Difference between revisions of "Jobs Housing Balance"

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San Fransico county has 162,000 too few workers (or 162,000 too many jobs) [http://www.labormarketinfo.edd.ca.gov/file/commute-maps/sanfrancisco2010.pdf]
 
San Fransico county has 162,000 too few workers (or 162,000 too many jobs) [http://www.labormarketinfo.edd.ca.gov/file/commute-maps/sanfrancisco2010.pdf]
  
San Joaquin County has 18,000 too few jobs (or 18,000 too many workers)[http://www.labormarketinfo.edd.ca.gov/file/commute-maps/sanjoaquin2010.pdf]
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San Joaquin County has 19,000 too few jobs (or 19,000 too many workers)[http://www.labormarketinfo.edd.ca.gov/file/commute-maps/sanjoaquin2010.pdf]
  
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== Other Research ==
 
Here's another perspective from Curbed [https://sf.curbed.com/2016/10/12/12945854/bay-area-cities-jobs-housing-san-jose-palo-alto-sf]
 
Here's another perspective from Curbed [https://sf.curbed.com/2016/10/12/12945854/bay-area-cities-jobs-housing-san-jose-palo-alto-sf]

Revision as of 14:29, 11 August 2018

A central premise of environmentally beneficial development is the concept of the Jobs-Housing Balance. In our region, it is generally accepted that a Jobs/Housing ratio of 1.4-1.5 is healthy for a community to economically exist while minimizing the impacts of daily commuter traffic [1]. Achieving this ratio supports housing that is affordable, and employment opportunities that are closer to those residences.

In the San Francisco Bay Area Megaregion, the counties with too high a ratio (too many jobs or too few houses) are Santa Clara, San Mateo and San Franciso. Those with a deficient ratio (too many houses or too few jobs) include San Joaquin. The remaining counties in the Bay Area are better balanced, and there have be attempts to project the effects of likely future planning and development [2].

MTC has an interesting interactive projection tool [3].

EDD Data

The California Employment Development Department maintains a good volume of information about employment destinations and where the workers live including graphic maps on commute patterns [4] . The data is from 2010, accumulated over the previous 2 years.

In Alameda County, nearly the same number of people commute inward as outward. Alameda County as a whole is balanced [5]

Santa Clara County has 100,000 too few workers (or 100,000 too many jobs) [6]

San Fransico county has 162,000 too few workers (or 162,000 too many jobs) [7]

San Joaquin County has 19,000 too few jobs (or 19,000 too many workers)[8]

Other Research

Here's another perspective from Curbed [9]