Obama Talks Urban Policy as LaHood Seeks More Urban Transpo Money

The White House Office of Urban Affairs, which has drawn criticism for its inactivity at a rocky economic time for the nation’s cities, capped a day-long summit today with a speech by President Obama.

Referencing
his formative years as a Chicago community organizer, Obama urged the
mayors, governors, and Cabinet secretaries who attended the urban
policy summit to think of cities and suburbs as interacting parts of
the same metropolitan organism.

At one point, the president sounded a David Brooks-esque note, describing sprawl — the days of which he declared "over" in February — as "creating new pressures and problems [but] also opening up new opportunities":

Now, the first thing we need to recognize is that this is not just
a time of challenge for America’s cities; it’s also a time of great
change. Even as we’ve seen many of our central cities continuing to
grow in recent years, we’ve seen their suburbs and exurbs grow roughly
twice as fast. It spreads homes and jobs and businesses to a broader
geographic area.

And this transformation is creating new
pressures and problems, of course, but it’s also opening up new
opportunities, because it’s not just our cities that are hotbeds of
innovation anymore. It’s our growing metropolitan areas.

Later
in his speech, however, Obama criticized a pattern of Washington
policy-making that "encouraged sprawl, congestion, and pollution"
instead of promoting transit and smart growth.

His urban
policy goals remain centered on renewable energy, transit, and
high-speed rail, he added, which would not "just make our downtowns
more livable [but help] our regional economies grow."

Obama
announced a broad inter-agency review of urban policy, which he billed
as the first of its kind in three decades, and vowed to send Cabinet
officials on a listening tour of the nation’s cities this summer.

Meanwhile, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood sought to do his part for cities today by calling on state DOTs to spend more federal stimulus money in urban and economically disadvantaged areas. Cities have gotten shortchanged on stimulus road funding, though an analysis by Streetsblog Capitol Hill found the top 20 U.S. metro areas faring better when it comes to the smaller pot of transit aid.

LaHood made his remarks during a roundtable with regional reporters. From the Allentown Morning Call’s report:

U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said Monday that he’s
concerned not enough stimulus dollars are being spent in large
metropolitan areas around that country and he’s urging states to
consider places with higher unemployment when choosing where to direct
the government funds.

“These decisions are not being made by DOT,” LaHood told reporters
today … “Governors and [state] DOTs are deciding where this money
is spent and we want to make sure that the money is being spent in
highly economically distressed areas and high unemployment areas.”

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