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GEOG 346: Day 15

GEOG 346: Day 15. Jobs Close to Homes. Housekeeping Items.

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GEOG 346: Day 15

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  1. GEOG 346: Day 15

    Jobs Close to Homes
  2. Housekeeping Items I found the plans for the adjacent DND lands to be very innovative and thoughtful on the whole. If your group hasn’t submitted its summary yet, please do so. I will send out e-mails to each individual on marks for the last two assignments once I have everything in hand. A book I highly recommend is Common Ground in a Liquid City: Essays in Defense of an Urban Future by Matt Hern. The library has it in both hard copy and e-format. If you are interested in a series of smart growth self-study courses, see http://www.smartgrowth.ca/courses/. To do the courses you have to create an account for yourself. The topics include Housing Choice,   Vibrant Complete Communities, Smart Building Design,  Renew Existing Communities,  Green Infrastructure, , Farmland & Green Spaces,  Integrated Regional Planning, Transportation Choice, Community Involvement.
  3. Jobs close to housing In the past, industries and workers used to cluster close together in order to facilitate access. More recently, separation of land uses became the gospel – partly because of industrial pollution – and, more recently, most industrial jobs have moved offshore. Not many people walk to work anymore, though some do (see charts on following pages).
  4. JOBS CLOSE TO HOUSING While energy consumption (and hence GHG production in most places) in the industrial sector in developed countries has declined, along with energy consumption in housing, energy consumption (and GHG production) in per capita vehicle miles travelled (VMT) has been increasing steadily for the past 70 years. This has more than offset the other gains. Moreover, people are commuting further and congestion is slowing them down. The average automobile traveller in L.A. loses almost two weeks of his or her life per year due to congestion, in addition to ‘normal’ travel time.
  5. JOBS CLOSE TO HOUSING Many metro regions have attempted to get around this by creating hub and spoke transit systems, but this doesn’t always reflect the real commuting patterns.
  6. JOBS CLOSE TO HOUSING In the U.S., city cores have been growing at 1/6th the rate of the suburbs, and city centres throughout North America are somewhat declining in importance in terms of serving as job magnets. In Greater Vancouver, many if not most commutes are between suburbs, rather than from suburbs to downtown. Richmond has the fast growing rate of jobs of any municipality in Metro. The commute is longer for poor families who have to find accommodations where they can afford them and often drive long distances to their jobs.
  7. JOBS CLOSE TO HOUSING As people move out to more affordable housing, their transportation costs go up – often dramatically – something they don’t always take into account when they make their housing decisions. The situation is so desperate in Vancouver that the City of Vancouver designated one building in the former Olympic Village as rental exclusively for “essential service” workers – policemen and women, firemen, etc., – who otherwise can’t afford to live in the city. In addition to the affordability issue, municipalities are beginning to dismantle the “one use, one zone” mentality in recognition of the fact that, with changes in the economy, most so-called industrial jobs do not have the negative adjacent land use impacts that they had in the past.
  8. Jobs Close to Housing As Condon notes (p. 82), “In 2006, direct fossil fuel combustion in the transportation sector accounted for 26.3 percent of total GHG emissions in the United States. However, total life cycle emissions for the transportation sector are estimated to be 27 to 37 percent higher than direct fuel consumption…. When production, air-conditioning, vehicle maintenance, and infrastructure consequences were added… the cumulative percent of total GHG emissions in Canada…rose to an astonishing 52 percent.” Even if we all switched to driving electric cars, the load on the Earth’s resources would still be immense.
  9. Median Commuting Distance (In Kilometres)
  10. What is your experience with commuting for work – how far do you travel?
  11. Principles for Jobs & Housing Integration Condon offers 6 rules for changing the relationship of jobs and land use: Don’t assume new jobs will smell Discourage land-inefficient job sites (e.g. single-storey industrial ‘parks’) Integrate jobs into streetcar arterials Wherever possible fit jobs into existing blocks Don’t place one’s hopes on one mega-employer Redevelop strip commercial, when under-used, into a location for jobs.
  12. What Are some ways Nanaimo could enhance its jobs-housing integration given its current structure?
  13. GEOG 346: Day 16

