2010 Highlights
For Urban Habitat, 2010 is shaping up to be a
big year as many of the programmatic seeds planted and cultivated over
the past 20 years bear fruit.
Transportation Justice
In the first successful action of its kind in the nation, Urban Habitat
helped organize a coalition that filed a civil rights complaint to stop
$70 million in stimulus funds from being allocated to the Oakland
Airport Connector (OAC)—an unfair $500-million transit project. As the
coalition demanded, the funds will be shifted to Bay Area transit
agencies to help avert service cuts, fare hikes, and layoffs that will
affect hundreds of thousands of people. The complaint, filed with the
Federal Transit Administration (FTA) by the nonprofit law firm Public
Advocates on behalf of Urban Habitat, TransForm, and Genesis, charged
the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) agency with failing to take into
account the needs of communities of color and low-income communities
when planning the OAC project. (See story on page 34.) We are now
moving to broaden this civil rights victory to other communities around
the country and to persuade Congress to incorporate easier access to
Title VI civil rights remedies in the Federal Surface Transportation
Authorization Act.
Affordable Housing
In a major affordable housing victory, on March 12, 2010, Alameda
Superior Court Judge Frank Roesch ruled in favor of a suit brought by
Urban Habitat that the City of Pleasanton’s housing cap violates state
law. In the first ruling of its kind, the court ordered the city to
meet its share of affordable housing. Urban Habitat is now working with
Public Advocates—the law firm that filed the case—to ensure that
Pleasanton zones for this new affordable housing near reliable public
transit. Following up on the court ruling, Urban Habitat has been
organizing with other housing advocates to sway the city council to
accept Roesch's verdict. We’ve also been fielding calls from people in
other cities who are working to use the ruling as leverage in their own
communities.
Leadership Institute
This year we also witnessed the graduation of our first cohort of the
Social Equity Caucus Boards and Commissions Leadership Institute.
Designed to identify, train, and support low-income people and people
of color for boards and commissions service in the San Francisco Bay
Area, the leadership institute prioritizes boards and commissions seats
that influence equity in terms of transportation, development, housing,
jobs, and the environment. All 10 of our graduates are now seated on
priority boards and commissions, such as planning commissions in
Oakland and Richmond, and housing, parks, and transit boards. We are
now interviewing the next group that will be entering the program and
working with commissioner-advocates from around the region and state,
including first-year program alumni, to equip our cohort with the best
possible information and skills for advancing equity in the Bay Area.
20 years of Race, Poverty & the Environment
This year marks the 20th anniversary of our journal Race, Poverty & the Environment and the 21st for Urban Habitat. We began this project in partnership with the California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation’s Center on Race, Poverty & the Environment and since 2004 have been the publisher. We are committed to continuing the vision of a magazine that presents a framework for achieving racial and social justice and fulfilling the founding editor’s goal to “strengthen the networks between environmental groups and working people, people of color and poor people.”
