Wednesday, July 31, 2024

HONORING A LEGACY WHILE LEARNING FROM JAPAN

MARK BOOKMAN AND THE 34TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ADA


In addition to his academic work, Mark Bookman collaborated with public sector and private sector clients in Japan and the United States. 

He spoke at numerous conferences, underscoring that everyone is aging and many will experience some kind of disability.

Bookman created a legacy of teaching the intrinsic value of disability inclusion.

His dissertation on inclusion is being published by the prestigious Oxford University Press, for release in 2025. 

Because I travel the world speaking about accessibility I want to share some observations about Tokyo – where I explored access for two weeks while participating in the world premiere of “Mark – A Call To Action.”

Tokyo, a highly populated city, that is spread over an enormous space -- could not exist without its always on time, can get you to everywhere, network of subways and above ground trains.

Most essential stations have elevators to get wheelchair users up or down to boarding platforms. They also have outstanding wayfinding to point the way to these. I tried 100-plus elevators – 100 percent of them worked.

When I visit New York, a terribly high percentage of access elevators are out of service.



Tuesday, July 30, 2024

HONORING A LEGACY WHILE LEARNING FROM JAPAN

MARK BOOKMAN AND THE 34TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ADA


My trip to Tokyo to attend the world premiere of “Mark – A Call To Action” allowed me to:

Honor a great disability advocate who died much too soon.

Further the documentary subject’s legacy of inclusion.

Learn about a terrific leadership program for people with disabilities.

Marvel at clean, efficient and large accessible public restrooms.

Mark Bookman, PhD, Tokyo College postdoctoral fellow and historian of disability policy and connected social movements in Japan, made an everlasting impact on disability inclusion.

In late 2022, he died at age 31.

Bookman had a rare variant of a metabolic-genetic condition. 

It is not Muscular Dystrophy but has similar impacts on the body. 

He had a heart transplant at age 10 and used a wheelchair for mobility most of his adult life.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Monday, July 29, 2024

HONORING A LEGACY WHILE LEARNING FROM JAPAN

MARK BOOKMAN AND THE 34TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ADA

I am honored to appear in the film “Mark – A Call To Action” as a Universal Design expert, focused on creating a better built environment for people with disabilities.

Japan has made some monumental strides toward inclusion, but like every place, still has much (far too many shops and restaurants – even in brand new spaces – require steps to enter) left to accomplish.

In the U.S., we celebrated the 34th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act on July 26th.

It was very interesting to see how a nation that does not have underlying legislation as strong as the ADA commits so strongly to accessible public transit and inclusive public restrooms.



Sunday, July 28, 2024

HONORING A LEGACY WHILE LEARNING FROM JAPAN

MARK BOOKMAN AND THE 34TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ADA

I recently traveled to Tokyo to assist with the world premiere of the disability-positive film: “Mark – A Call To Action.”

It’s a documentary that follows the brief but brilliant life of Mark Bookman, PhD, -- Fullbright scholar, disability inclusion researcher and Tokyo College postdoctoral fellow.

The 90-minute feature tells a father-son love story as Bookman’s father Paul works to find an elusive diagnosis then supports his brilliant son through a heart transplant, transition to using a wheelchair and adapting to life as a scholar-leader halfway around the world.


It depicts Mark Bookman’s rise to working with the International Paralympic Committee and United Nations, influencing policy via commentaries published in The New York Times, The Washington Post and The Japan Times and a prestigious academic opportunity in Kyoto.


Saturday, July 27, 2024

DESIGNING TO AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT COMPLIANCE IS THE FLOOR

NOT THE CEILING. INCLUSIVE DESIGN IS BEAUTIFUL AND DURABLE


Wheelchair access and design that accommodates all disabilities is doomed when a city leader in charge of facilities "boasts" that something has minimum ADA compliance.

How come everything else is made state of the art, but people with disabilities get the bare minimum?

Ask your mayor, commissioner, director of essential departments -- transit, parks, public works, planning, building -- why July 26 is significant.

Not 5% will know it's the ADA's anniversary.

This is why the built environment is NOT accessible. 

It is why Universal Design is not part of the though process of planning, design and building.



PROMOTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING

VIA ZONING REFORM

Jenny Schuetz, a senior fellow at The Brookings Institution

While acknowledging that local government has most of the power of zoning and land-use regulations, Jenny Schuetz, a senior fellow at The Brookings Institution,  noted “the federal government has some policy levers that could help expand the supply and diversity of housing.”

