Title: COMBATING URBAN SPRAWL
1JUST TRANSPORTATION
Dismantling Race and Class Barriers to
Mobility Robert D. Bullard, Ph.D. Environmental
Justice Resource Center Clark Atlanta University
2 Why Regional Equity Matters
- Public Investments
- Access to Jobs
- Physical and Economic Mobility
- Equal Opportunity and Civil Rights
- Public Subsidies
- Disparate Car Ownership Rates
- Public Health
- Transit-Oriented Development
- Urban Revitalization
- Representation and Decision Making
3Importance of Transportation
- Transportation touches every aspect of our lives
where we live, work, play, and go to school - Transportation plays a pivotal role in shaping
human interaction, economic mobility, and
sustainability - Transportation also provides access to
opportunity and serves as a key component in
addressing poverty, unemployment, and equal
opportunity goals while ensuring access to
education, health care, and other public services
4Environmental Justice Principle
- Environmental justice embraces the principle that
all people and communities are entitled to equal
protection of our environmental, health,
employment, housing, transportation, and civil
rights laws
5Benefits of Transit
- Transit gives mobility to millions of Americans
who do not or cannot drive - Transit reduces air pollution
- Transit reduces traffic congestion
- Transit makes all Americans, even drivers, freer
by giving them flexibility and options
6Transportation Barriers
- Lack of Personal Transportation (no privately
owned car available to travel to work) - Inadequate Public Transit (limited,
unaffordable, or inaccessible service and routes,
and security safety) - Spatial Mismatch (location of suitable jobs in
areas that are inaccessible by public
transportation)
7Americans without Cars
- Lack of car ownership and inadequate public
transit service in many central cities and
metropolitan regions exacerbate social, economic,
and racial isolation - Nationally, 7 percent of white households own no
car, compared with 24 percent of black
households, 17 percent of Latino households, and
13 percent of Asian-American households - Over 46.5 of blacks with incomes under 15,000
do not own cars compared with 14.9 of all U.S.
households
8Transportation Justice
- Other than housing, Americans spend more on
transportation than any other household expense - The average American household spends 19.2 of
its annual income on transportation - Americans spend more on driving than on health
care, education, or food - The nations poorest families spend about 40 of
their take home pay on transportation - Households earning less than 20,000 saw their
transportation costs increase by 36.5 between
1992 and 2000. - Households earning 70,000 and above only spent
16.7 more on transportation than they did in
1992
9Transportation Equity
- Procedural Equity (Is the process fair, uniform,
and consistent?) - Geographic Equity (Are some spatial communities
located on the wrong side of the tracks?) - Social Equity (How are the benefits and costs
distributed among population groups?)
10Separate But Equal
- Transportation and Civil Rights have been linked
for more than a century - The 1896 U.S. Supreme Court Plessy v. Ferguson
decision codified Jim Crow segregation
11Frontal Assault on Transportation Apartheid
- U.S. Supreme Court overturned Plessy in 1954
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka - The system was later challenged by Rosa Parks in
December 1955 and Montgomery Boycott - This December will mark the 50th anniversary of
the Montgomery Bus Boycott - Rosa Parks would have a difficult time sitting on
the front or back of a Montgomery today. The
city dismantled its public bus system, which
served mostly blacks and poor people in 1997
12Government Response
- Executive Order 12898 February 1994
- U.S. DOT Order April, 1997
- FHWA Order December, 1998
13(No Transcript)
14Executive Order 12898 February 11, 1994
- EJ Strategies and Guidance
- NEPA
- Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
- Research, Data Collection, Analysis
- Disproportionate and Cumulative Impact Assessment
- Subsistence Fishers and Wildlife Consumption
- Public Participation
15Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
- No person in the United States shall, on the
ground of race, color, or national origin, be
excluded from participation in, be denied the
benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination
under any program or activity receiving federal
financial assistance
16Confronting Transit Injustice in Los Angeles
- In 1996, the LA Bus Riders Union won a landmark
Title VI Civil Rights Consent Decree - 1.5 billion settlement for clean fuel buses
- Improved services
- Lowered fares
- Even though the Bus Riders Union has won
repeatedly in court, as recent as January 2004,
the group has had to wage an uphill battle to get
