Match
Market Displacement and Social Equity
Transportation and Air Quality Modeling
Development Feasibility
CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide17 : Review results of first workshop.
Address subregional issues.
Recommend preferred alternative.
Develop regulatory changes and incentives.
PUBLIC WORKSHOPS - ROUND TWO CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide18 : BAASD coordinates a Public Education and Engagement Campaign
ABAG Board considers adoption of Projections forecast
MTC’s Regional Transportation Plan
Other regional plans
Regional regulatory changes and incentives
Local implementation FINAL STEPS CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide19 : General Plans
Revised Regulatory Framework
Additional Incentives
Regional Context
Housing Allocations RELATIONSHIP TO OTHER PROCESSES CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide20 : RELATIONSHIP TO DRAFT COMPACT CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide21 : Open Space Preservation
Traffic Mobility and Congestion
Housing Availability and Affordability
Livability and Community Vitality
Social and Economic Equity
OUR REGIONAL GROWTH CHALLENGES CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide22 : OPEN SPACE PRESERVATION CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Sonoma Valley
Slide23 : Land has been urbanized 2 1/2 times faster
than urban population has increased Urban
Population OPEN SPACE PRESERVATION CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Urbanized
Land Population (millions) Urbanized Land (square miles) 100 200 300 400 15,000 30,000 45,000 60,000 Urban
Population Urbanized
Land Population (millions) Urbanized Land (square miles) 100 200 300 400 15,000 30,000 45,000 60,000 70 13,000 150 60,000 1950 1990 Source: National Geographic
Slide24 : Projected for Development Through 2020 Public Land or
Privately Protected Land Conservation Easement Owned in Fee Urban Areas OPEN SPACE PRESERVATION CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Lands Projected for Development
through 2020
Slide25 : OPEN SPACE PRESERVATION CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Urban Growth
Boundaries
Slide26 : 0 200,000 400,000 600,000 800,000 Vehicle-Hours of Delay 2025 339,100 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% VMT Increasing Faster
Than Population
2000-2020 VMT
Increase Population
Increase 14% 28% 1998 TRAFFIC MOBILITY AND CONGESTION CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT 854,600 100,000 300,000 500,000 700,000 900,000
Slide27 : 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 1990 2020 Commute Mode Split
Remains Unchanged
(millions of trips/day) 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 1990 2020 In-Commuters to Bay Area
Increase
(thousands of persons/year)
Cars Transit Walk, bike TRAFFIC MOBILITY AND CONGESTION CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide28 : Vehicle Miles Traveled Per Year 6,455 4,779 10,591 0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 Urban Center Traditional Neighborhood Suburban
Neighborhood TRAFFIC MOBILITY AND CONGESTION CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT (San Francisco) (Rockridge) (San Ramon)
Slide29 : Source: MTC SONOMA COUNTY DAILY COMMUTERS CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT 3,158 Mendocino
County Lake County 2,584
9,537 21,519 Marin County San Francisco
Slide30 : TRAFFIC MOBILITY AND CONGESTION CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Highway 101 Corridor Planning
Freeway widening
Rail Service
Transit-oriented development
Slide31 : Illustrations from Urban Advantage CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES TRAFFIC MOBILITY AND CONGESTION SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Railroad Square
Santa Rosa
Slide32 : Illustrations from Urban Advantage CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES TRAFFIC MOBILITY AND CONGESTION SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Santero Way Plan
Cotati Community Design + Architecture
Slide33 : HOUSING AVAILABILITY AND AFFORDABILITY Bay Area Jobs and Employed Residents
by County, 2000 200,000 400,000 600,000 800,000 1,000,000 1,200,000 Alameda Contra Costa Marin Napa San Francisco San Mateo Santa Clara Solano Sonoma Total Jobs Total Employed
Residents CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide34 : Projected Growth in Jobs and Employed Residents 2000-2020 - 50,000 100,000 150,000 200,000 250,000 300,000 Alameda Contra Costa Marin Napa San Francisco San Mateo Santa Clara Solano Sonoma HOUSING AVAILABILITY AND AFFORDABILITY Jobs Employed Residents CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Alameda Contra Costa Marin Napa San Francisco San Mateo Santa Clara Solano Sonoma