“Congress should create financial incentives for local governments to revise their zoning in favor of allowing a wider range of structure types, and better integrate federal investments in housing, land use and transportation,” she testified. 

“Local governments and regional planning agencies would also benefit from federally funded technical assistance and clearer guidance on what types of zoning reforms work best in different local housing markets — tasks that fall well within the scope and mission of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.”

Schuetz said accessible housing and the housing needs of people with disabilities is a serious omission in publicly available data and academic research.

“Federal agencies including HUD, HHS, and the Census Bureau should explore ways to address knowledge gaps and support high-quality, policy-relevant research on these topics,” she said of housing needs of people with disabilities. 

“Rising housing costs create more financial stress for low-income households and people living on fixed incomes.”

U.S. Department of Labor statistics show that people with disabilities are the most under- and un-employed of all minorities. 

Underscoring a crisis that marginalizes and denies dignity and quality of life for people with disabilities, Schuetz reported that only about 16 percent of low-income disabled Americans receive housing subsidies.

 

Thursday, July 25, 2024

PROMOTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING

VIA ZONING REFORM

Senator Bob Casey

Jenny Schuetz, a senior fellow at The Brookings Institution, who gave testimony this summer to the United States Senate Special Committee On Aging, emphasized that her views were her own. 

Her expert testimony to the committee, chaired by U.S. Senator Bob Casey, focused on an oft-overlooked aspect — housing that is both affordable and accessible to older adults and people with disabilities.

She said the U.S. housing shortage, caused by a gap of nearly 3.8 million additional houses needed to match population growth, is creating acute housing affordability challenges for older adults and people with disabilities. 

Zoning rules that prohibit all structures except single-family detached homes create direct barriers to building accessible homes.

“Single-family homes are less likely to have accessible features, such as a no-step entry into the home or a bedroom and bath on the main living floor,” she testified.

“Historically, duplexes and triplexes have enabled multiple generations and extended families to live together — an important source of informal caregiving.”

CDC research shows one in four million Americans have some kind of disability.

But Schuetz noted research has proven that less than 5 percent of homes are accessible for people with moderate mobility difficulties.

“Many older adults and people with disabilities need or prefer fully accessible apartments in elevator buildings. 

Yet all of these diverse structure types are illegal to build on the majority of residential land in communities across the United States,” she testified. 

“The lack of small, accessible homes in many neighborhoods limits the ability of older adults … to right-size their home while staying in the same community.”

 

Wednesday, July 24, 2024

PROMOTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING

VIA ZONING REFORM



The state housing authority’s loans to developers involves a competitive process.

One of the ways to earn a higher ranking is to be located in a community that has engaged in the most significant zoning regulatory reform.

Tom Larson, executive vice president of the Wisconsin REALTORS® Association,  said part of the reform is allowing smaller lot sizes and more units per acre. 

“We have found it very persuasive to explain to local officials and members of the public that today you can’t build the housing that most of us grew up in — because local regulations won’t allow it. 

That frames it.

It changes the narrative,” he said.

“We hear ‘We don’t want the others, those people,’” Larson said about the argument for exclusionary zoning.

“But when they see the regulations wouldn’t allow themselves or their children to move into the community, it personalizes it. 

They think of it differently.”

Larson noted that zoning that allows smaller units close to neighborhood conveniences gives seniors a place to downsize into. 

That frees up housing inventory for young families. 

Young families, in turn, can rehab Wisconsin’s aging housing stock, where more than half of single-family homes were built before 1980.

 

Tuesday, July 23, 2024

PROMOTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING

VIA ZONING REFORM

Tom Larson, executive vice president of the Wisconsin REALTORS® Association

Washington County invested $7.5 million to lower the cost of homes in the pilot project. Another $2.5 million is in a downpayment assistance program. 

To get $20,000 of forgivable downpayment funds, a person has to commit to volunteering at a nonprofit to serve the community for five years. 

If the person does not volunteer, they must pay back the loan five years after receiving it, but at zero-percent interest.

Josh Schoemann, county executive of Washington County, Wis., said the county has a “fair amount of rentals” so it is not funding affordable apartments. 

The goal is to create 1,000 units of owner-occupied Next Generation Housing over a decade.

Tom Larson, executive vice president of the Wisconsin REALTORS® Association,  said another provision in Wisconsin, aimed at streamlining workforce housing, places limits on what neighbors have standing to file a court appeal on a zoning decision.

“It limits appeals to those who suffer actual damages.

If you’re a neighbor with stormwater put onto your property. that’s actual damage,” he said. 

