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Marin County, CA March 2, 2004 Election
Smart Voter

Transportation and Housing Challenges

By John Leonard

Candidate for Supervisor; County of Marin; Supervisorial District 3

This information is provided by the candidate
The jobs/housing imbalance in Marin needs to be addressed on the transportation and housing fronts. Better local transit and affordable housing will add to Marin's quality of life
Marin has become a high income County with an extensive service sector, much of which resides outside of Marin. This puts pressure on our transportation network and creates an imbalance in the composition of our communities. Better local transit would ease the pressure on our crowded local roads, but we also need to address the 101 chokepoint through San Rafael and the increasing problems related to the 580 interchange and the Richmond Bridge. Finally, we should be promoting safe opportunities for children to walk or bicycle to school. This is why I advocate a 1/2 cent sales tax measure for transportation improvements that would focus exclusively on these three areas: Financing for the 101 gap closure project, for the implementaion of a local transit system in Marin run independently of Golden Gate Transit, and for Safe Routes to Schools programs in our local communities. Affordable housing is another part of the equation because it allows some employees, particularly teachers, a chance to live closer to where they work, and provides a valuable opportunity for firefighters and police to get to know the communities which employ them. However, we cannot expect to meet affordable housing needs solely through infill projects. Infill means increasing density in already developed areas. For this reason, while infill projects are worthwhile, they are expensive, frequently contentious, and typically small in scale. This is why we need to look at the type of larger scale opportunities for housing in re-use situations such as the closing of San Quentine prison would represent. The prison is a major consumer of water and energy, and could be replaced with housing which would actually reduce the current level of environmental impact.

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