Navigation





Locations


Jim Scott's Richmond Report


Housing and Transportation: A mismatch?
The General Assembly, with the leadership of Governor Warner, made significant progress in addressing education, environment and human service needs. However, the 2004 session did not deal with two other closely-related problem areas: affordable housing and transportation.

Too rarely do we discuss the issues together. Dr. Stephen Fuller of George Mason University has frequently pointed out the region’s mismatch of housing prices and transportation capacity. As median housing prices escalate, and transportation funding stagnates, the gap between job availability and housing affordability widens. In other words, adequate housing for many working poor and middle-income families is only available at substantial distances from jobs. The alternative is for families, particularly immigrant families, to reduce the gap by crowding into housing fairly close to their job sites.

One solution is to build more roads or mass transit. The other is to build more housing at cheaper prices. Both provoke the NIMBY (Not In My Back Yard) response.

One solution is largely public; the other is principally implemented and funded by the private sector. Transportation requires substantial public funding to construct. Housing does not.

With the completion of the biennial budget, Virginia continues a period of transportation funding shortages. Additional state funding is probably two years away—after the next gubernatorial election in 2005. Congressional action on funding appears deadlocked until after November, 2004, at the earliest.

New Approaches

One approach to the transportation crisis is to encourage more private funding. Most localities have encouraged private funding at varying levels through zoning proffers or “impact” fees. In short, they rely on private resources to provide roads, parking or alternative job sites (“telecommuting”). Some are now beginning to re-think housing strategies and transportation funding.

Some examples:

  • Fairfax County objects to VDOT’s planned excessive widening of the Beltway and endorses the concept of a private party building, and substantially funding, a scaled down widening project;
  • Fairfax County aggressively pursues a “stretch” goal of 20% telecommuting by County employees;
  • Fairfax County, led by Chairman Connolly, makes the private preservation of affordable housing a priority and establishes measurable goals. Preservation has two benefits: it stops the loss of relatively inexpensive resources and frequently avoids the NIMBY zealots.
  • Falls Church Chamber of Commerce makes addressing the shortage of affordable housing a priority.
  • the Virginia Foundation for Housing Preservation is a 501(c) (3) organization established to assist in providing “gap” funding for preserving existing lower cost housing
  • Local planning and land use strategies are increasingly calling for replacing each lost affordable dwelling unit with another. Units preserved, or provided anew, reduce the pressure on the transportation system. Units lost add to transportation woes.
One clear theme is emerging: old assumptions must be challenged and new avenues explored.

Printer Friendly Version
This Week

Local & Regional News & Commentary
  • Winning Primary, Moran Blasts 'Biases,' 'Inaccuracies' in 'Unprofessional' Post
  • Falls Church News & Notes
  • News-Press Photo: Primary Colors
  • Ames Site Lives
  • F.C. Council Skeptical of New Proposal
  • News-Press Editorial: Stiffing Afordable Housing
  • Crime Report for Week Ending June 7
  • Anything But Straight
  • GMHS Assembly Honors Award Recipients
  • For O'Connell Principal, It Has Been a Good 9 Innings
  • For Young Survivor, Lemonade Stand Is A Way to Give Back
  • A Penny For Your Thoughts
  • 'Semester at Sea:' Nate Hamme's Log Begins In Fidel Castro's Cuba
  • Greater Falls Church School Bulletin Board
  • Delegate Jim Scott's Richmond Report
  • Our Man in Arlington
  • General News & Commentary
  • Nicholas F. Benton's White House Report: Not A Global Bully, But With A Respect for the Individual
  • Thomas L. Friedman: D-Day in Iraq
  • Maureen Dowd: Epitaph & Epigone
  • Paul Krugman: The Great Taxer
  • Helen Thomas: Wars With a Difference
  • Arts & Entertainment
  • Restaurant Spotlight of the Week: Taqueria el Poblano
  • Roger Ebert's Movie Review: 'Baadasssss!'
  • Knick Knack
  • Critter Corner
  • Sports
  • Trading Places
  • Mustangs Claim Regional Title on Hardcourts
  •   
    PicoSearchHelp