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MAKING DO: How Working Families in Seven U.S. Metropolitan Areas Trade Off Housing Costs and Commuting Times
Robert Cervero, UC Berkeley
Karen Chapple, UC Berkeley
John Landis, UC Berkeley
Martin Wachs, UC Berkeley
Michael Duncan, UC Berkeley
Patricia Lynn Scholl, UC Berkeley
Evelyn Blumenberg, UCLA
ABSTRACT: This report explores how working families in seven major metropolitan regions (Atlanta,
Chicago, Dallas–Ft. Worth, Los Angeles, New York City, the San Francisco Bay Area,
and Baltimore–Washington) tradeoff housing and commuting costs, and how their
tradeoffs differ from those of wealthier families. It is organized into five sections.
Beyond this brief introduction, the report consists of five parts. Section 2 introduces the
PUMS (Public Use Microdata Sample) database, upon which this analysis is based, and
presents the procedures used to identify the seven case study metropolitan regions.
Section 3 presents a series of descriptive statistics comparing the housing and
transportation choices confronting different types of working families in each of the
seven case study metropolitan regions. Section 4 develops a series of statistical “bid-
rent” models to contrast the housing and transportation tradeoffs made by working
families versus upper-income families. Section 5 looks at the tradeoff issue through the
lens of residential location to examine the types of neighborhoods favored by working
families. Section 6 summarizes the research results and explores their implications for
public policy.
SUGGESTED CITATION: Robert Cervero, Karen Chapple, John Landis, Martin Wachs, Michael Duncan, Patricia Lynn Scholl, and Evelyn Blumenberg,
"MAKING DO: How Working Families in Seven U.S. Metropolitan Areas Trade Off Housing Costs and Commuting Times"
(June 1, 2006).
Institute of Transportation Studies.
Research Reports.
Paper UCB-ITS-RR-2006-4.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/its/reports/UCB-ITS-RR-2006-4
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