File #: 2019-0516   
Type: Motion / Motion Response Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 6/21/2019 In control: Board of Directors - Regular Board Meeting
On agenda: 6/27/2019 Final action:
Title: APPROVE Motion by Directors Bonin, Garcia, Solis, Kuehl, Hahn and Dupont-Walker that the Board direct the CEO to: A. Adopt Equity Focus Communities as a working definition under the first pillar of the Equity Platform; B. Utilize this definition of Equity Focus Communities to evaluate scenarios in planning efforts currently underway, including NextGen and Congestion Pricing, along with supplemental metrics if necessary and appropriate; C. Continue to refine the definition and applicability of Equity Focus Communities through the development of the LRTP and in consultation with the Policy Advisory Council and Chief Equity Officer. D. Report back to the Board on the status of hiring the Chief Equity Officer.
Sponsors: Board of Directors - Regular Board Meeting
Indexes: Congestion pricing, Equity Focus Communities, Hilda Solis, Jacquelyn Dupont-Walker, Janice Hahn, Long Range Transportation Plan, Metro Equity Platform, Mike Bonin, Motion / Motion Response, NextGen Bus Study, Policy Advisory Council, Race, Race and ethnicity, Robert Garcia, Shelia Kuehl
Related files: 2019-0535
Date Action ByActionResultAction DetailsMeeting DetailsAudio
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Meeting_Body
REGULAR BOARD MEETING
JUNE 27, 2019

Preamble
Motion by:

Bonin, Garcia, Solis, Kuehl, Hahn and Dupont-Walker

Defining Equity Focus Communities

In February 2018, the Metro Board adopted the Equity Platform, a groundbreaking policy framework for addressing disparities in access to opportunity that result from historical disinvestment in low-income communities and communities of color. The Equity Platform included four key pillars to guide the work of the agency. The first of these pillars, Define & Measure, is foundational for all equity work moving forward. Over the past year, the lack of a clear definition of equity has hindered the application of the Equity Platform to agencywide planning efforts.

Los Angeles is one of the most inequitable regions in the United States, according to the National Equity Atlas. The significant gap between the region's wealthy and low-income communities manifests itself spatially, which affects educational attainment, job access, health outcomes, public safety, environmental quality, mobility, and more. Regions with greater disparities in educational and employment access are associated with slower economic growth and less social cohesion. In contrast, researchers at the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, the International Monetary Fund, Standard and Poor's, and USC Program for Environmental and Regional Equity (PERE) have all found that regions that intentionally prioritize equity enjoy more robust economic growth over the long haul. Beginning to address these disparities is an urgent need, since it takes time to realign agency priorities and resources from historical practices. Adopting a working definition for use during the critical planning efforts underway, most notably the NextGen Bus Study and the Congestion Pricing Feasibility Study, would result in real benefits for communities that have waited a long time for their needs to be addressed equitably.












As part of the LRTP Draft Values Framework, M...

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