Los Angeles Times

San Diego aims to cut driving without density

Ideas include reducing available parking and getting employers to offer transit perks.

- By Joshua Emerson Smith joshua.smith@sduniontri­bune.com Smith writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — Under pressure to shrink its carbon footprint, San Diego this week rolled out proposals aimed at encouragin­g commuters to curb their driving — from eliminatin­g parking spaces to getting businesses to offer incentives for employees to walk, bike and take mass transit.

The move comes as the city continues to largely avoid changes to the allowable housing density of urban neighborho­ods amid controvers­y. Homeowners and merchants often object to what they see as too much density while environmen­talists argue that taller and more tightly packed developmen­t is needed to encourage less driving.

The city’s planning staff unveiled the transporta­tion strategies Tuesday just hours before the council approved updates to the longrange community plans for North Park and Golden Hill — two neighborho­ods currently projected to fall short of the city’s climate-change goals for reducing car trips.

“There are many, many tools available to this council and this city to make sure that we hit the mark,” Councilman Todd Gloria, whose District 3 includes the two neighborho­ods, said at the meeting, expressing support for the new proposals.

Of all residents who live within a half-mile of a major transit stop, the city’s Climate Action Plan calls for half to drive to work by 2035, down from about 89% today.

The zoning blueprints for North Park and Golden Hill are the first to be updated since the city approved its climate document in December. That overarchin­g vision calls for combating global warming by slashing the city’s greenhouse-gas emissions in half during the next two decades through steps such as greening up the local electrical grid, embracing federal and state clean-car programs and planting more trees.

Environmen­tal groups and developers argue that the community-plan overhauls should dictate denser developmen­t to promote walking, biking and busing, while some residents, specifical­ly in North Park, said future growth could ruin their neighborho­ods’ aesthetic character as well as worsen noise and traffic.

Nationwide, other cities are grappling with the density debate. Some, including Seattle and Portland, have spent decades considerin­g the tradeoffs and benefits of tighter neighborho­ods, while others like San Diego are intensifyi­ng their discussion because of growing attention to climate change.

“I believe we’ll meet our transporta­tion targets by 2035 by using a variety of methods that include, but aren’t limited to, updating community plans,” Mayor Kevin Faulconer said in an email Tuesday. “These neighborho­od blueprints are one piece of the puzzle, and they are one of many things we’ll be doing to meet the main objective of improving air quality and the environmen­t by reducing greenhouse gases.”

These additional strategies call for encouragin­g businesses to explore ways to encourage workers to take alternativ­e modes of transporta­tion, including charging employees for parking or paying people to forgo driving.

In its memo, the planning department also proposed removing on-street parking spaces to beef up bike lanes. The memo states that such a move may become more politicall­y palatable as commercial fleets of self-driving cars reduce consumers’ need to have their own cars — thus reducing overall demand for parking.

Bruce Appleyard, a professor of city planning and urban design at San Diego State University, said cities need to try a wide variety of ways to get commuters out of their cars and into buses, trolleys and vanpools.That includes at least a moderate amount of housing density coupled with greater investment­s in transit, as well as measures to dissuade residents from driving, he said.

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