    Affordable Housing
  14. Overview of housing issues “Residential land uses consume between 70 and 85 percent of all developed North American metropolitan lands” (p. 96). Low-density single-home districts are ecologically costly in two ways: they make people drive further and their lack of shared walls ensure that their energy consumption per unit is higher – more than twice low-rise multi-family dwellings. House sizes have expanded drama-tically (162% from 1970 to 2005) while household sizes have shrunken. It’s not uncommon for 1 or 2 people to occupy a 3 or 4-bedroom house.
  15. Some markets are worse than others
  16. Housekeeping Items On Saturday the 16th, the Student Union is sponsoring a Women in Action conference on campus. Tickets must be purchased in advance ($10.00 for students). See the folder and http://womeninactionconference.weebly.com/ for more information. I attended most of the design workshop today on sense of place…. In the folder, you will find a couple of articles about a major controversy involving the inner boat basin which the Port Authority, with the support of the mayor, wants to privatize.
  17. REAL ESTATE ON THE WEST COAST Why are real estate values so high on the West Coast? What are the different aspects of unaffordability? What are some potential solutions?
  18. Overview of housing The tower is not necessarily the most energy-efficient alternative to single-family homes. They lose heat to winds, their glass sheathing allows heat to penetrate in the summer and cold to penetrate in the winter, and their construction materials involve more embodied energy. According to Condon, the most GHG-efficient dwellings are medium to high-density low-rise structures between 20 and 65 dwelling units per acre. The trend in Vancouver is to build more of these and more towers because of the high cost of land.
  19. Table 1: Density for Various Building Forms Depending on the size of the development area, higher levels (source: CMHC)
  20. Affordable housing Zoning has been used, Condon notes, as a tool for segregating populations by income. Except in exclusive neighbourhoods like Shaughnessy, this kind of uniformity was far less common in the period before WW II. In addition, the poor were often herded into ‘housing projects’ such as Pruitt-Igoe (St. Louis) or Regent Park (Toronto). These replaced functional neighbourhoods.
  21. Strategies for affordable housing Introducing density into existing low-density neighbourhoods – e.g. duplexes, townhouses & lane units (not fool-proof) Converting single-family homes to multiple dwelling units (easier when there is an economic incentive) Imposing a fixed percentage of “affordable” units – sometimes called inclusionary zoning. In Concord Pacific, they had to donate 20% of the land for housing (to be funded by senior levels of government – ha ha!). In the U.S., developers are often forced to build the units themselves.
  22. Strategies for affordable housing In the South False Creek neighbourhood where I live part-time, the City owned the land and mandated that it would be one-third upper income, one-third medium income, and one-third lower income, with the different structures intermixed, which they are. This was supposed to be the pattern for Olympic Village/ Southeast False Creek, but it was axed by a subsequent right-wing Council. The 252 units of social housing promised for the Olympic Village (after the 1/3, 1/3, 1/3 ratio was abandoned) were axed and turned into 126 market rentals, and 126 below-market rentals, some being supplied by a new co-op.
  23. affordable housing It’s also important to distinguish between affordable housing and social housing. The latter is purpose-built housing for people on social assistance. Both the federal and provincial governments essentially pulled out of social housing in the early 1990s, though the glare of the Olympics forced the province to create some temporary shelters and to renovate some single-room occupancy (SRO) hotels run by non-profit agencies. According to Wikipedia, “[m]ore than 200 communities in the United States have some sort of inclusionary zoning provision.
  24. Strategies for affordable housing Montgomery County, Maryland, is a pioneer in inclusionary zoning policies. It is the sixth wealthiest county in the United States; yet it has built more than 10,000 affordable units since 1974, many units next-door to market-rate housing. All municipalities in the state of Massachusetts are subject to that state's General Laws Chapter 40B, which allows developers to bypass certain municipal zoning restrictions in those municipalities which have fewer than 10% affordable housing units. Developers taking advantage of the law must construct 20% affordable units as defined under the statute. All municipalities in the state of New Jersey are subject to judicially imposed inclusionary zoning as a result of the New Jersey Supreme Court’s Mount Laurel Decision and subsequent acts of the New Jersey state legislature.
  25. Strategies for affordable housing In 2007, Smart Growth BC published a “Review of Best Practices in Affordable Housing” (see http://www.smartgrowth.bc.ca/Default.aspx?tabid=155). In that report, they review a number policies, programs and strategies, including inclusionary zoning density bonusing rent control resale price restrictions secondary suite policy rental housing banks, and housing funds, etc. In addition, they also talk about the value of co-ops, co-housing, and community land trusts.
  26. Strategies for affordable housing Other possible measures include: a speculation tax (In the case of the U.S.) disallowing tax credits on second and third homes rent vouchers disallowing conversion of rental to condo, or conversion of multi-suite single-family to single-family For housing/ land trusts, see one possible model: http://www.champlainhousingtrust.org/ As Matt Hern writes, “The market puts us in a Faustian bargain: almost any attempt to beautify, improve, develop, or embolden a community inevitably means it will price out its most vulnerable citizens and under-mine all that good work.” The irony, as he points out, is that the Sunnyside neighbourhood in Portland where City Repair has done so much good work is now longer affordable for the activists!
  27. From main street to vain street? GENTRIFICATION OF OLDER, FUNKY NEIGHBOURHOODS
  28. Obstacles to affordable housing There are a number of obstacles to achieving more affordable housing, apart from rampant real estate speculation and frenzied market conditions. These include: a reluctance to interfere with property rights lack of political will lack of senior government financial support lack of appropriate fiscal instruments at the municipal level, and NIMBYism (resistance to change in existing neighbourhoods). In some instances, part-time or speculative homeowners are buying into neighbourhoods and leaving the houses mostly vacant and helping to erode the sense of neighbourhood.
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