Slide35 : HOUSING AVAILABILITY AND AFFORDABILITY The jobs/housing challenge
2000-2020
Projected job growth: 95,000 jobs
Resulting housing need: 55,000-65,000 units
Housing projected in local General Plans:
36,000 units CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide36 : HOUSING AVAILABILITY AND AFFORDABILITY Affordability Gap for Median-Income Households - $100,000 $200,000 $300,000 $400,000 $500,000 $600,000 East Bay
(Oakland
PMSA) San Francisco
(PMSA) Santa Clara County
(San Jose
PMSA) Sonoma County
(Santa Rosa
PMSA) Solano/Napa
(Vallejo-Fairfield-
Napa PMSA) Home Price Affordable to
Median 4 Person Household Median Home
Market Price CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide37 : INCOME CATEGORIES FOR A FAMILY OF FOUR
Median Income - $61,800 VERY LOW INCOME 0-$30,900 — Child Care Worker $17,680 — Medical Assistant $20,500 — Retail Clerk $20,430 LOW INCOME $30,900-$49,440 — Accountant $42,100 — Elementary School Teacher $43,790 MODERATE INCOME $49,440-$74,160 — Registered Nurse $50,970 HOUSING AVAILABILITY AND AFFORDABILITY CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT — Police Patrol Office $55,150
Slide38 : HOUSING AVAILABILITY AND AFFORDABILITY Housing need by affordability category:
Very low income: 20%
Low income: 14%
Moderate income: 26%
Above moderate income: 40% CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide39 : HOUSEHOLD
COMPOSITION
2000 BAY AREA
HOUSING PERMITS
JAN-SEP 2000 SINGLE-FAMILY
DETACHED 63% MULTI-FAMILY 37% SINGLE PARENTS WITH CHILDREN 8% SINGLES 30% FAMILIES WITH CHILDREN 26% FAMILIES WITH NO CHILDREN 36% HOUSING AVAILABILITY AND AFFORDABILITY CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide40 : Tower Apartments
Multi-Family Housing
Rohnert Park HOUSING AVAILABILITY AND AFFORDABILITY SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide41 : Lavell Village
Santa Rosa HOUSING AVAILABILITY AND AFFORDABILITY CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide42 :
Sonoma Commons
Multi-Family Housing
Sonoma HOUSING AVAILABILITY AND AFFORDABILITY SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide43 : In-Law Unit
Sonoma HOUSING AVAILABILITY AND AFFORDABILITY CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide44 : LIVABILITY AND COMMUNITY VITALITY CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Snyder Lane, Rohnert Park
Slide45 : LIVABILITY AND COMMUNITY VITALITY CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Old Redwood Highway
Cotati
Slide46 : SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC EQUITY The Bay Area’s
46 Most Impoverished Neighborhoods
(NCCC 1997) Very low-income neighborhoods need reinvestment while minimizing displacement These neighborhood residents need access to
quality jobs CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide47 : Definition of Impoverished Community:
Areas where a majority of households earn less than 80% of the County median income (1990)
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC EQUITY SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Impoverished Communities In Sonoma County
Slide48 : SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC EQUITY Boyes Hot Springs Impoverishment =
An Under-served Community: CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Limited employment opportunities near housing
No child care facilities
No Grocery Stores
No Parks
Slide49 : SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC EQUITY SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT 10.4% 17.5% 75.3% 41.4% 9.0% 21.8% 0.0% 10.0% 20.0% 30.0% 40.0% 50.0% 60.0% 70.0% 80.0% 90.0% 100.0% Boyes Hot Springs Sonoma County Other Services Retail Wholesale Manufacturing Agriculture Job Distribution by Occupation, 2000 10.4%
Slide50 :
Impoverished neighborhoods:
Can benefit from Smart Growth
May be significantly affected by Smart Growth SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC EQUITY CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Regional Agencies Smart Growth Strategy Bay Area Alliance for Sustainable Development Regional Livability Footprint Project : Regional Agencies Smart Growth Strategy Bay Area Alliance for Sustainable Development Regional Livability Footprint Project DESIGN, COMMUNITY & ENVIRONMENT Sonoma County
September 22, 2001
Slide52 : SMALL GROUP EXERCISE GOAL
Identify the most appropriate patterns for smart growth in Sonoma County. CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide53 : SMALL GROUP EXERCISE Smart Growth Principles
Land Use Mapping Exercise
Affordable Housing
Regulatory Changes and Incentives
CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide54 : PRINCIPLES CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Review principles generated this morning.
