by C. Jeffery Small
"Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." — George Santayana
http://go-galt.org/Galt_Pledge/JG_Current.html
Urban Planning
From Wikipedia:
Does anything above sound familiar? Government urban planners, with big ideas and
only the best interests of the "general public" at heart, use the power of the state to
seize huge tracts of private land, raise everything in sight, hand over that land to
private developers, and proceed to create a new social and economic Shangri-La.
Except things, for some unexpected reason, don't really turn out as anticipated! Oh
well, don't worry. We'll get it right next time.
From Wikipedia:
During the 1950s and 60s, New Haven [Connecticut] received more urban renewal
funding per capita than any city in the United States. New Haven became the de
facto showcase of the new modern redeveloped city and plans for its downtown
development were chronicled in publications like Time and Harper's magazines
throughout the 1950s and 60s. Robert C. Weaver, Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development in the Lyndon Johnson Administration, once said that New Haven
during this time was the closest America has ever been to having a "slumless" city.
Well, that certainly sounds more promising! However, as an architect and a resident
of New Haven from 1978-1988, I recall a slightly different picture. Through the 60s,
70s and early 80s, despite being the home to Yale University, New Haven was an
economically depressed area. All of that urban renewal money had been spent
purchasing low-rent buildings within the downtown core, knocking them down, and
creating temporarily gravel parking lots while wondrous new structures were
planned. However, by the early 1980s, after 25 years of "planning", most of these
areas remained open gravel lots, giving much of the city the appearance of a
bombed war zone rather than a thriving community.
But what about the claims of being a "slumless" city? Well, that might well be true.
Every building within New Haven that offered inexpensive storefront rents and
provided affordable housing on the upper floors were demolished. All of these self-
sufficient business owners were displaced, as were their clientele, the low-income
tenants who had previously occupied these buildings. With no place left to live or
work, these people moved on to other cities or became new clients of the state-run
subsidized housing developments springing up everywhere.
While private development was being encouraged in the mid-to-late 80s when I left
the state, I think the article's reference to economic expansion beginning to take real
hold after 2000 — a 45-50 year period of economic stagnation — is the ultimate
indictment against urban renewal. Strike two.
From Wikipedia:
Kelo v. City of New London, 545 U.S. 469 (2005) was a case decided by the Supreme
Court of the United States involving the use of eminent domain to transfer land from
one private owner to another to further economic development. The case arose from
the condemnation by New London, Connecticut, of privately owned real property so
that it could be used as part of a comprehensive redevelopment plan which promised
3,169 new jobs and $1.2 million a year in tax revenues. The Court held in a 5-4
decision that the general benefits a community enjoyed from economic growth
qualified such redevelopment plans as a permissible "public use" under the Takings
Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
Following the decision, many of the plaintiffs expressed an intent to find other means
by which they could continue contesting the seizure of their homes. Soon after the
decision, city officials announced plans to charge the residents of the homes for back
rent for the five years since condemnation procedures began. The city contended
that the residents have been on city property for those five years and owe tens of
thousands of dollars of rent. The case was finally resolved when the City agreed to
move Kelo's house to a new location. The controversy was eventually settled when
the city paid substantial additional compensation to the homeowners.
In spite of repeated efforts, the redeveloper (who stood to get a 91-acre waterfront
tract of land for $1 per year) was unable to obtain financing, and the redevelopment
project was abandoned. As of the beginning of 2010, the original Kelo property was a
vacant lot, generating no tax revenue for the city.
[As reported in the papers] "Pfizer Inc. announced that it is closing the $350 million
research center in New London that was the anchor for the New London
redevelopment plan, and will be relocating some 1,500 jobs."
Remember, these are the people who believe that they can run automobile plants,
manage the entire US economy, and will soon be in charge of your life-and-death
health care decisions.
In each of the three cases cited above, who knows just how many houses,
businesses, and millions of tax dollars were taken from productive people who would
have furthered their lives and made sensible investments with their money, only to
instead have it squandered by these bureaucrats? Then, realize that it is not three,
but hundreds of similarly failed experiments taking place across the country each
year, and the mind boggles at the lost wealth, in the billions and trillions, that has
been pumped into these rat holes of disastrous attempts at social engineering by the
central planners. They failed in the 1950s, and again and again in the 60s, 70s, 80s,
90s, right up through the destruction of the town of New London, CT in 2009, and
still no lesson has been learned — other than we can have our property confiscated
from us at any time, so long as the magical incantation "for the public good" is first
proclaimed.