“If you are down the road a mile or two and you worry about a few more cars on the road, (due to the development) you do not have standing.

“Under prior law, if you were within a quarter mile of a rezoning, you could file a protest and that triggered a super majority vote. 

Now that does not happen — only a simple majority is required,” he said.

Monday, July 22, 2024

PROMOTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING

VIA ZONING REFORM

Josh Schoemann, county executive of Washington County, Wis., 

Josh Schoemann, county executive of Washington County, Wis., is leading the charge for affordable workforce housing in his area north of Milwaukee.

“The biggest challenge is having housing the workforce can actually afford. They are costed out of our community,” he said.

“I looked up on REALTOR.com and found three houses for sale at $300,000 and below in the whole county.”

Schoemann said the skyrocketing cost of homeownership is making it hard to recruit a workforce and to keep local college graduates in the community.

“We focused on Next Generation Housing.

We identified very early on that our zoning would not let you build on a single-family lot less than 8,000 square feet and our regulatory hard and soft costs added about $80,000 per lot.

Builders tell us they can create a 1,200 square-foot home in the $250,000 range — but when you tack on all the regulatory and infrastructure costs, the price pretty quickly hits about $400,000.”

The county created a pilot project in the village of Jackson, where it funded some infrastructure and allowed smaller lots. 

The Oaks of Jackson features 105 units — mostly single family with some duplexes and quadplexes — on about 20 acres next to the village hall. 

Seventy-five percent of the units will sell at $320,000, and 25 percent will be $420,000 or below.

 

 

Sunday, July 21, 2024

PROMOTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING

VIA ZONING REFORM


Tom Larson, executive vice president of the Wisconsin REALTORS® Association, praised two new statewide rules. 

The first is a development-by-right framework, which requires local governments to approve a residential development if the development is consistent with the local development regulations.

It gives local officials the spine to make the correct, but politically unpopular decision.

The other change is if local government turns down a development, the applicant can appeal directly to the court and that ruling stands.

In the past, courts overturned zoning decisions, but remanded it back to the municipality.

The long cycle of winding through staff review, lower hearing boards and a vote by elected officials drove up costs and sometimes killed missing middle and urban infill projects that would have addressed the housing crisis.

Saturday, July 20, 2024

HISTORIC IS NOT AN EXCUSE FOR INACCESSIBLE

IT IS ABLEIST TO DENY FRONT DOOR ACCESS 

TO PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES

 


I love the 19th century cast iron buildings of New York’s SoHo.

I also reject the absurd argument that replacing their stairs with access ramps would diminish their history.

Their interiors have been 100% gutted for retail and apartments. Ramps do not alter facades.

It is ableist to claim denying front door access to people with disabilities preserves history.

Many Soho buildings have no access 34 years after the ADA.

Others have demeaning back alley access or faulty lifts.

Access for all is a basic civil right.

Those that cling to inaccessible buildings as “a part of history” are as out of bounds as those that would cling to race based deed restrictions or denying women the right to vote.

Let’s celebrate Disability Pride Month and the 34th anniversary of the ADA with inclusive design.



PROMOTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING

VIA ZONING REFORM



The report and WRA’s government relations work struck a chord, because eight different pro-housing legislative measures passed with bipartisan backing last year and in the most recent session, five major housing bills passed with almost unanimous support. 

The highlight is a $525-million revolving loan program for workforce housing.

“Our legislature is not a fan of TIF (Tax Increment Financing), tax credits or grants. It favors a revolving loan program, so the money gets paid back,” Tom Larson, executive vice president of the Wisconsin REALTORS® Association, observed.

Larson said another issue in the Badger State has been Not In My Back Yard (NIMBY) opposition to affordable housing, saying “you can enact the best land-use regulations you want, but you can’t get a project approved if neighbors oppose everything.”

Thursday, July 18, 2024

PROMOTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING

VIA ZONING REFORM\


Tom Larson, executive vice president of the Wisconsin REALTORS® Association (WRA), has been working on smart growth and housing affordability issues with state and local lawmakers for a quarter century.

In 2019, WRA commissioned University of Wisconsin-Madison professor of urban and regional planning, Dr. Kurt Paulsen, Ph.D., AICP, and his report, “Falling Behind,” highlights three main causes of the workforce housing shortage:

· Not building enough homes to keep up with population and income growth.

· Construction costs outpacing inflation and incomes.

· Outdated land-use regulations that significantly drive up the cost of housing.

