Assembly Bill 32 (AB 32) and Senate Bill 375 (SB
375) Workshop Report:
Changing California Through a New Environmental Paradigm

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February 27, 2009 …Learning how California
and the Bay Area plan to deal with — and reduce —the
impending onslaught of climate change drew more than 100 representatives
of Bay Area cities, counties, transportation agencies, business
and environmental organizations to a half-day conference at
the Joseph P. Bort MetroCenter in Oakland on February 24, 2009.
AB 32 , California’s Climate Warming Solutions
Act ,and SB 375, the state’s aggressive new greenhouse
gas-reduction law, were - the focus of the conference, sponsored
by MTC and the Northern California Chapter of the Association
for Commuter Transportation (ACT).
Three speakers presented
some hard facts regarding projected global warming impacts
on the Bay Area and the basic requirements of AB 32 and SB
375. In order o help defray the impacts, SB 375 aims to make
sweeping changes in land use, transportation and environmental
planning. Several case studies illustrated how creative
community planning can change behavioral and life-style patterns to reduce sprawl
and curb greenhouse gas emissions. The basic message of the conference — and
the mandate of SB 375 — is that California must make significant reductions
in its greenhouse gas emissions through dramatic changes in land use and transportation
policies.
Ted Droettboom, Regional Planning Program Director of the
Joint Policy Committee (JPC), offered some reality checks,
noting that the Bay Area’s
carbon footprint is three times that of the world average; 41 percent of our
greenhouse gas emissions come from transportation, compared to 14 percent worldwide;
and that by 2020, the Bay Area’s vehicle miles traveled (VMT) is projected
to increase 50 percent over 1990 levels. The JPC is a consortium of four regional
agencies: MTC, the Association of Bay Area Governments, the Bay Area Air Quality
Management District and the Bay Conservation and Development Commission.
While reducing emissions
through technology (i.e. better gas mileage and hybrid vehicles)
is important, location of jobs and housing matters more. “Location
trumps technology,” Droettboom said. “The 2035 Regional Transportation
Plan (RTP, also known as the Transportation 2035 Plan)
to invest $226 billion in transportation infrastructure over
the next 20 years hardly does anything to reduce CO2 emissions.
We have to do a lot more,” he said.
Droettboom
highlighted several essential elements of SB 375 and draft
policies to guide the Bay Area’s implementation of it. These policies will
be considered by the JPC at its March 20th meeting.
- Regional CO2 targets for cars and light trucks will be
adopted by the state by 2010. The draft policies call for
targets that challenge "business as usual" and
promise to require serious reductions in carbon emissions.
- A”Sustainable Communities Strategy” (SCS) must
be an integral part of the next RTP that will be adopted
in 2013. The SCS requires land-use plans by each region in
the state to accommodate all of the region’s
housing demand within its boundaries. Land-use plans must
be integrated with the transportation network and with transportation
measures and policies. For the Bay Area, this means ABAG
and MTC must work even more closely together. “The
SCS must be realistic and attainable over 20 years,” Droettboom
said, “and local governments must buy in to the SCS
voluntarily, through incentives. In the law, there is nothing
binding on the local governments; it must be voluntary.”
- If a region’s SCS falls short of the state’s
targets for reduced emissions, it must develop an alternate
planning strategy. “We propose that the Bay Area make
every effort to achieve our CO2 targets through the SCS,” Droettboom
said, “but unless local governments and congestion
management agencies agree to the plan, we cannot argue that
it’s attainable. It must be an open process of inclusion,
not just outreach.”
- The regional housing needs allocation (RHNA) and the next
RTP must be completed simultaneously and must be in synch
with the SCS. This means that ABAG's assessment of the region’s
housing needs and MTC's transportation planning must be coordinated.
After the RTP is adopted, local governments will have 18
months to adopt their housing elements and three years to
adopt zoning measures to implement their housing elements.
The location of new housing in the Bay Area will bring people
closer to public transportation and to where they work, shop,
go to school and recreate, with the goal of reducing dependence
on automobiles — and carbon emissions.
Doug Kimsey, MTC planning director, outlined major components
of the 2035 RTP, titled “Change in Motion,” which
is scheduled to be adopted by the Commission toward the end
of March 2009. Kimsey noted that by 2035, the Bay Area expects
to have 2 million more people and 2 million more jobs. The
2035 plan, he said, calls for 80 percent of the region’s
total $226 billion in transportation investments to be spent
on maintaining the current network of roadways and transit
systems, with only 20 percent allocated for new investments.
Kimsey reiterated Droettboom’s comments that new vehicle
technology, infrastructure improvements and road pricing (through
tolls), in and of themselves, will not enable the Bay Area
to meet its CO2 targets. “Shifts in individual behavior
will ultimately drive change,” he said.
William Fulton,
President/CEO of Solimar Research Group, offered a planner’s
perspective on reducing greenhouse gas emissions through better
land use. “Mono-density doesn’t
solve the problem,” he said. “We need more of everything
in close proximity. The obvious solution to sprawl is transit-oriented
development, with a concentration of diverse activities. The
mix of businesses and services (in a proposed development)
is just as important as the land use, and means greater focus
on neighborhood services.”
As example, Fulton cited Torrance,
Calif., as a successful, mixed-use, dense community that was
designed 98 years ago by Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. Another
example is Old Town Pasadena, where, he said, the middle of
a former shopping mall was imploded and converted into four-story
housing, resulting in a lively, mixed-use community. Fulton
asserted that parking structures should be used as transit
stations. “It’s the park-once
strategy,” he said. “It keeps people out of their
cars as long as possible and turns drivers into pedestrians.”
Unlike the suburbs of Manhattan, which suffer from the magnetic
draw of the big city, Fulton said, “California is a state
of small downtowns. We can leverage change in these old commercial
areas, such as Fulton and Pasadena. We must find them and nurture
them.”
—Marjorie
Blackwell