Sponsor
We gratefully acknowledge generous support for research reported in this paper from the National Institute for Transportation and Communities, the Utah Transit Authority, the Wasatch Front Regional Council, the Mountainland Association of Governments, and the University of Arizona.
Document Type
Working Paper
Publication Date
2015
Subjects
Transit-oriented development, Transportation -- Planning, Street-railroads -- Economic aspects
Abstract
Literature suggests that rail transit improvements should be associated with more jobs and perhaps increasing share of jobs in a metropolitan area. Literature and some research also suggest that such improvements should increase the number of lower-wage jobs accessible to transit. In this paper, we assess both in the context of all 11 light rail transit systems built in metropolitan areas of fewer than eight million residents in the nation since 1981. Using census block-level job data over the period 2002 to 2011, we evaluate change in jobs and change in metropolitan area job share for all jobs, and lower- and upper-wage jobs for selected light rail transit (LRT) corridors and comparable corridors in each of these 11 metropolitan areas. Overall, we find little difference between the LRT and control corridors in both attracting new jobs and new lower-wage jobs, or in changing relative share of jobs compared to their metropolitan areas, though systems built since 2004 appear to have fared slightly better in both respects. We view these results as generally supportive of LRT employment-related objectives. Planning and policy implications are offered.
Persistent Identifier
http://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/16725
Citation Details
Nelson, Arthur C.; Miller, Matt; Eskic, Dejan; Ganning, Joanna P.; Liu, Jenny H.; and Ewing, Reid, "But do Lower-Wage Jobs Follow? Comparing Wage-Based Outcomes of Light Rail Transit to Control Corridors" (2015). Urban Studies and Planning Faculty Publications and Presentations. 129.
http://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/16725
Description
The final research report that this work is derived from is located here: http://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/16717