· The results of these root causes of the workforce housing shortage bring about the following results:

· Housing costs on the rise.

· A severe decline in homeownership.

· A continued decline in overall housing affordability.

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, July 17, 2024

PROMOTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING

VIA ZONING REFORM 


“Cities and states can also enable housing production by converting land previously zoned for other uses. As work-from-home continues to be prevalent, the demand for commercial real estate has plummeted, so allow housing in commercial districts,” said Aaron Shroyer, senior advisor with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Office of Policy Development & Research.

“We also need to promote affordable housing options near transit and create more people-centered neighborhoods.”

Shroyer is encouraged by a year that has seen about 200 affordable housing policy bills introduced in various states and the majority of them approved. 

He said all political parties are realizing that more housing supply will help hedge against prices going up so dramatically.


Tuesday, July 16, 2024

PROMOTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING

VIA ZONING REFORM



“Larger-lot-size zoning forces a person to buy a house and a yard. Some people don’t want yards,” said Aaron Shroyer, senior advisor with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Office of Policy Development & Research.

“What you’re doing is guaranteeing less density. Houston lowered minimum lot sizes from 5,000 square feet to 1,400 about 25 years ago. 

I’ve read that it produced 80,000 more houses. 

Now we can’t say the smaller lot sizes are the causation for every house, but it seemed to bring more units to market and more options means more affordability.”

Shroyer agrees with many affordable housing advocates who say cities should allow missing middle and larger multifamily development by right — meaning no expensive variances or land-use changes are required. 

He also said cities could remove barriers to adaptive reuse and conversion of office or commercial buildings into housing.

Monday, July 15, 2024

PROMOTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING

VIA ZONING REFORM



Aaron Shroyer, senior advisor with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Office of Policy Development & Research, said cities should eliminate minimum parking requirements, which often mandate more parking spaces than the market requires.

Studies have shown that parking spaces in a garage can add $30,000 or more to the price of a unit.

“I’m not the first person to say this, but our focus should be on building affordable housing for people and not for cars,” he said, noting that jurisdictions that do away with parking requirements often see more housing units on a development site.

In the single-family realm, Shroyer suggests removing something that is omnipresent in local zoning codes — minimum lot sizes.

Sunday, July 14, 2024

PROMOTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING

VIA ZONING REFORM

Aaron Shroyer is a senior advisor with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Office of Policy Development & Research.

Aaron Shroyer is a senior advisor with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Office of Policy Development & Research.

“It’s clear that in cities there is downtown and areas where job centers are and these are the hubs of economic activity. 

But you look at how most of these big cities are zoned, they reserve an outsized portion of their land for single-family housing,” he said.

 “It sets an artificial cap on the number of people who can live there and the number who can live near the jobs. [People] pay a higher rent because the scarcity of housing.”

Shroyer said cities and the early suburbs had a mix of housing types, then areas were downzoned to allow only single-family houses, often on large lots.

 “That affordable housing stock is illegal to build in most cities, so it’s important to re-legalize it,” he noted.

Saturday, July 13, 2024

NOBLE DEN HOTEL

CLEAN, EFFICIENT ROOMS PLUS ROOFTOP DECK

IN LOWER MANHATTAN'S CHINATOWN/LITTLE ITALY


I could instantly see why Noble Den Hotel gets high reviews.

The staff is very polite and resourceful.

The property is an oasis in an otherwise slightly gritty area where Chinatown meets Little Italy -- with the Lower East Side and SOHO nearby.

Mulberry Street next door can be noisy, but the hotel is sound proofed.

The units are small, but super well designed. They have thought of everything as far as space, natural light, comfortable bath, tons of outlets (with USB outlets too), a mini fridge, etc.

The super bonus is a rooftop lounge. It has no bar, so there is no noise are hipster crowds to fight. Just some nice furniture and a panoramic view of lower Manhattan.

Just off the lobby is really good free coffee, hot chocolate and a microwave for heating up delicious food from the neighborhood.

The room fridge is not a mini bar, which is a good thing. All of its space is for cooling beverages, berries, breakfast foods and leftovers.

There are two elevators, so no waiting in the smallish family feeling property.

I was checked in just under an hour early -- for free -- and they safely stowed my bags.

You get a cute stuffed animal on arrival and there are toothbrushes, combs and more in the room, if you forgot to pack those.

Major subway stations are nearby for fast, inexpensive transit.

The price point was incredible for a modern, fresh, well-designed and well-located hotel.

There is a great accessible room with roll-in shower. The only drawback is adjacent elevator shaft noises.