the MTA to live up to the ten-year federal
consent decree
17Transit Racism Can Kill
- Transit discrimination killed 17-year old Cynthia
Wiggins because Buffalo city buses were not
allowed to stop at an upscale suburban mall - The transit discrimination lawsuit was settled in
November, 1999 for 2.55 million
18Transit Investments
- All transit is not created equal
- Some communities get buses, others get light
rail, while some are left out altogether - Transit equity analysis uses the follow the
dollars approach
19Follow the Dollars
- Public transit has received roughly 50 billion
since the creation of the Urban Mass Transit
Administration over thirty years ago, while
roadway projects have received over 205 billion
since 1956 - Generally, states spend less than 20 percent of
federal transportation funding on transit - Public transit is a 32 billion industry
employing more than 350,000 people - Every 1 invested in public transportation
generates 6 in local economic activity. Every 1
billion invested in public transportation
infrastructure supports approximately 47,500 jobs - Just 6 percent of all federal highway dollars are
suballocated directly to the metropolitan regions - Although local governments within metropolitan
areas own and maintain the vast majority of the
transportation infrastructure, they receive only
about 10 percent of every dollar they generate
20Shortchanging Metro Areas
- Commuters in 176 metro regions paid 20 billion
more in federal gas tax than they received in
federal highway trust fund money for both transit
and highways from 1998 through 2003 - Taxpayers in 54 metro areas lost over 100
million dollars the six year period - The top gas tax losers were Los Angeles,
Dallas-Fort Worth, Phoenix, Atlanta, Detroit, and
New Orleans - Such an uneven playing field creates donor
regions
21Creation of Donor Regions
- From July 1999 thru September 2003, Georgia spent
620 for every resident in the 13-county Atlanta
region, a region with the states worst
congestion and dirtiest air - In contrast, Georgia spent 1,000 per resident on
the rest of the state - During the late 1990s, only about 17 percent of
the gas tax revenues were returned to the 13
Atlanta metropolitan countiesa region that
generates 40 percent of the states collection
22Getting There on Public Transportation
- Nationally, only about 5 percent of all Americans
use public transit to get to work - In urban areas, African Americans and Latinos
comprise over 54 percent of transit users (62
percent of bus riders, 35 percent of subway
riders, and 29 percent of commuter rail riders) - Urban transit is especially important to African
Americans where over 88 percent live in
metropolitan areas and over 53 percent live
inside central cities - African Americans are almost six times as likely
as whites to use transit to get around
23MARTA Moving Africans Rapidly Through Atlanta
- The Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority
(MARTA) was conceived as a five-county system in
the 1960s - However, the mostly white suburban counties opted
out and several later created their own separate
and unequal suburban bus systems
24No State Support for MARTA
- MARTA is the nations largest transit agency that
does not receive earmarked state funds - MARTA has received a total of 15 million from
the state of Georgia since 1993 or an average of
1.36 million per year - MARTA is slated to receive a mere 2 million
toward a new fare collection system in Gov. Sonny
Perdues proposed 15.5 billion transportation
package - By contrast, the Massachusetts Bay Transit
Authority (Boston) gets 20 of the states 5-cent
sales tax, or about 680 million a year
25The Iron Triangle of Suburban Sprawl
- Sprawl is random unplanned growth characterized
by inadequate accessibility to essential land
uses such as housing, jobs, and public services,
i.e., schools, parks, and mass transit - Suburban sprawl is fueled by the iron triangle
of finance, land use planning, and transportation
service delivery
26Building Roads to Everywhere
- Between fiscal year 1992 and 1999, states had
more than 33.8 billion in federal funds
available to spend on either highways or public
transportation, but spent only 12.5 of that sum
on public transit - Nearly half of that 12.5 was spent by two states
(New York and California)
27Highways vs Transit
- From 1998-2003, TEA-21 transportation spending
amounted to over 217 billion - Some 30 states (including Georgia) restrict use
of the gas tax revenue to funding highways only - Between fiscal year 1992 and 1999, states had
more than 33.8 billion in federal funds
available to spend on either highways or public
transportation, but spent only 12.5 of that sum
on public transit
28Cars and Pollution
- Transportation sources account for 80 of carbon
monoxide, 45 of nitrogen oxide, 35 of
hydrocarbons, 32 of carbon dioxide, 19 of
