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The Senate Dem's need to control your lawn

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The following article appeared in the Wall Street Journal



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'Character' Development?

Jim Jeffords wants to run your local zoning board. </b>



BY THOMAS J. BRAY

Tuesday, April 30, 2002 12:01 a. m. EDT



Imagine if a Republican-controlled committee in Congress had attempted to keep the public and the media away from a key hearing and vote on, say, a bill to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling. The outrage would have been deafening--and rightly so.



So how come we haven't heard more about an effort to ram through something called the Community Character Act? "Senate Democrats," the Washington Times reported, "barred the public from a committee meeting and vote on a land-use bill that opponents believe will impose federal standards on local zoning boards. " First the meeting was moved to an obscure room from which the public is generally barred; then Sen. James Jeffords, over Republican objections, tried to move the package through the Environment and Public Works Committee, which he chairs, on a voice vote.



The Community Character Act would intrude the federal government deeply into the zoning process, one of local government's most important prerogatives. A federal grant program would pay communities 90% of the cost of updating local zoning regulations in order to "improve environmental policy," "promote social equity" and avert "loss of community character. "



If history serves as a guide, the voluntary grant program would soon enough become mandatory. The environment, after all, is too important to be left to the mercies of developers. And indeed, the Community Character Act can be seen as the opening wedge of the old Al Gore "livable communities" initiative that in turn reflects the desires of the "smart growth" movement.



In mid-February the American Planning Association, working on a grant from the Housing and Urban Development department under Clinton-Gore, issued a "Growing Smart" legislature guide, seven years in the making, that purports to offer model codes for communities looking to control development. In the 1920s, the APA points out, a similar document put forward model development codes that led to the zoning systems so common now across the country.

The zoning mechanism at least was confined to decision-making by local government. And, ironically, critics of sprawl frequently complain that zoning has actually served to squeeze out the "community character" that they claim to want. They complain that most American communities are little more than cookie-cutter developments whose main characteristic is the single-family home on a gridlock pattern of streets with no community center at all.



So you would think the smart-growth set might be wary of new formulas being imposed on regions and localities by all those wise and wonderful folks in Washington. Will the planners and their friends in Congress (the Community Character Act requires communities to "consult and cooperate" with nonprofit organizations--such as the APA) really get it right this time? Or might not the market forces and local democracy, if left to themselves, more effectively produce some true character on the American urban and exurban scene?



Developers, after all, already are rushing to supply the environmental amenities that an increasingly affluent nation is demanding. Cluster housing with set asides for open space is one example. And even as voters in Colorado and Arizona were rejecting grandiose land-use planning measures in the 2000 elections, they were endorsing record sales of bonds for local parks and recreational facilities. And that's as it should be. If people in a certain area want more environmental amenities, they should pay for them.



But of course Al Gore, Jim Jeffords and the like aren't really interested in "community character. " They are interested in controlling growth by making it difficult and expensive for average citizens to live the American dream--a house of their own on a plot of land in a decently run community. The only community character they want is a community free of people exercising their own choices about what the good life means.



That's one reason they applauded last week's Supreme Court decision declaring that temporary moratoriums on growth don't necessarily constitute "takings" for which property owners must be compensated. A moratorium is the perfect process tool for no-growthers. It allows them to hamstring development without cost.











And what is the vision that animates the "Growing Smart" guidelines that served as a basis for the Senate bill? The Sierra Club last year conducted an exercise in which it attempted to define the optimum density for American cities. It came up with a figure of 500 families per acre. As economist Randal O'Toole of the Thoreau Institute has pointed out, this is roughly twice the density of the densest parts of Manhattan--on a par with the densest cities of Asia.

Confronted with this observation, the Sierra Club quietly backed off, reducing its density recommendation sharply. Likewise, now that Senate Democrats have been caught trying to foist a federal zoning system on America in secret, it may back off too. The Bush administration has announced opposition to the idea. But the mere existence of a "Community Character Act" tells you that the smart-growthers are making serious inroads--and aren't likely to go away.



Mr. Bray is a staff columnist at the Detroit News. His OpinionJournal.com column appears Tuesdays.
 
As a farm-raised kid, we were well aware of the benefits of fences, feed lots and other methods that provided maximum control, unit density, and monitoring of our herds in order to best achieve OUR wants and goals for their existence...



In exchange for the feed we provided them, they received medical care and a degree of shelter and protection they might not obtain if allowed the freedom cattle had in earlier years...



Of course, as long as individual critters behave and produce as WE demand and expect, they are rewarded with the above care - if they rebell, don't produce as WE expect, or become difficult - they are easy to dispose of as well. And when they finally become old and non-productive, we can also dispose of them - and still obtain at least SOME additional revenue from whatever of their carcasses we find of residual value.



LOTS easier and more profitable than in early frontier days, when critters roamed free and capable of individual choice - we had a hard time knowing what devious activities they were cooking up - didn't know WHERE they were or what they were doing - shucks - they were largely living for their OWN enjoyment, freedom and usefulness - not OURS.....



Aren't we glad WE'RE not stupid cattle - or SHEEP... :rolleyes: :p ;)
 
Originally posted by Power Wagon

Or might not the market forces and local democracy, if left to themselves, more effectively produce some true character on the American urban and exurban scene?



The problem with that theory is that the developers are very smart, AND well-funded. The communities that oppose unrestricted growth don't have a chance if the developer sues them in court for millions of dollars of lost income (because they couldn't build on the land that they purchased that is zoned for other uses. ) The township's insurance won't pay if the developer offers a compromise settlement that will cost the township nothing. So let's say a developer wants to build a 500 unit trailer park in an area zoned for 5 acres per home. Your property backs to this - you built your dream retirement home because you knew that the zoning laws would protect you from overgrowth. The developer brings a lawsuit for 1000 unit park and then offer to "settle" for 500. No more cost than filing the lawsuit and even if the township fights and wins (not likely) then they simply move on to the next small town that doesn't have the resources to oppose them. People outside of the township control what happens.



I am not for more federal control, but I sure would like to see current zoning laws enforced without the simple threat of lawsuits by "the haves". Something has to be done - the Democrats proposal may not be the answer, but I am open to suggestions.



JMHO - Steve
 
Suggestion

Just look at the proposal on it's wording. That's all you need to know. The endless analysis of attempts to control you and I are worthless, and only serve to dilute the true meaning of the attempts. It is all about CONTROL of you and I, without need, without representation, without due process and without recourse. The meeting was held in secret; no public allowed. What does that tell you? Some one wants to remove your right to control your environment as you see fit.

Bureaucracies exsist to enlarge and enhance their own existence.

It seems painfully obvious that some Congress people have run out of things to do, and have begun a serious and deadly attack on the fundamental reason for our existence:FREEDOM.

Who in the world decided that you and I are incapable of deciding what's right and wrong.

It's obvious that the environmental whackos have deep inroads to the liberal faction; not news to anyone, I'm sure.

P. W, thanks for the heads up! As always, the vigilant watchdog for the TDR.

God Help America

Ron
 
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