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Mobilising for Transit-oriented Communities in Los Angeles

Lily Song (Northeastern University, USA)

Public Participation in Transport in Times of Change

ISBN: 978-1-80455-038-0, eISBN: 978-1-80455-037-3

Publication date: 3 May 2023

Abstract

Unprecedented levels of investment in transit and transit-oriented development in Los Angeles County have not resulted in gains for transit-dependent populations or overall higher ridership for that matter. They have instead saddled them with inordinate cost burdens and displacement pressures. Yet racialised, low-income communities that rely on transit are far from passive victims. Rather, they are participating in advocacy campaigns that penetrate decision-making venues and procedures and co-create institutional practices, policy priorities, and public and private investments that serve their interests and build a Los Angeles that is more widely accessible and affordable. This chapter presents a case study of the Alliance for Community Transit-Los Angeles (ACT-LA), a regional coalition of over 40 community-based organisations at the helm of direct-action policy campaigns and participatory planning initiatives to advance transit justice and equitable transit-oriented communities (TOC). After examining ACT-LA's origins in the LA-based movement for community benefits agreements, the analysis focuses on how ACT-LA has combined political mobilisation for ballot-box measures with participatory policy-making and planning processes to advance just, equitable, sustainable transit systems, and TOC. The concluding discussion considers the implications of the ACT-LA case for reformulating participatory policy-making and planning around transportation and land use to further equity and climate goals.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgements

The author would like to thank Laura Raymond, Asiyahola Sankara, and Scarlett De Leon from ACT-LA for their crucial input on the case study along with Daniel Foster, Elifmina Mizrahi, Anne Lin, and Fiona Riley for their research assistance. Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies and Transforming Urban Transport-Role of Political Leadership (TUT-POL) project partially funded the research.

Citation

Song, L. (2023), "Mobilising for Transit-oriented Communities in Los Angeles", Hansson, L., Sørensen, C.H. and Rye, T. (Ed.) Public Participation in Transport in Times of Change (Transport and Sustainability, Vol. 18), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 15-31. https://doi.org/10.1108/S2044-994120230000018004

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023 Lily Song