By Shaun Donovan, Lisa Jackson, and Ray LaHood
Two years ago, President Obama offered a new vision for sustainable communities and vastly improved how our agencies work together. He challenged us to coordinate our efforts and help build communities where housing, public transportation, jobs, and services are conveniently connected, where businesses thrive, and where the air, water and land are clean.
That is the goal of the HUD-DOT-EPA Partnership for Sustainable Communities. And since June 2009, we have worked to help improve access to affordable housing, provide more transportation options at lower costs, and protect the environment in communities across the nation.
Americans have made it clear they want their communities back--back from the neglected brownfields of earlier decades, back from traffic congestion and sprawl, and back from housing choices that exclude most families.
In places like Ranson, West Virginia, and Boston, Massachusetts, residents are already benefiting from our Partnership's coordinated efforts to help revitalize neighborhoods and reposition them for a more sustainable future.
Coordinating these grants and assistance will help Ranson create more affordable housing and transportation choices for its residents--saving them money, protecting their air and water, and encouraging long-term economic growth.
The Fairmount Corridor in Boston connects several low-income neighborhoods that rely heavily on public transit. Although a rail line runs along the corridor, it largely bypasses these areas. Boston municipal agencies and regional community groups have been working with the Partnership agencies to improve access to the Fairmount Corridor and open up more economic, environmental and recreational opportunities for neighborhood residents. DOT support is helping upgrade infrastructure, refurbish two transit stations, and build four more. HUD is helping build new affordable homes near these stations. And EPA is helping clean up nearby brownfield sites and prepare station areas for redevelopment. When this work is complete, residents will enjoy more accessible rail service between Boston and the surrounding region, greater prospects for economic development around local stations, new affordable housing choices and more opportunities to improve their lives and the lives of their families.
From Portland, Oregon, to Portland, Maine, DOT, EPA, and HUD have worked closely together to support innovative ideas from communities that help meet their housing, transportation, economic, and environmental challenges head-on. When we back local innovation with coordinated, targeted investments, the economic ripple effect creates jobs, supports business development, and helps keep America on track toward economic recovery and long-term prosperity.
As the President said last October, "We're working to change the way government works, and that means investing tax dollars wisely and well."
For more information about the Partnership for Sustainable Communities, please visit www.sustainablecommunities.gov.

I think the Partnership is a great idea and encouraging. It would be even more so if the federal government followed its own "Recommendations on Sustainable Siting for Federal Facilities" that were developed by DOT, GSA, EPA, HUD, DOD, and Homeland Security early last year. The EPA Region 7 office has announced it is moving from a downtown location in an environmental justice community to a greenfield environment far out in a more affluent suburb with little transit access. (Although that suburban building already exists, there is farmland across the street in two directions from it.) This decision by GSA and EPA should change to show the federal government and this Partnership are truly "walking the walk." (And yeah, there's nothing much to walk to from the announced new EPA Region 7 location, either.) The region where the EPA Region 7 office is location received one of these Sustainable Communities grants.
Posted by: Disillusioned in EPA Region 7 | June 16, 2011 at 08:53 AM
This is so exciting!! I'm ready to help our community reapply!
Posted by: WS | June 16, 2011 at 09:44 AM
Woo hoo! Congratulations PSC!! Happy Anniversary!
Posted by: Faith | June 16, 2011 at 10:27 AM
This is amazing,
We have a project following the same line of idea in Quebec and I must say this is great. This is how we can make sure that our child will have the chance to live in a world with breathable air. I'll make sure to send this information to the person in charge of the project here.
Thanks
Posted by: Phil Vandal | June 17, 2011 at 11:27 AM