Add additional principles if desired.
Slide55 : MAPPING EXERCISE
Planning Areas
Planning Area Categories
Place Types
Predictors
CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide56 : PLANNING AREAS CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Areas where development
might be possible
Not an endorsement of
new development
Slide57 : PLANNING AREA CATEGORIES Key Sites
Residential Areas
Mixed-Use Areas
Town Centers/Downtowns
Employment Areas/Institutions
Rail Stations/Major Transfer Facility Areas
Corridors CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide58 : PLACE TYPES MENU CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide59 : PLACE TYPE MANUAL CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide60 : PLACE TYPES Varying mixes of residential and employment uses: CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Residential
Mixed-Use
Town Center/Downtown
Employment Center/Institution
Slide61 :
Petaluma RESIDENTIAL CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide62 :
Sonoma RESIDENTIAL CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide63 :
MIXED USE SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Sonoma
Slide64 : Santa Rosa MIXED-USE CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide65 : TOWN CENTER / DOWNTOWN CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Downtown
Santa Rosa
Slide66 : TOWN CENTER / DOWNTOWN Downtown
Petaluma CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide67 : EMPLOYMENT CENTER / INSTITUTION Bay View Bank
Santa Rosa CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide68 : EMPLOYMENT CENTER / INSTITUTION SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Old Redwood Highway
Petaluma
Slide69 : Varying land uses and densities
within each Place Type
Specify percentage of planning area to be changed
Focus on the next 20 years
PLACE TYPE CHARACTERISTICS CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide70 : OTHER PLANNING AREA ASSIGNMENTS
No Change (includes open space)
New Place Type
Percent Increase CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide71 : Broad brush, regional perspective
County-wide interaction APPROACH CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide72 : PLACE TYPE EXERCISE CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide73 : PLACE TYPE EXERCISE CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide74 : PLACE TYPE EXERCISE CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide75 : PLACE TYPE EXERCISE CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide76 : PLACE TYPE EXERCISE CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide77 : PLACE TYPE EXERCISE CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide78 : AFFORDABLE HOUSING MIX
Assign affordability mix to each planning area:
Category Default
Very Low Income 20%
Low Income 14%
Moderate Income 26%
Above Moderate Income 40% CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Slide79 : Fiscal Reform
Monetary Incentives to Local Governments
Regulatory Exemptions
Transportation Improvements and Policies
Monetary Incentives for Individuals REGULATORY CHANGES AND INCENTIVES CONCLUSION IMPLEMENTATION KEY ECONOMIC ISSUES SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT
Regional Agencies Smart Growth Strategy Bay Area Alliance for Sustainable Development Regional Livability Footprint Project : Regional Agencies Smart Growth Strategy Bay Area Alliance for Sustainable Development Regional Livability Footprint Project SMART GROWTH STRATEGY / REGIONAL LIVABILITY FOOTPRINT PROJECT Sonoma County
September 22, 2001