particulate matter, and 5 of sulfur dioxide - Over 24 of black households, 17 of Hispanic
households, 13 of Asian American households, and
7 of white households do not own cars
29Geography of Air Pollution
- Nationally, 57 of whites, 65 of blacks, and 80
of Hispanics live in counties with substandard
air - Over 61.3 of Black children, 69.2 of Hispanic
children and 67.7 of Asian-American children
live in areas that exceed the 0.08 ppm ozone
standard, while 50.8 of white children live in
such areas - Air pollution costs Americans 10 billion to 200
billion a year - Air pollution claims 70,000 lives a year, nearly
twice the number killed in traffic accidents
30Paying for Ozone Pollution
- Air pollution has been linked to rising asthma
rates - Asthma hits poor, inner city children the hardest
- African Americans are two to six times more
likely than whites to die from asthma - Asthma hospitalization rate for African Americans
and Latinos is 3 to 4 times the rate for whites
31An Asthma Epidemic
- Asthma affects 15 to 17 million people, including
5 million children in the U.S. - Six percent of U.S. children have asthma
- Asthma is now the nations number one childhood
illness - Asthma is the number one reason for childhood
emergency room visits and school absenteeism
32Widening Disparities
- Highway sprawl is aiding in the creation and
perpetuation of separate and unequal housing and
residential areas - Sprawl is heightening the economic divide between
the haves and the have nots - Sprawl is also a threat to public health
33Atlantas Heat Island
- NASA scientists have discovered that Atlantas
sprawl development pattern is creating thunder
storms
34Economic Activity Centers
35Losing to the Suburbs
- The city of Atlanta share of the regions jobs
dropped from 40 in 1980, 28 in 1990, and 19 in
1997 - Between 1990-1997 Atlantas Northern suburbs
added 272,915 jobs or 78 of all jobs add in the
region - Baltimores share of metro private jobs dropped
from 33.3 in 1993 to 30.4 in 1996 - Washingtons, DCs share of metro private jobs
dropped from 28.8 in 1993 to 26.0 in 1996
36Spatial Mismatch BetweenBlacks/Whites and Jobs
- In 2000, no group was more physically isolated
from jobs than blacks - Over 50 of blacks would have had to relocate to
achieve an even distribution relative to jobs
the comparable figures for whites are 20 to 24
percentage points lower - Black/white dissimilarity index for total
employment 2000 Atlanta (53.9/39.6)
Los Angeles (61.2/37.3) Chicago
(69.5/34.5) and Detroit (71.4/36.5)
37Metro Jobs Location
- Washington, DC (3-mile radius 18.9 10-mile
radius 52.7 outside 10-mile ring 47.3 - Atlanta, GA (3-mile radius 11.3 10-mile
radius 38.1outside 10-mile ring 61.9 - Baltimore, MD (3-mile radius 17.6 10-mile
radius 56.5 outside 10-mile ring 43.5 - Los Angeles, CA (3-mile radius 6.9 10-mile
radius 38.1 outside 10-mile ring 61.9)
38Office Sprawl and Spatial Mismatch in Metro Areas
- Share of office space located in suburbs
Detroit (69.5), Atlanta (65.8), Washington, DC
(57.7), Miami (57.4), Philadelphia (55.2), Los
Angeles (48.5) - Nationally, 23 percent of Americans worked
outside their county of residence in 2000 - up
from 20 percent in 1990 and 18 percent in 1980 - Across the largest 100 metro areas, only 22 of
people work within three miles of the city center
39Access to Entry Level Jobs
- Only 54.4 of American households have any access
to public transit, and only 28.8 claim to have
satisfactory public transit - More than one-third of all entry-level jobs in
the Baltimore region cannot be reached without a
car - The majority of entry level jobs in metro Atlanta
are not within a quarter mile of public
transportation - Metro Atlanta households pay an extra 300 per
month for the lack of transportation choices or
3,600 per year - African Americans in metro Atlanta earned only
700 per 1,000 earned by whites in 2000
40Growing Smarter
- Smart Growth is defined as growth that is
economically sound, environmentally friendly, and
supportive of community livability - growth that
enhances our quality of life - Smart growth is development that serves the
economy, the community and the environment
41Linking Transportation Equity to Smart/Fair
Growth
- Enforce Civil Rights and Anti-Discrimination Laws
- Broad Coalitions Across Political Jurisdictions
- Coordinated and Linked Regional Transportation
- More Funds for Public Transit
- Build Equity Analysis into Regional Planning
(RTP/TIP) - Making Metropolitan Planning Organizations
Accountable - Transit-Oriented Development
- In-Fill Development
- Plans to Minimize Displacement and
Gentrification - Streets for Walking, Bicycles, and Transit
- Gas Tax Reform
- Energy Efficient Vehicles and Clean Fuels
42For Information on the EJRC Contact
- Phone 404/880-6911
- Fax 404/880-6909
- E-Mail ejrc_at_cau.edu
- Web Page www.ejrc.cau.edu