While most Bay Area communities are pursuing housing solutions "individually," local planners acknowledge the need for strategies that address the regional as a unified whole.

"Though each of the Bay Area's nine counties and 101 cities is experiencing the region's housing crisis differently, the message from local planners is unified and clear: the problem demands a regional solution," Emma Zehner writes for the Lincoln Institute.
Discussing a meeting of eight Bay Area planning directors at this spring's annual APA conference, Zehner writes that as certain places (like San Francisco) add jobs at a breakneck pace, "other cities in the region are beginning to step up to create new regional job centers where housing is more readily available or where there is still the flexibility to add additional units."
San Jose, for instance, "has significant untapped housing potential as 94 percent of its residential land is currently zoned for detached single-family homes." At the same time, "San Jose faces a different type of imbalance: only nine percent of the city's land is devoted to employment uses." A new jobs center in San Jose could relieve pressure on San Francisco. So could locating more jobs in Oakland.
The planners acknowledged that even as job centers grow, the housing issue also depends on transportation. "If we could get to and from job centers more efficiently, it could solve some very significant problems for us," said Al Savay, community and economic development director for San Carlos.
Also discussed were ADU regulatory reform, inclusionary zoning, and potential for overarching state legislation.
FULL STORY: Housing Affordability: Regional Strategies to Address the Bay Area Affordability Crisis

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Report: Zoning Reforms Should Complement Nashville’s Ambitious Transit Plan
Without reform, restrictive zoning codes will limit the impact of the city’s planned transit expansion and could exclude some of the residents who depend on transit the most.

Judge Orders Release of Frozen IRA, IIJA Funding
The decision is a victory for environmental groups who charged that freezing funds for critical infrastructure and disaster response programs caused “real and irreparable harm” to communities.
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