Politics & Government

Marin Residents Blast Plan Bay Area, While Supes Back It in Final Vote

Opposition group Citizen Marin chartered a 48-person bus to the meeting, and several Marin residents seized on the opportunity to speak out against the plan.





By Bay City News Service

A coalition of Bay Area leaders, including Marin County Supervisor Katie Rice, approved late Thursday night a long-term regional plan meant to accommodate population growth over the next few decades while meeting state mandates for cutting air pollution and improving access to public transportation.

The final vote on Plan Bay Area came during a marathon joint meeting of the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) and the Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) at the Oakland Marriott.

The two groups are made up of 21 Bay Area county supervisors, mayors and other local leaders. In a vote after midnight, Marin County supervisors Steve Kinsey and Katie Rice voted yes on both the plan and its environmental impact report, while Novato City Councilwoman Pat Eklund abstained from voting on both, according to the Marin Independent Journal.

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As with dozens of Plan Bay Area-related meetings over the past three years leading up to the final vote, the night was not without controversy. Several hundred people packed a Marriott ballroom to protest the plan, voicing concerns that it will bring overcrowded housing developments and will bypass local control over development

Opposition group Citizen Marin chartered a 48-person bus to the meeting, according to the Marin Independent Journal, and several Marin residents seized on the opportunity to speak out against the plan.

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"It's clearly a social engineering experiment," Fairfax resident and Marin Republican Party leader Kevin Krick said during the public hearing.

"This plan has been wrong from the beginning," said Mill Valley resident Susan Kirsch, one of the co-founders of Citizen Marin. "You don't represent us. What we demand is the right to vote."

Some speakers also voiced concerns that the plan would give the government undue authority to dictate where and how communities are allowed to develop housing.

Hundreds of attendees from groups such as Discontent with Plan Bay Area said they believe such a plan should be subject to a public vote and toted signs and chanted "Let us vote!" or "MTC, don't speak for me!"

According to the MTC, the plan is a "work in progress " that continues earlier efforts to "develop an efficient transportation network and grow in a financially and environmentally responsible way."

Created by several agencies including MTC and ABAG, Plan Bay Area comes up with blueprints for the region's nine counties to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 15 percent by the year 2040, as required under state Senate Bill 375. The plan also focuses on providing housing for all residents of all income levels near transportation hubs, according to MTC and ABAG officials.

The federal government requires the agencies to update the plan every four years to keep up with shifting demographics and new data, MTC spokesman John Goodwin said.

"There are no easy solutions in this plan but...this plan creates a way for the residents of the Bay Area to discuss our future openly," said ABAG Executive Director Ezra Rapport.

But many of the Bay Area residents who spoke at the meeting said they either did not feel included in the planning process or felt that requests for public input were disingenuous and that board members had already made up their minds to approve the plan.

Dozens of people said they would support the plan as long as it included amendments to increase funding under the plan for affordable housing and public transit options – amendments that were adopted later in the meeting.

Some speakers praised the plan as it was originally presented, expressing hope that it will provide a wider variety of alternatives to congested Bay Area roadways and prevent the displacement of low-income residents as rents throughout the region soar.

"I'm really glad to see the region take this pioneering step," said Adina Levin of Menlo Park.

The Bay Area is among the state's 18 regions tasked with creating a vision for meeting mandated emissions reduction targets and implementing transit and housing solutions.

Thursday night's vote came at the end of a three-year planning process involving the MTC, ABAG, the Bay Area Air Quality Management District, the Bay Conservation and Development Commission and local communities and agencies.

Copyright © 2013 by Bay City News, Inc. – Republication, Rebroadcast or any other Reuse without the express written consent of Bay City News, Inc. is prohibited.


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