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Draft 14. Subregional Planning Element <br />Housing <br />The majority of housing in the Tri Valley is single-family units (generally between 65 and 79 percent in <br />the various communities). By comparison, 62 percent of the entire San Francisco Bay Area housing <br />supply is single-family units. Vacanry rates in 2006 ranged from 1.83 percent in Livermore to <br />3.67 percent in Dublin, compared to 3.4 percent in the Bay Area as a whole a <br />The Tri-Valley area, like the San Francisco Bay Area in general, is experiencing a shortage of housing. <br />This is evidenced by the relatively low vacanry rates and by the fact that many Tri-Valley employees <br />commute from outside the area. This housing shortfall reflects the rapid growth of employment in the <br />1980s and 1990s and the fiscal disincentive created by State legislation to local governments to plan fox <br />new housing. The shortfall is qualitative, as well as quantitative, in that the market has not produced <br />housing affordable to Tri-Valley workers. A consequence of the imbalance between income and the <br />affordability of housing is the increasing number of Tri-Valley workers who live in east Contra Costa <br />County and in San Joaquin County resulting in long commutes to work via the congested freeway <br />system. <br />It is important to ensure an adequate supply of housing for people who work in the Tri-Valley area. <br />When people live close to their place of employment, they commute shorter distances, thereby <br />reducing traffic congestion and air pollution. People who spend less time commuting have more time <br />to spend with their families and to become involved in the communities where they live. To this end, <br />the City of Pleasanton has collaborated with regional entities on issues related to housing. <br />One of these collaborative efforts is the Tri-Valley Affordable Housing Committee (TVAHC) <br />comprised of elected officials and staff from the cities of Dublin, Livermore, Pleasanton, and San <br />Ramon, along with the Town of Danville and Alameda and Contra-Costa counties. This Committee <br />was formed in 1992 to collaborate and expand regional affordable housing opport<uuties. A recent <br />initiative of the TVAHC in 2005 was to create the Tri-Valley Housing Opportunity Center which <br />offers a comprehensive counseling and education program that will expand mortgage credit <br />opport<uiities and increase home ownership in the Tri-Valley region. The City of Pleasanton made a <br />substantial monetary and staff contribution to help start this center. <br />Another collaborative effort included cooperation of the cities of Pleasanton, Livermore, and Dublin, <br />along with Alameda County, in acquiring and rehabilitating a homeless shelter located in the City of <br />Livermore. The partnership secured a Section 1081oan from HUD to cover the majority of the costs, <br />and Pleasanton is repaying its share of the loan with a portion of its annual Community Development <br />Block Grant allocation. The shelter was renamed Sojourner House and re-opened in October 2002. <br />California Department of Finance, January 1, 2006. <br />Subregional Planning 060507, clean ~ 4-7 City Council 6/5/2007 <br />