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Overview
and Accomplishments of the Oregon and
Metro Portland Planning Programs
Prepared
by Robert Liberty, Director, 1000 Friends of Oregon
September 1998
Oregon's
statewide planning program was adopted by the Oregon Legislature in 1973,
under the leadership of Republican Governor Tom McCall. The state land
use planning program: mandates urban growth boundaries around every city
in Oregon; requires cities and counties to rezone urban land for affordable
types of housing (which had the effect of increasing permitted residential
densities); requires changes to the transportation network and urban design
to reduce dependence on automobiles; establishes state zoning for all
farm, range and forest lands in order to protect the land base for farming,
ranching and timber production; requires the identification and protection
of natural resources; and changes the way land use decisions are made.
Oregon's
state land use planning laws and policies have survived many attacks,
because they command broad support. Three initiatives to repeal the state's
planning laws were rejected by Oregon voters by margins of 10 to 20%.
Groups opposing repeal in 1982 included the AFL-CIO, the Home Builders
Association of Metropolitan Portland and various chambers of commerce.
The very conservative leadership of the 1995 and 1997 Oregon Legislatures
failed to pass amendments to weaken the land use laws, because of support
for those laws by the public, the Oregon Farm Bureau Federation, the Oregon
Forest Industry Council and business leaders.
Upon
the foundation of Oregon's statewide planning program, the Portland, Oregon,
metropolitan region is in the process of adopting a 40-year regional framework
plan that may do even more to address the problematic patterns of metropolitan
sprawl and decay in the U.S. This process is being carried out by a directly-elected,
home rule, regional council, Metro. Under state law and its home rule
charter, Metro is required to adopt a long-range regional framework plan.
The 24 cities and parts of three counties within Metro's boundary, must
amend their local land use plans and regulations to conform to the Regional
Framework Plan.
Here
is a summary of some of the accomplishments of the Oregon and Metro planning
efforts to date and some information about additional prospective efforts
under consideration. This summary focuses on the planning efforts' achievements
in the Portland metropolitan region.
A. Urban
Growth Boundaries
Every
incorporated city in Oregon has an urban growth boundary (UGB), from
metropolitan Portland (population 1.3 million in the Oregon part of
the region) to Greenhorn, population 3.
The Portland metropolitan UGB encompasses 24 cities and parts
of three counties and 1.3 million people. It is 232,000 acres in size
and has been in place for 17 years.
B. Land
Savings & Densities Within the Portland Metro UGB
In
1960 the density of metropolitan Portland was 3,412 people per square
mile and the density of metropolitan Atlanta was 3,122 people per square
mile. In 1990 the density of the Oregon part of the Portland metro area
rose to 3,734 people/square mile while Atlanta's had dropped to 1,898
per square. In 1994, the Oregon portion of the Portland metropolitan
area reached a density of 3,885 people per square mile.
If the Atlanta metropolitan region had been able to grow during
the 1980s, as efficiently as the Portland, Oregon metropolitan area
has been able to grow in the early 1990s, Georgia would have saved 93,000
acres of rural land - farm land, pine forests and rural homesites.
C. Protection
of Farm and Forest Lands Outside Urban Growth Boundaries
Oregon
has adopted statewide zoning for 16.4 million acres of farmland and
8.7 million acres of private forest land (about 40,000 square miles.)
By contrast, all of the land set aside for urbanization and rural residential
development and commerce in Oregon totals 1.6 million acres.
Minimum lot sizes in farm and forest zones range from 80 to 240
acres. (Houses are subject to additional restrictions beyond lot size.)
The two large counties which contain the western, eastern and
southern parts of the Portland regional urban growth boundary, rank
second and fifth out of 36 counties in agricultural production.
D. Urban
Reinvestment and Revitalization in the Portland Metropolitan Region
In
1996, about 29% of all residential development inside the Portland metro
UGB has come from infill and redevelopment, as contrasted with about
4% in the Cleveland metropolitan area.
In the mid-1990s, the most rapid appreciation of home prices in
the region occurred in poor inner city neighborhoods. For example, in
March 1992, the average sale price of a home in poor and working class
North Portland was $44,500. In March 1997 the average sale price was
$102,000; a 150%. By contrast, in the exclusive Lake Oswego/West Linn
area the sales prices increase for that period was 31% (from $169,900
to 221,900.) The biggest problem in many poor neighborhoods now is not
urban decay but gentrification.
