Skip to content

Podcast 203: Transit as Economic Development Strategy with Joya Stetson

The workforce pipeline called, it wants a bus stop.

Dane Carlson
Dane Carlson
3 min read
Podcast 203: Transit as Economic Development Strategy with Joya Stetson

Table of Contents

Episode 203 of the Econ Dev Show Podcast is out. Listen now.

Transit as Economic Development Strategy with Joya Stetson
A practical conversation on why suburban transit is an economic development tool, and how partnerships, first/last-mile fixes, and nimble service changes can expand a region’s real labor shed.

In this episode of the Econ Dev Show, host Dane Carlson talks with Joya Stetson, Community Development Director at the Minnesota Valley Transit Authority (MVTA), about how transit directly shapes workforce access, development costs, and long-term community competitiveness. 

Joya unpacks “first mile/last mile” barriers and how tools like microtransit and service tweaks can turn missed connections into real outcomes, including route changes that unlocked student internships and boosted ridership. 

They dig into suburban realities like coverage vs. ridership, post-COVID recovery, and why transit belongs inside RFP workforce narratives, land-use planning, and even parking requirement conversations. 

Like this show? Please leave us a review here — even one sentence helps! 

The Econ Dev Show is made possible by Sitehunt.

Sitehunt (created the Econ Dev Show's host Dane Carlson) will not replace your relationships, manage your BR&E visits, or do your board politics. It will not invent workforce where none exists, and it will not make you sound smart after one login. Wit and wisdom are still on you.

But if you care about your buildings and sites, and getting the RFI out the door with confidence, Sitehunt may be the smartest small investment you make this year.

Schedule a Demo

10 Actionable Takeaways for Economic Developers

  1. Get your transit provider “at the table” early for major projects, not after the announcement, so service planning can match real hiring needs.
  2. Treat “workforce access” as more than unemployment rates: explicitly describe how transit expands the labor pool and reduces absenteeism and turnover risk.
  3. Audit first-mile/last-mile gaps for key job centers, campuses, and training sites; don’t assume a route nearby means people can actually reach it.
  4. Use microtransit strategically to bridge gaps, but pair it with fixed routes when predictable arrival times matter (classes, shifts, internships).
  5. Build a “route change wins” pipeline: channel feedback from chambers, employers, schools, and workforce boards into concrete service-change proposals.
  6. Include transit in your site selection/RFP package (especially the workforce section): routes, frequency, last-mile options, and how employers can engage.
  7. Coordinate transit with land-use planning and TOD goals so comp plans and transit plans evolve together instead of living on shelves.
  8. Use transit to reduce development friction: make the case for lower parking requirements where transit access supports it.
  9. Map housing-to-transit-to-jobs (especially affordable housing) to show actual accessibility and to target investments or service pilots.
  10. Frame transit as competitiveness and sustainability: companies care about low-carbon performance, and mobility options are part of that story.
PodcastNewsletter

Dane Carlson Twitter

CEO of Sitehunt, the AI platform for economic development, site selection and RFI automation. Host and publisher of the Econ Dev Show. In Houston, Texas.


Related Posts

Members Public

24 New Economic Development Jobs This Week

From $41,434 - $225,437

24 New Economic Development Jobs This Week
Members Public

2025: A Year in Podcasts

2025's economic development people, strategies, ideas, and insights

2025: A Year in Podcasts
Members Public

16 New Economic Development Jobs This Week

From $35,152 - $247,695

16 New Economic Development Jobs This Week