Zoning
But until they come along and take your property for some urban planning scheme,
it's yours to do with as you see fit, right? Not a chance. So called Euclidean Zoning
laws, instituted in the early part of the 20th century have long placed a complex set
of restrictions on what any individual could do with their land and buildings. These
regulations specify what types of uses are allowed (residential, commercial, religious,
etc.), the location where any structure may be placed on the lot, overall land
coverage, total usable building area, height, allowable exterior pavement, types of
landscaping required, restrictions on signage, lighting, grading, drainage, and on and
on.
After more than one hundred years of imposing these guidelines and restrictions all
across the country, we must, by now, certainly be living in a designer's paradise.
Well, according to a July 8th article in Architect magazine titled Brave New Codes,
the result has been as follows:
The separation of uses written into Euclidean zoning codes made sense to the
lawyers who wrote them, but they have the effect of creating bland and inefficient
places, Plater-Zyberk says.
Great places weren't being produced under Euclidean zoning, according to Plater-
Zyberk. "It became evident that this regulatory framework was really what was
driving suburbia, sprawl, and the things that were being criticized as being inefficient
and unsustainable," Plater-Zyberk says. "It wasn't that people wanted it to be that
way—the codes were just written that way."
So, the ill effects were not produced because "people wanted it to be that way", they
were forced upon us all because "the codes were just written that way". Then the
solution is obvious! Remove the zoning codes and let people achieve those better
results that they desire. But no, freedom and choice is never a solution that crosses
the mind of the totalitarian planner. Just as we saw in the case of urban planning,
the zoning advocates believe that they now have all the answers and can create
nirvana with a different set of regulations. So coming soon to a city near you is Form-
based Zoning, the cure for what ails you.
From Wikipedia:
One example of a recently adopted code with design-based features [...] creates
"form districts"
One version of form-based or "form integrated" zoning utilizes [...] three district
components - a use component, a site component and an architectural component.
The use component is similar in nature to the use districts of euclidian zoning.
However, with an emphasis on form standards, use components are typically more
inclusive and broader in scope. The site components define a variety of site
conditions from low intensity to high intensity such as size and scale of buildings and
parking, accessory structures, drive-through commercial lanes, landscaping, outdoor
storage and display, vehicle fueling and washing, overhead commercial service doors,
etc. The architectural components address architectural elements and materials.
As a home or business owner, you have really got to love that "potentially
discretionary criteria". It can really add some excitement to your life! And as an
architect, it has got to be a relief that the form, elements and material design choices
will now be made for you by a government agency rather than being a decision
formulated between you and your client — much as medical decisions under
nationalized health care will now be dictated by a bureaucrat rather than resulting
from a consultation between patient and doctor.
Here are some additional comments from the Brave New Codes article:
"A lot of times, [the zoning codes are] just telling you what you can't do." [Peter]
Park says Denver's form-based code tries harder to guide developers and designers
toward what they can do, mainly by being a very visual document.
[Emphasis added]
So instead of being left free to do anything other than what is specifically restricted,
the new codes turn western culture upon its head by actively prohibiting everything
except that which is explicitly allowed. Your right to use your property is now being
placed in a straitjacket where a few subjective, discretionary strings are then
loosened to allow you some very restricted range of motion, based not upon what
you desire, but upon what others deem is best.
"If the architects could understand that they're part of a larger effort of placemaking,
and it's not just a restriction like any old code, I think that they would have a good
time working with form-based codes."
"Often 'design freedom' becomes another term for 'anything goes' solutions that
contribute little, if any, to the collective enterprise," Jiménez adds. "Limits are not the
curtailing of freedom, but rather opportunities to transcend them."
Translated, this means that, as an architect, I will learn to enjoy my new role as an
implementor of their rules, as soon as I learn to accept my proper place as a
comrade in the collective enterprise of state-mandated placemaking. These people
have covered all the bases and their actions would bring a smile to Ellsworth
Toohey's face.
This collective premise is so pervasive in our society that many people are not even
aware of the extent of its effect upon them. For example, in another article in
Architect magazine titled If a Tree Falls, the author, Lance Hosey, discussing the
ecological benefits to using regional construction materials, makes the following
offhand statement:
How would the construction industry change if builders were limited to what's in their own
backyards?
