Laserfiche WebLink
<br />WHAT IS A "COMMUNITY BENEFITS AGREEMENT?" <br /> <br />From the Partnership for Working Families website http://www.communitybenefits.org/: <br /> <br />"A Community Benefits Agreement, or a CBA, is a legally enforceable contract, signed by <br />community groups and by a developer, setting forth a range of community benefits that the <br />developer agrees to provide as part of a development project. <br /> <br />A CBA is the result of a negotiation process between the developer and organized representatives <br />of affected communities, in which the developer agrees to shape the development in a certain way <br />or to provide specified community benefits. In exchange, the community groups promise to <br />support the proposed project before government bodies that provide the necessary permits and <br />subsidies. The CBA is both a process to work towards these mutually beneficial objectives, and a <br />mechanism to enforce both sides' promises." <br /> <br />WHAT IS THE "SOUTHDALE NEIGHBORHOOD TASK FORCE?" <br /> <br />The Task Force will be an ongoing forum for residents, developers and officials to guide the <br />implementation of the planning initiatives and the CBA. Through open dialog and trust-building, <br />the Task Force will facilitate conflict resolution, creative initiatives and oversight of <br />commitments outlined in the CBA. <br /> <br />EXAMPLES OF CBA'S <br /> <br />Park East Redevelopment Compact (Milwaukee, WI): Passed in 2005. A broadbased coalition of <br />community, labor, environmental and faith-based entities worked to pass the PERC. This County ordinance <br />requires any development on a large tract of county-owned land to meet job quality standards and hire local <br />residents. The PERC also establishes a separate fund that will finance affordable housing development <br />using money from sale of county land. www.gjln.org <br /> <br />Yale-New Haven Hospital CBA (New Haven, CT): Negotiated in March 2006 by Connecticut Center for <br />a New Economy (CCNE), this agreement set aside money for housing, economic development, youth <br />programs and job training, included strong environmental standards, and a job training & local hire <br />program, and addressed neighborhood & community concerns. www.ctneweconomy.org/CORD.html <br /> <br />CIM Project CBA (San Jose, CA): Negotiated in April 2003 by Working Partnerships USA (WPUSA). <br />WPUSA's efforts yielded an agreement that established living wage protections for parking garage <br />employees, set aside space for locally owned small-businesses on site, and required the developer to seek <br />living wage jobs for grocery, retail or hotel dimensions of the project. Strong affordable housing <br />requirements round out the CBA. www.wpusa.org <br />