What's New

Where the Jobs Are: Employer Access to Labor


jobs-trans-mapA new report by Adie Tomer, released by the Brookings Institution, examines metro-level data on jobs located near transit, the number of workers within reach of job locations, and how these trends vary across industries and across cities and suburbs.  Mr. Tomer ranks the 100 largest metropolitan areas for how effectively transit gives employers access to the metropolitan workforce.

Supplementary individual metropolitan profiles explain metropolitan transit coverage, labor access rates, and industry trends.  Salt Lake City, San Jose, and Honolulu top the list of areas that provide the best labor access via transit, while Palm Bay, Poughkeepsie, and Riverside are at the bottom and provide the worst access. The report concludes with policy recommendations, calling for public and private sector leaders to shift policy to enhance transit accessibility by: 1) considering job locations in transit investment decisions; 2) using policy levers and governance reforms to enhance access to suburban locations; and 3) investing in data systems to improve decision making.

Access Where the Jobs Are: Employer Access to Labor here.

 

Strong Local Econmies Spotlight

Grantee Spotlight: East Bay Alliance for a Sustainable Economy (EBASE)

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The East Bay Alliance for a Sustainable Economy's (EBASE) mission is to advance economic, racial, and social justice in California's East Bay region by building a just economy based on good jobs and healthy communities. In order to support low-income workers and communities of color, and address root causes of economic injustice, EBASE builds power through strategic alliances with labor, community, and faith groups.

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