The Mercury News

Facebook’s plan to address housing, transporta­tion

- By Elliot Schrage, Paul J. Fitzgerald and Nicole Taylor Elliot Schrage is a vice president at Facebook. The Rev. Paul J. Fitzgerald is president of the University of San Francisco. Nicole Taylor is president and CEO of Silicon Valley Community Foundation.

A recent poll identified homelessne­ss as well as housing costs and availabili­ty as two of the most important issues facing California today. In fact, these issues are two sides of the same coin — we cannot address homelessne­ss without also addressing the housing shortage across the income spectrum. This recognitio­n should drive a common agenda for building the Bay Area’s future.

Today, it’s too expensive to live here. Young people can’t raise families in the communitie­s where they grew up. Many families are forced to live in RVs. Communitie­s suffer when commuting keeps families apart and ruins our environmen­t. How do we overcome our different priorities and interests to develop common solutions?

California has done this before. Our economy is the envy of people around the world. Local industry invented technologi­es that have improved how people live. Our parents and predecesso­rs built ports and highways, schools and university systems, that advanced our economy and supported our residents. This spirit of innovation and ingenuity can be directed to create a new model for our communitie­s and economies that works for all.

We can do this — again. We write this together because business, philanthro­pic and academic communitie­s must work together to address the interconne­cted challenges of housing, transporta­tion, climate change and economic opportunit­y:

• Facebook on Tuesday announced a $1 billion, 10-year investment, including a new partnershi­p with the Newsom administra­tion and the state of California for mixed-income housing on excess state-owned land in communitie­s where housing is scarce.

• The University of San Francisco is constructi­ng housing for students in San Francisco and working with interfaith leaders and peer academic institutio­ns to unlock land and funding for housing to serve communitie­s in need.

• The Silicon Valley Community Foundation is expanding its efforts to protect and expand housing for residents, especially the most in need.

Sadly, money alone cannot solve the housing crisis. By one estimate, 2 million new homes are needed in the five-county Bay Area by 2070. Our collective experience suggests six principles to guide future efforts:

The crisis is a regional problem and solutions must be addressed regionally. We must do more on a policy level to alter legal and regulatory systems that delay projects and incur huge costs.

Producing new homes, protecting people from evictions and preserving the existing housing stock must all be part of our solutions. No one approach will be sufficient.

Solving the crisis requires producing homes for California­ns at every rung of the income

ladder. This includes supportive and affordable housing, and housing for essential workers such as teachers, nurses and other public service employees who contribute to everyday functionin­g of their communitie­s.

Housing and transporta­tion planning must be integrated to meaningful­ly address climate change. Shortening commute times is not only good for the environmen­t, but also expands the pool of housing alternativ­es open to those in need.

Initiative­s to produce new homes should reflect our Bay Area values of inclusion, environmen­t and economic opportunit­y. Metrics that inform planning and infrastruc­ture investment­s should address affordabil­ity, rates of homelessne­ss, carbon footprints and social mobility.

Solving California’s housing crisis requires new partnershi­ps around a common vision and shared responsibi­lity for our future. Government­s at all levels, the private sector, labor, faith communitie­s and voices traditiona­lly not well represente­d in the housing policy arena must work together.

Our organizati­ons embrace these principles and agree to coordinate our efforts going forward. Pope Francis’ encyclical, “Laudato Si: On Care for Our Common Home,” calls on us all to think about our shared home and address complex crises that are both social and environmen­tal. We encourage leaders across all sectors — public, private and philanthro­pic, secular and those of faith — to take up this charge with us.

 ?? BAY AREA NEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO ?? In 2017, Facebook took the area’s first step in addressing one component of the housing crisis — specifical­ly, creating a pilot program to offer rental assistance for teachers and communitys­erving profession­als.
BAY AREA NEWS GROUP FILE PHOTO In 2017, Facebook took the area’s first step in addressing one component of the housing crisis — specifical­ly, creating a pilot program to offer rental assistance for teachers and communitys­erving profession­als.

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