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Hudson Valley Pattern for Progress

Our Mission

Hudson Valley Pattern for Progress is a nonprofit organization that provides objective research, planning, and educational training throughout the region. Its work identifies civic challenges and promotes regional, equitable, and sustainable solutions to constantly improve the quality of life in Hudson Valley communities. Pattern develops its work upon a considerable foundation of facts and experience, without political aims or affiliations.

Building Consensus Through Collaboration

When business and academic leaders founded Pattern in 1965, their goal was to build consensus for a pattern of growth that will ensure a high quality of life for the nine county Mid-Hudson Valley Region. The work plan included the protection of the natural environment, taking from it only those resources needed to promote economic prosperity, and providing adequate opportunities and incentives for capital formation and meaningful, gainful employment.

Hudson Valley Regional Map

In that spirit, Pattern brings together business, nonprofit, academic and government leaders from across Columbia, Greene, Sullivan, Ulster, Dutchess, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, and Westchester Counties to collaborate on regional approaches to housing, municipal sharing and local government efficiency, education, land use policy, transportation and infrastructure to move the dial, inspiring growth and vitality for our regional economy.

Pattern’s Commitment to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion

It is important to Pattern that diverse populations within the Hudson Valley are beneficiaries of its mission to enhance the growth and vitality of the region and to improve regional quality of life. Pattern believes it is uniquely suited to “move the dial” on the integration of issues of inclusivity and fairness into its traditional areas of work including, but not limited to housing, education, health, community development, economic policy, government efficiency and environmental quality. Pattern can do this because of its research capabilities, its broad relationships and ability to convene diverse groups.

Learn more about Pattern’s commitment to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. 

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Pattern releases new research brief: 

The report – Local Zoning, Regional Needs – outlines how other states have preserved the core intent of home rule while also requiring their towns to allow for the development of diverse housing that meets statewide and regional needs and examines the strategies, requirements, and legal precedents utilized by New York’s neighboring states to produce affordable housing for their residents.

“Proposals to create statewide housing policies in New York are often decried as attacks on home rule,” Pattern CEO Adam Bosch said. “But our research found that practically every state surrounding New York balances home rule with reasonable mandates to diversify zoning and meet regional housing needs. Our neighbors prove that states can allow towns to govern and design themselves, while also requiring those towns to allow for certain housing that meets the greater public interest.”

The report examines the underlying laws, regulations, and legal precedents related to zoning and housing in the states of Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Vermont. All those states are so-called “home rule” states, except Vermont.

READ THE FULL REPORT

Pattern releases new research brief: 

The report – Making it Mesh: How the Hudson Valley Can Prepare for Next-Gen Wireless –will educate the Hudson Valley about the complex infrastructure that must be deployed for our region to have fifth-generation (5G) wireless broadband connectivity. The demand on our existing wireless network is growing as more people and businesses utilize “smart” devices that require additional bandwidth to relay larger quantities of data. Although 5G has not arrived in much of the Hudson Valley, telecom companies are steadily looking to expand their infrastructure into our communities. Making it Mesh underscores that local policies, outdated zoning, and cumbersome permitting processes could hamper the deployment of 5G infrastructure unless communities prepare now.

READ THE FULL REPORT

Pattern releases new research brief: 

Hudson Valley Pattern for Progress and its Center for Housing Solutions & Community Initiatives have analyzed rental housing and wage data for more than a decade. Our reports on housing trends help lawmakers, nonprofit agencies, developers, and other stakeholders in their efforts to provide housing that is affordable in the region.

Our annual Out of Reach (OOR) report examines the affordability of rental housing throughout the nine counties we serve: Columbia, Dutchess, Greene, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, Sullivan, Ulster, and Westchester. This report is largely based on data published annually by the National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC), which compares fair-market rents (FMR) with average renter wages.

This year’s report continues to underscore an irrefutable truth: even with long work hours or multiple jobs, most renters in our region struggle to pay for rent and modest living costs. Over the past five years, rents across our region have increased by anywhere between 25-45%. With inflation hitting a 40-year peak in 2022, the basic costs of living – food, transportation, healthcare, and more – are also out of reach.

READ THE FULL REPORT

Pattern releases new research brief: 

The research brief, The Great People Shortage and its Effects on the Hudson Valley.

This research brief was inspired by a trend that elected leaders, economic development experts, and business owners have felt across the Hudson Valley for the past several years. Our neighbors often hint at this trend through a nagging set of questions they have been asking more frequently.

  • Why is there such a shortage of nurses, restaurant wait staff, and cashiers?
  • Why am I receiving fewer and fewer applications when I post a job?
  • Have you noticed that it’s taking months to get an appointment to fix your car, paint your house, or get your annual medical check-up?

Data show that the Hudson Valley is experiencing the start of The Great People Shortage, a term that demographers and economists are using for the steady trend toward global population decline. Higher living standards, rising costs, and other factors have pushed global birth rates below the threshold that is necessary to keep populations stable.

READ THE FULL REPORT

Pattern releases new report: 

The report, Moving In, Moving Out, examines a new set of migration data released in the final week of April by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The data utilize information from tax returns to track domestic and international migration throughout the United States. The data are provided on a county-by-county basis, which allowed Pattern to analyze the inflow and outflow of people for each county in the Hudson Valley. The IRS migration data are considered among the most accurate information for tracking the movement of people throughout the United States. The data in Moving In, Moving Out show migration trends during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Report highlights:

  • Hudson Valley lost 4,845 people to migration during the brunt of the Covid-19 pandemic
  • Hudson Valley has lost people to migration in 24 of the last 25 years, as more than 134,000 people have left the region for neighboring states and the South
  • Migration affects counties on a proportional basis.

READ THE FULL REPORT

Pattern launches report and education campaign on electric vehicle charging infrastructure in the Hudson Valley 

  •  Report outlines EV trends and infrastructure needs for the future, as more than $1 billion will be spent across New York to install charging infrastructure 
  •  Campaign includes advice on funding opportunities, working with utilities, best practices and policy recommendations, and a model zoning ordinance for multi-family dwellings 

Hudson Valley Pattern for Progress today released a new report that examines the adoption of electric vehicles (EV) across our region and strategies to install the public charging infrastructure that will power our transportation in the future. Pattern will use this research as part of a public education campaign in 2023. Our researchers and planners will teach the Hudson Valley about EV charging, the proper siting of charging infrastructure, and the funding sources that can help to pay for charging stations.  

Read the Report

Upcoming Events

You won’t want to miss this.

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A Message from Pattern’s New President & CEO, Adam Bosch!

It’s the first day for Adam Bosch as the new President & CEO of Hudson Valley Pattern for Progress! Tune in to hear Adam’s message and a little about his vision in leading Hudson Valley Pattern for Progress.

MAIN STREET: Hudson Valley

A regional resource center providing a comprehensive approach to strengthen main streets through commerce, community and culture.

In recognition of the importance of main streets as drivers of economic growth, social connectivity, and cultural experiences, Pattern is pleased to announce a new Initiative called MAIN STREET: Hudson Valley. The mission of this initiative is to re-energize the pre-pandemic momentum of the past ten years by providing tools and support systems to allow main streets, neighborhoods and community hubs to flourish in the new post-pandemic economy. Through efforts like façade renovation, adaptive re-use, marketing, code enforcement and more, communities can realize main streets as the hubs of commerce and community engagement that define their unique sense of identity.

Learn More about Main Street: Hudson Valley

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