The share of regional employment in the central city area of the
metropolitan Portland region has held nearly steady at about 20% of
the regional total (compared to 10 to 15% for many metropolitan areas
of similar size), even as the entire region has experienced rapid growth.
Between the mid-1970s and the mid-1990s, downtown employment increased
from 56,000 to 109,500. The downtown is lively, vital and busy on weekends
and weekday evenings.
E. Reducing
Barriers to Housing Affordability
The
average minimum lot size for vacant residential land in 1978 was 12,800
square feet. Because of the implementation of Oregon's Goal 10, "Housing",it
was reduced to an average of 8,280 square feet by 1982, reducing the
cost of the land for a home by $7,000 to $10,000 in 1982 dollars.
Due to Goal 10, between 1977 and 1982 the amount of land zoned
for residential use increased by only 10% but land available for multi-family
residential development almost quadrupled, from 7.6% to 27% of net buildable
acreage.
Overall, the maximum number of buildable units in the metropolitan
area increased from 129,000 to over 301,000.
Oregon state law requires local governments to allow manufactured
housing in all residential zones. Cities and counties must all zone
adequate amounts of land for multi-family housing. City charters or
zoning regulations cannot be used to block government subsidized housing.
Today, these gains are eroded as accelerating growth during a
period of modest wage increases has made housing less and less affordable
in this region (like other high growth parts of the U.S.) However, the
average sale price of a home in the Portland metropolitan region in
the second quarter of 1998 (preliminary estimates from the National
Association of Realtors) was only $158,900, slightly more than Denver
($151,400) and less than San Diego ($210,200), Seattle ($185,800) and
the San Francisco Bay Area ($329,400).
Additional steps are now being taken to help increase the supply
of affordable housing. For example, in 1996, the Metro regional government
adopted a regulation which requires cities and counties to allow accessory
housing units in any residential zone.
F. Increasing
Transportation Choices
In
1997, the Portland metropolitan area decided not to build a beltway
around its most rapidly growing south-western quadrant. Over the next
40 years, the region plans to build only a few short highway segments
totaling less than 40 miles.
Between 1990 and 1995, transit usage (measured in trips/person/year)
increased 4.4% in the Portland region. During the same period, transit
usage in the 20 cities closest to Portland in size decreased by an average
of 9.1%.
From 1990 to 1996, transit ridership in the Portland metropolitan
area grew 20% faster than growth in vehicle miles traveled (VMT), 41%
faster than growth in service, and nearly 150% faster than the growth
in population.
In 1998, the second light rail line, 18 miles long, reaching to
the western suburbs, opened. There are already 6000 new houses and apartments
that are permitted or under construction in transit oriented developments
next to the line. Projections are that as many as one-third of the people
living in these new suburban communities will get to work by walking,
riding their bikes, or taking public transit.
G. Conserving
Urban Greenspaces
In
the Portland metro area, the voters approved a $136 million bond measure
to buy an additional 6,000 acres of greenspaces in and around the regional
UGB.
Prohibitions on development on steep slopes or in flood plains,
now being considered, will save significant amounts of additional greenspaces.
H. Metropolitan
Regional Governance
In
1979, citizens in the Portland metropolitan region voted to replace
their Council of Governments with a directly elected regional council
and executive to handle a moderate portfolio of regional responsibilities
including solid waste disposal, to regional visitor facilities and transportation
planning.
In 1995, the voters approved a home rule charter for the regional
government, now called Metro, emphasizing that its primary function
was long-range land use and transportation planning. The charter reaffirmed
Metro's statutory authority to require local government's local land
use and transportation plans to conform to a regional framework plan.
Metro's planning program is the subject of extensive public participation;
over 17,000 people have returned surveys, with their own postage, on
the regional planning effort. Voters get to express their preferences
on the subject by who they elect to the Metro Council.
The
following documents are available from 1000 Friends of Oregon. Prices
include postage.
Questions
& Answers About Oregon's Land Use Planning Program 35 pages (1997)
$5.00
Evaluation of the Oregon planning program's performance in Landmark
30 pages (February 1997) (photocopy only) $4.00
Oregon's Comprehensive Growth Management Program: An Implementation
Review and Lessons for Other States Environmental Law Reporter News
& Analysis 24 pages and 337 footnotes (June 1992) $3.00.
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