We envision a city that embraces the future and takes a leadership role in the region to build understanding of the connection between land use and transportation planning and the fields of climate change, economy and social equity and diversity.
While our members come from different parts of the community — environmentalists, civic activists, for-profit and nonprofit developers, the business community, professional urban planners and architects, and private citizens <0x2024> we all share a genuine interest in promoting growth that is sustainable and makes Palo Alto a leader in meeting both the state's new greenhouse-gas reductions and the city's affordable-housing allocation.
We formed for several reasons. For some, it was the obvious contradiction of the City Council's deletion of housing as a priority when taking up the global-warming-reduction goal. Every resident can subscribe to Palo Alto Green — but the huge transportation emissions from a commuting workforce overwhelm the reductions gained by renewable electricity sources.
Others joined ALPA because they were concerned about the type and location of new housing being approved by the Planning & Transportation Commission and City Council. Reduced density, high parking requirements and not enough housing planned near transit and retail centers fails the sustainability test regardless of whether it is built with green materials.
As the new book, "Growing Cooler, The Evidence on Urban Development and Climate Change" indicates, land use, especially how a region houses its workforce, is as much a part of global warming as the vehicles the residents drive and the energy their homes consume. But who on the council or commission was making this connection?
That connection is well-understood in Sacramento. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, credited in 2006 with signing AB 32, the state's landmark global-warming-reduction law, has just signed another landmark bill, SB 375. The new law that will require the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) and the Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) to develop "sustainable community strategies" that ultimately reduce greenhouse-gas emissions in the Bay Area by reducing the time we spend in our vehicles.
The targets that MTC sets in collaboration with ABAG must be approved by the state Air Resources Board, the entity charged with meeting the global warming reduction targets set in AB 32.
In short, our group intends to lobby "for the right kind of housing in the right locations."
Housing advocates joined the group to ensure that housing is planned and built for all income groups, not just those who can afford market-rate prices,
A major part of our agenda is to ensure that new housing is planned not only so Palo Alto complies with its "fair share" housing requirement, but to reap the environmental, economic and social benefits that result from smart urban-planning efforts.
The local business community wants to ensure our economy remains strong, which includes providing more housing for the local workforce.
Finally, we all want to work towards a healthier city where residents and workers spend less time in their cars and more on foot, on bikes, and on shuttles, buses and trains.
ALPA also sees the ramifications of not building new housing: more gentrification, more pressure placed on the existing housing stock. While the latter may please existing homeowners when they place their homes for sale it detracts from our current quality of life. It spells out a grim future where the city has declining social diversity, and a much larger carbon footprint resulting from an increasingly distant workforce.
The reluctance to build more housing also hurts existing residents: There are limited opportunities to continue living in the city after retirement and there are few affordable apartments for our children who might wish to remain here when they are ready to live independently.
We believe Palo Alto needs to look to the future, for our current residents, our children and the next generation of city residents.
We are looking to engage the public to have a healthy dialogue on how development can benefit the community, the dangers of resisting "smart growth, "how local land-use policies can help the city meet the state's global-warming-reduction goals, and maintain social diversity in a city at risk of displacing even middle-income residents
Approaching the city's Housing Element Update with an open mind and exploring the best ways to plan for the 2,800 housing units assigned to Palo Alto by 2016 (a fair share based on how many jobs Palo Alto hosts) presents an ideal opportunity to further explain our goals to the community.
ALPA will advocate for smart-growth solutions before the planning commission, the council, regional governing bodies and through interactive forums, conferences and other outreach events to the community.
We will sponsor research and develop policy papers.
We encourage others to join us in these important actions. Check our website for meeting times and dates: http://alivablepaloalto.org/ .
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