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Bay Area Alliance for Sustainable Communities

Organization

The Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) represents cities, counties and regional agencies on the Steering Committee of the Bay Area Alliance for Sustainable Communities (Bay Area Alliance), a multi-stakeholder coalition established in 1997 to develop and implement an action plan that will lead to a more sustainable region. The Bay Area Alliance provides a unique and valuable forum in which government leaders and representatives of the three Es of Sustainable Communities (3 Es) - prosperous economy, quality environment, and social equity - come together to address major regional challenges.

Steering Committee

In addition to ABAG President Dave Cortese, the members of the Steering Committee are: Juliet Ellis, Execut ive Director of Urban Habitat, Carl Guardino, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Silicon Valley Lead ership Group, Robert L. Harris, Vice President Environmental Affairs of Pacific Gas and Electric Company, Van Jones, Executive Director of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, Michele Perrault, International Vice Pres ident of the Sierra Club, Will Travis, Executive Director of the Bay Conservation and Development Commission, and Jim Wunderman, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Bay Area Council.

Member Organizations

The members of the Bay Area Alliance are constituency-based public and private sector organizations that represent the perspectives of the Three Es and government as well as the civic, philanthropic and faith communities.

Vision

The Bay Area Alliance has adopted the following vision:

"We envision a Bay Area where the natural environment is vibrant, healthy and safe; where the economy is robust and globally competitive and where all citizens have equitable opportunities to share in the benefits of a quality environment and prosperous economy."

Compact for a Sustainable Bay Area

The Bay Area Alliance worked with more than 200 public and private sector stakeholders to develop the Compact for a Sustainable Bay Area. The Compact is an action plan intended to guide government, businesses, civic organizations and individuals in cooperative efforts to sustain and enhance the Bay Area's environmental, economic and social qualities for current and future generations. It is also a commitment by participating organizations to act now and over the next quarter century to put the Bay Area on a more sustainable path.

Ten Commitments to Action

The following Ten Commitments to Action are the centerpiece of the Compact:

  1. Enable a diversified, sustainable and competitive economy to continue to prosper and provide jobs in order to achieve a high quality of life for all Bay Area residents.
  2. Provide housing affordable to all income levels within the Bay Area to match population increases and job generation.
  3. Target transportation investment to achieve a world-class comprehensive, integrated and balanced multi-modal system that supports efficient land use and decreases dependency on single-occupancy vehicle trips.
  4. Preserve and restore the region's natural assets, including San Francisco Bay, farmland, open space, and other habitats.
  5. Improve resource and energy efficiency, reduce pollution and waste.
  6. Focus investment to preserve and revitalize neighborhoods.
  7. Provide all residents with the opportunity for quality education and lifelong learning to help them meet their highest aspirations.
  8. Promote healthy and safe communities.
  9. Support state and local government fiscal reforms.
  10. Stimulate civic engagement.
Sustainable Communities: What's in it for the Bay Area?

The Compact contains recommendations for each of the 10 commitments. The proposed strategies and actions address some of the most difficult and intractable conditions affecting the region. Collaborative implementation of these measures can support public decision makers in their efforts to work with all stakeholders to find effective and lasting solutions.

Public Review

The Bay Area Alliance initially presented the Draft Compact to the Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) General Assembly in April 1999, and surveyed participants on the ten commitments. The Draft Compact was revised to reflect input received from ABAG and other member organizations before being cir culated for broader review.

Presentations were made to city councils and boards of supervisors to solicit input and support. All 9counties and 66 of the region's cities took actions supporting the work of the Bay Area Alliance. The Bay Area Alliance also sought feedback through the Smart Growth workshops held in each county, media outreach, and a feedback quest ionnaire on its website.

The Bay Area Alliance used the input to enhance the Draft Compact before submitting it to the members f or approval. In November 2003, the final Compact for a Sustainable Bay Area was released.

Related Projects

Regional Livability Footprint Project

The Bay Area Alliance launched the Regional Livability Footprint Project to facilitate regional consensus on how the Ten Commitments to Action in the Compact relate to land use. The Regional Livability Footprint Project was coordinated with the Regional Agencies Smart Growth Strategy to develop an "alternative growth scenar io" for the Bay Area.

The Smart Growth Strategy/Regional Livability Footprint Project

conducted an extensive public participation process to reach regional consensus and generate support for a prefer red land use pattern that will inform how the Bay Area can grow smarter and more sustainably. Using a number of i ndicators, the alternative growth scenario will be compared with the current-trends projections ABAG produces eve ry two years. The projections are used in developing transportation and other regional plans.

The Bay Area Alliance pursues the objectives of the Regional Livability Footprint and related commitments in t he Compact by advocating for legislative initiatives and incentives needed to spur smarter growth.

For more information on the Livability Footprint, please contact the Bay Area Alliance at (510) 464-7978.

Community Capital Investment Initiative

The Community Capital Investment Initiative (CCII) is a high-priority implementation strategy for the Bay Area Al liance. Its purpose is to attract private investment into the poorest neighborhoods in partnership with the commu nity in order to simultaneously tackle poverty with market-based solutions and promote smart growth. Work on this Initiative is providing valuable real-time information and practical lessons on the potential for infill, land r ecycling, and neighborhood revitalization as strategies for sustainable development. For more information, contac t the Bay Area Alliance at 510/464-7978.

Indicators

The Bay Area Alliance has selected a set of indicators which it is using to assess the region's progress towards achieving the vision. Working in partnership with the Northern California Council for the Community, the Bay Are a Alliance established baselines and a system to collect and update data, publish reports, and create a repositor y of sustainability data. The inaugural report, Bay Area Indicators: Measuring Progress Toward Sustainability, is available on the Bay Area Alliance website.
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