"Our cities are acting responsibly," Glazer added. "A transit agency has never been given land use authority anywhere in California, anywhere. And we're going to give that special privilege to BART?"

"This is a bill with the right goal, which is more housing, particularly at our transit centers," said Baker, who emceed the event throughout, as others stepped up to also call on Gov. Jerry Brown to veto the bill. "But it has the wrong way to do it, that will actually take us backwards."

The Monday press conference was spearheaded by local State Assemblywoman Catharine Baker (R-Dublin) and State Sen. Steve Glazer (D-Orinda), who have both come out in opposition to the measure.

A collection of around 20 East Bay representatives, mayors and council members gathered across from the Dublin-Pleasanton BART station Monday morning to protest Assembly Bill 2923, which would allow BART to construct and govern housing on its land within half a mile of its stations such as parking lots at Tri-Valley BART stops, a move critics see as blatantly circumventing local control.

Housing and traffic congestion are hot-button issues facing the Bay Area, but one proposed solution currently on the governor's desk has garnered significant opposition from leaders across the Tri-Valley and in other East Bay communities.

While the BART board has taken a neutral position on AB 2923, director Debora Allen came to express her own opposition to it. (Photo by Erika Alvero)

The group included councilmembers and mayors from the Tri-Valley, along with leaders from other East Bay communities. Many pointed to the Avalon apartments behind them as an example of how cities are constructing their own transit-oriented housing. (Photo by Erika Alvero)

He adds that "transportation services are uniquely tied to land use patterns" and that the BART district needs to have some land use authority in order to develop the most effective transit-oriented housing. He also points to the fact that the district is "governed by an elected board of directors, granting the people of the San Francisco Bay Area a greater measure of input on the district's decisions than the constituents of other agencies have on their agencies."

"In the state-mandated sustainable communities strategy for the Bay Area, locating affordable and market-rate housing near high-capacity transit is a primary tool with which to address these challenges and will keep the Bay Area on track to meet its state-mandated greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets," Chiu wrote.

In the bill's text , lead author Assemblyman David Chiu (D-San Francisco) argues that by allowing BART to construct transit-oriented developments on-site and near their stations, the state can address affordable housing shortages, traffic congestion and environmental challenges.

The bill passed both houses of the State Legislature in August, with a 26-13 vote in the Senate and a 46-28 vote in the Assembly. It was enrolled and presented to Brown on Sept. 6, who is expected to decide on whether to sign or veto the bill at some point before the end of this month. As of Tuesday afternoon, the governor has taken no action on AB 2923.

Baker said that the cities least affected by the prospective bill were the ones that were "most behind on housing" -- San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose. "The communities that are most doing their jobs and meeting their housing numbers are in the Tri-Valley and on this background podium behind me," she said.

"We know how to build homes here in Dublin," said Dublin Mayor David Haubert. "And we've done that. We've done our part, and we don't think that taking away our housing and planning authority and ability is the right thing to do."

Several of the speakers pointed to the Avalon Dublin Station apartments looming behind them behind them as an example of how cities were indeed stepping up to the housing plate.

However, the officials at the Monday press conference opposed Chiu's proposal on multiple counts, saying that AB 2923 would revoke jurisdiction from those best-qualified to create housing, adding that BART has its own problems to deal with right now.

"It's a problem that does not exist," he said. "And I believe that local people who live here are the ones that should decide what our local community looks like."

"AB 2923 will ruin the spirit of cooperation that has evolved between cities and BART, or the development of properties," she added.

"The BART organization has its hands full," Allen said. "And it should stick to transit, until I can get a real solid handle on running that in a safe, clean, reliable manner."

As a body, the nine-member BART Board of Directors has taken a neutral stance on the bill, but director Debora Allen was present Monday, also in opposition to AB 2923.

"What you're not hearing is 'Please don't build this in my backyard,'" she said. "You're hearing 'Do it, but let us do it in collaboration.'"

Tri-Valley leaders oppose BART housing bill

Baker, Glazer and others say transit agency should not have development jurisdiction