Ed Roberts Campus Closes Funding Gap
Berkeley City Council to vote on $2 million for ERC on Tuesday,
November 27th;
MTC to vote on $4.5 million on November 28th
Contact:
Joan Leon, ERC Development Director
(510) 652-6583
jleon@cwnet.com
www.edrobertscampus.org
Monday, November 26, 2007... A coalition of East Bay elected
officials, transportation agencies and people with disabilities
have joined together to close a $10 million funding gap that
will enable the Ed Roberts Campus to start construction in
early 2008.
The Ed Roberts Campus will be an internationally-renowned center
for people with disabilities at the Ashby BART station in South
Berkeley. The seven partner organizations located at the ERC
will provide direct services to the disability community throughout
the greater Bay Area and be a national center for advocacy
and other efforts on their behalf.
In response to requests from the Ed Roberts Campus, Congresswoman
Barbara Lee and Berkeley Mayor Tom Bates, the Metropolitan
Transportation Commission (MTC) is expected to award $4.5 million
to the Ed Roberts Campus (ERC) at its meeting on November 28.
The MTC is providing funds to the campus because it is a major
transit-oriented development that will result in greater utilization
of public transit by the disabled and elderly.
Providing the one-to-one match for the MTC funds are the City
of Berkeley, the Alameda County Congestion Management Agency
(ACCMA) and BART. Mayor Bates, who is also the MTC Commissioner
representing the cities of Alameda County, coordinated the
effort to meet MTC’s match. The City’s portion
of the match is expected to be $2.5 million, $500,000 of which
was awarded to the Campus by the Council on October 23rd, and
$2 million that is expected to be awarded on Tuesday, November
27. ACCMA and BART are working together to provide $2 million
from an additional source of funds.
This collaborative effort of MTC, the City of Berkeley, ACCMA
and BART will provide $9 million toward the Campus’ $45
million goal, bringing its campaign total to $44 million. The
final $1 million is being provided by a “bridge loan” that
the ERC will repay through a combination of pending federal
appropriations bills, the New Freedom grant program, and private
sector philanthropy that will be raised during construction.
“The Ed Roberts Campus will be a national and international
model dedicated to disability rights and universal access.
I am honored to be joining with Barbara Lee and my transportation
colleagues in working to make the dream of the Ed Roberts Campus
a reality,” said Berkeley Mayor Tom Bates. “Berkeley
is the birthplace of the disability civil rights movement and
I can think of no better place in the world to house such an
important facility to serve this important community. Mayor
Bates has been a long-time champion of the disability rights
movement, and as a State Assembly Member authored the legislation
that provided permanent funding for California’s independent
living centers that allowed for their expansion across the
state.
“Today is a great day for everyone involved in making
the Ed Roberts Campus happen,” said Congresswoman Barbara
Lee. “Now seniors and people with disabilities will enjoy
the benefits of a center that is fully accessible by public
transportation. I want to commend the Metropolitan Transportation
Commission for its commitment to promote access to persons
with disabilities, and extend my deepest appreciation to the
Alameda County Congestion Management Agency, the City of Berkeley,
and BART for their generous matching funds.”
Representative Lee has led the federal effort to raise funds
for the Campus and has secured $3,774,000 in federal transportation
and economic development funds. Her request for $500,000 in
the “Transportation, Housing and Urban Development Appropriations
Bill” is now pending in Congress.
The Ed Roberts Campus
is widely recognized as a model transit-oriented development
that will make vital services and programs accessible via public
transit to seniors and people with disabilities who are among
the most transportation-disadvantaged populations in the country.
The Ed Roberts Campus is a nonprofit corporation that has
been formed by disability organizations that share a common
history in the Independent Living Movement of People with Disabilities.
The Ed Roberts Campus will house the offices of the collaborating
organizations and other non-profits as well as fully accessible
meeting rooms, a computer/media resource center, a fitness
center, a cafe, and a child development center. LMS Architects
designed the 86,000 square foot Campus.
The organizations developing the Campus are: Bay Area Outreach & Recreation
Program, Center for Accessible Technology, Center for Independent
Living, Computer Technologies Program, Disability Rights Education
and Defense Fund, Through the Looking Glass, and World Institute
on Disability. These organizations and other nonprofits will
offer a wide range of programs from legal advocacy and job
training to parenting support and wheelchair sports. Such programs
help people move from poverty and dependency into employment
and greater participation in society. The ERC expects to serve
30,000 people annually.
The Campus is a $45 million public-private partnership with
approximately 40% of its funds coming from the private sector
and a mortgage paid by the partner organizations and other
tenants, and 60% from government sources.
The Campus is named
after Ed Roberts, a significantly disabled man who was a trailblazer
of the Independent Living Movement that began in the 70s. He
was the first person with a disability to serve as Director
of the California Department of Rehabilitation; he was awarded
a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur fellowship in 1984. He
was co-founder and President of the World Institute on Disability.
Roberts died in 1995.
Additional contacts:
Dmitri Belser, President, Ed Roberts Campus (510) 325-0643
Cisco DeVries, Chief-of-Staff, Berkeley Mayor’s Office
(510) 981-7103