Take a high-level look at equitable transit-oriented development or ETOD, then dive into the nitty-gritty. Examine the administrative, regulatory and financial challenges of implementing ETOD. Hear about solutions employed across the country. Take home valuable and defensible examples of how organizations are engaging more to implement ETOD: Transit agencies, go ahead and set affordable-housing targets! Housing departments, speak to your transportation colleagues about shared interests! Learn to coordinate better for greater ETOD outcomes.
Moderator: John Hersey, Program Officer, Enterprise Community Partners, Denver, Colorado
Andrea Osgood, Director of Real Estate Development, Eden Housing, Hayward, California
Michael Spotts, Senior Policy Analyst, Enterprise Community Partners, Inc., Washington, DC
Luis Tamayo, Interim Chief Planner, City of Dallas, Texas
Amanda Rhein, Senior Director of Transit Oriented Development and Real Estate, Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority, Atlanta, Georgia
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Agenda
• Presentation
– What is eTOD?
– Making the Case for eTOD
– Overcoming Barriers to eTOD
• Panel Discussion
• Questions and Answers
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What is equitable TOD (eTOD)?
• “Compact, often mixed-use development with access to
jobs, neighborhood-serving stores and other amenities
that also serves the needs of low- and moderate-income
people.”
– Primary approach: Affordable housing near transit
• eTOD faces both common and unique challenges
– Affordable Housing: development costs
– TOD: auto- & low density-oriented regulatory environment
– eTOD: interdisciplinary coordination
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eTOD has myriad of benefits to:
For a full review, read:
Promoting Opportunity through eTOD: Making the Case
Image Sources: www.arlnow.com
Image Sources: Enterprise
Image Sources: Enterprise
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Barriers to eTOD
Image Sources: Western Locations SpainImage Sources: Forbes
Image Sources: Binary Option StopsImage Sources: Wordpress
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Overcoming barriers with diverse engagement
1. Adopt proactive, collaborative strategies
2. Take early action to reform plans, codes and policies
3. Expand access to capital
4. Enhance site-access and improve site viability
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1. Adopt proactive, collaborative strategies
a) Convene cross-sector collaboratives
b) Align cross-sectoral priorities
c) Improve planning through coordination & data analysis
d) Coordinate pre-development activities
e) Support citizen engagement & community benefits
f) Create typologies and guidelines
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2. Reform plans, codes and policies
a) Adopt state and local legislation that
supports affordable housing
a) Adopt local codes & standards
b) Reform parking policies
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3. Expand access to eTOD supportive capital
a) Create incentives in affordable housing funding programs
b) Link environmental resources to eTOD
c) Provide state-level resources
d) Utilize local resources, including taxing & bonding authority
e) Leverage private & philanthropic resources
f) Allocate transportation funds for transit & eTOD
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4. Enhance site-access & improve site viability
a) Adopt transit agency policies that
encourage affordability near stations
b) Acquire and/or assemble land eTOD
c) In weaker sub-markets, remove
regulatory barriers, take catalytic action
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Next Steps for Promoting Opportunity through eTOD
• Research initiative - http://bit.ly/eTOD-opportunity
– Making the Case
– Barriers to Success and Best Practices for Implementation
– Navigating Federal Regulations (late 2015)
• Policy and implementation support
12. eTOD 101 Panel Discussion
Rail~Volution
October 27, 2015