Chao, Liang-Fang-2-15-2018 902 am - FW_ Job-Housing BalanceFrom: Lauren Sapudar
To: Beth Ebben; Piu Ghosh; Catarina Kidd
Subject: FW: Job -Housing Balance in Cupertino is Better Than Santa Clara County Average and Most Surrounding Cities
Date: Thursday, February 15, 2018 9:09:28 AM
From: Liang-Fang Chao ]
Sent: Thursday, February 15, 2018 9:02 AM
To: City Council <CityCouncil@cupertino.org>
Subject: Fwd: Job -Housing Balance in Cupertino is Better Than Santa Clara County Average and Most
Surrounding Cities
Dear Mayor Paul and City Council Members,
This blog article draws data from the LAFCO Cities Services Report, based on 2014 census data.
It shows that the job jousing balance is much better than Santa Clara County and most of
surrounding cities.
I hope the City can prepare a similar report to set the record straight since some recent media
articles referencing Apple Park and Cupertino appear to be ignorant such differences in job -
housing ratios.
I would like to thank you for listening to the community in December 2014 so that the proposed
3.5 million square feet increase in office space was postponed. However, you have approved 2
million square feet for Vallco at the time, pending the approval of Vallco Specific Plan by May
2018. Since then, no one in their right mind ever supported such massive allocation of office
space.
Sand Hill already got 260,000 square feet of office space at Main Street plus 35,000 square feet as
incubator space. Way more than 100,000 sqft in the initial approval. They should be satisfied with
what they have now.
No group in the Feb. 5 kickoff meeting mentioned office. It's time to remove the massive office
allocation now so that the expectation is clear in the Vallco Specific Plan process. The city council
should be in control in the negotiation table, not the developer.
Cupertino has been a good citizen in the County by maintaining a good job -housing balance. Let's
maintain our good record. Remove the 2 million sqft office allocation from Vallco Specific Plan
now.
Regards,
Liang
---------- Forwarded messa e ---------
From: Liang-Fang Chao >
Date: Thu, Feb 15, 2018 at 2:45 AM
Subject: Job -Housing Balance in Cupertino is Better Than Santa Clara County Average and Most
Surrounding Cities
Finally finished the article to support Darcy's statement.
Job -Housing Balance in Cupertino is Better Than Santa Clara County Average and Most
Surrounding Cities
http://bettercupertino.blogsl2ot. com/2018/02/j ob-housing-balance-in-cuDertino-is.html
The root cause of the housing crisis is that there have been excessive job growth, while the
housing growth has not been able to keep pace with the rate of job growth. This imbalance is
especially significant at some cities where there are 2 or 3 jobs for each employed resident.
Cupertino has maintained pretty good balance between jobs and housing, more balanced than
Santa Clara County average.
The job -housing ratio in Cupertino is in fact pretty balanced according to this LAFCO Cities
Services report derived from 2014 census data
(htip://www.santaclara.lafco.ca.gov/file/ServiceReviews/CitiesSR2015/2CSRR ExecSumm.pdf).
The LAFCO Cities Services is a "state -mandated comprehensive studies of services within a
designated geographic area."
In Santa Clara County as a whole, the job -to -employed resident ratio is 1.18. For every employed
resident, there is 1.18 jobs. The ratio of Cupertino is 1.08, below the County average.
Here are the job -to -employed resident ratios for Cupertino and surrounding cities, in asending
order. The ratio in Cupertino is much better than other surrounding cities.
Sunnyvale: 1.07
Cupertino 1.08
Santa Clara County Overall: 1.18
Campbell 1.35
Milpitas 1.50
Mountain View: 1.79
Los Gato 1.83
Santa Clara: 2.08
Palo Alto: 3.02
"The jobs/employed-residents ratio measures the balance between where people work and where
people live. A balance closer to parity (i.e., 1.0) suggests there is sufficient housing in the
community relative to the number of people who work in the community. This does not
necessarily mean that the people who live in a city work there, but aggregated for several cities,
the jobs/employed-resident ratio begins to paint a picture of where imbalances exist. It shows
which communities "export" workers to other places (a ratio below 1.0) and which communities
must import workers from other places (more than 1.0)." (From LAFCO Cities Services report)
®❑
Another data set provided by the LAFCO report is the job -to -housing ratio. There are
27,950 jobs in Cupertino and 20,494 housing units. The job -housing ratio is 1.36.
There are 1.36 jobs per housing unit. It is pretty balanced since the ABAG guideline is
1.5 jobs per housing unit. The job -housing ratio of the entire Santa Clara County is
1.63. So, the job -house ratio of Cupertino is much more balanced then Santa Clara
County average.
Here are job -to -housing ratio for Cupertino and surrounding cities, in asending order.
The ratio in Cupertino is much better than other surrounding cities.
Cupertino 1.36
Sunnyvale: 1.43
Santa Clara County Overall: 1.63
Campbell 1.77
Los Gatos 1.91
Milpitas 2,35
Mountain View: 2.37
Santa Clara: 2.73
Palo Alto: 3.49
®❑
"A similar measure is the ratio of jobs to housing available within a community. Used
for years as a key urban planning tool, the jobs/housing balance measures the jobs
available based on the number of homes in a community." (LAFCO Report)
ABAG considers 1.5 jobs/housing unit as a balanced ratio.
®❑
Cupertino has maintained a good job -housing balance in the past.
Apple Park is built on a previous HP site with only 750,000 extra square feet of office
space. Not millions of square feet of brand new office space as seen in other cities, like
Mountain View or Santa Clara, With Apple Park, it is projected to "add" 2500 jobs
(from the 750,000 extra sf added).
Cupertino's General Plan has included 4421 new housing units to be built by 2040. The
General Plan includes residential zoning for both sides of Stevens Creek and the west
side of De Anza. These 4421 units are expected to be spread out among different sites
in the City and built over 25 years. Each 8 -year of Housing Element cycle could build
1000-1500 units.
As Mayor Darcy Paul pointed out in his State of the City Address, there is no "dire
need" in Cupertino to build thousands of units. Cupertino has a pretty good job -housing
balance today. Although Apple Park will add some more jobs, Cupertino has plans to
build more over time in order to maintain the balance.
Total Control Panel
To: citvcouncil e.cupertino.org Message Score: 50 High (60): Pass
From: My Spam Blocking Level: High Medium (75): Pass
Login
Low (90): Pass
Block this sender
Block gmail.com
This message was delivered because the content filter score did not exceed your filter level.