Notice that he didn't say "if builder's limited themselves", but "if builders were
limited", ignoring the possibility of using persuasion and immediately assuming that
external force should be applied against all builders in order to achieve his desired
results — a result which apparently is to be taken as self-evidently correct and
proper. For the collectivist, individual choice and personal freedom are nonexistent
concepts, and all that matters here is an economic calculation concerning the use of
raw materials. Trees and water are precious. Humans are beneath consideration.
National Social Engineering
Which brings us to the real purpose of this piece. From an article written by Bob
Livingston, it came to my attention that back on August 6, 2009, Christopher Dodd
submitted to the Senate S.1619, a bill titled the Livable Communities Act of 2009,
which was followed on February 25, 2010 by the companion House resolution
H.R.4690, the Livable Communities Act of 2010. On August 3rd, 2010, S.1619 was
released from committee and sent to the Senate and is currently awaiting a vote.
Let's examine the major provisions of this legislation.
As has been the case with all recent congressional legislation, the bill deals with the
establishment of a large and complex bureaucratic framework intended to implement
goals which are merely hinted at within the text. At this point there is no direct way
to gage the intentions of, or the specific actions that might be taken, by those
ultimately chosen to staff this operation. In this way these bills can be made to
appear as all things to all people, while being immune to meaningful criticism.
Nevertheless, I think we can draw a few broad generalities based upon the goals of
those sponsoring this initiative.
If central planners of the past were able to create such devastation in the wake of
their grand schemes, imagine the magnitude of harm that could be unleashed by
placing this much power in federal hands.
Dodd's bill is the first significant piece of legislation introduced in the United States
which attempts to implement the goals of Agenda 21, described by the UN's
Division for Sustainable Development (A division of the UN Department of Economic
and Social Affairs) as follows:
Agenda 21, the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development, and the
Statement of principles for the Sustainable Management of Forests were adopted by
more than 178 Governments at the United Nations Conference on Environment and
Development (UNCED) held in Rio de Janiero, Brazil, 3 to 14 June 1992.
During that conference, Agenda 21 was signed by President George H.W. Bush.
Unite all nation is a common effort for sustainable development, with the UN
ultimately acting as a super-government having authority over the remainder
of the world's national governments.
National governments are required to "strengthen institutional structures to
allow the full integration of environmental and developmental issues, at all
levels of decision-making".
A massive redistribution of wealth from the rich (developed) countries to the
poor (undeveloped) ones under the guise of creating "a more efficient and
equitable world economy". In other words, eliminate world poverty in the
name of promoting sustainable livelihoods and reduce the standard of living in
developed countries as a necessity for reducing environmental stress.
Developed countries are to provide health care for undeveloped countries.
Global financial institutions are to be funded by rich countries in order to
implement the environmental policies dictated by the UN.
By recognizing the "increasing interdependence of the community of nations",
and working to "overcome confrontation", "foster a climate of genuine
cooperation and solidarity", "strengthen national and international policies",
and by adapting "to the new realities", strong countries are to be subjugated
to the weak.
Use the UN's now discredited IPCC report as justification for throttling the
economies of developed countries.
Adjust all land-use and resource policies to mitigate changes to the
atmosphere, promote bio-diversity, conserve resources, minimize pollution,
promote sustainability, provide shelter for all, promote sustainable
construction, energy distribution, and transportation.
"Transfer" environmentally sound technology from the developers to those
with a need. (Steal it.)
Promote education, public awareness and training. In other words, an active
propaganda campaign.
Agenda 21 is nothing more than a capitulation of the good to the bad, the rich to the
poor, the strong to the weak, the productive to the unproductive, the creative to the
uncreative, and the free to the unfree, all under the pretense of a global warming
disaster which has been thoroughly debunked as one of the world’s biggest lies.
Conclusion
As was the case with Health Care, the Disclose Act and Finance Reform,
the Livable Communities Act is likely to be another piece of legislation that
will be attempted to be pushed through the Democratic Congress with
little regard for the impact upon the constitutional rights of the citizens of
this country, or upon the fragile state of our economy. This is an
administration focused upon one goal only — that being the consolidation
of power — and this bill would expand federal power into devastating new
areas. I encourage everyone to spread the word about this bill, and to
contact your Senators and Representatives and tell them to vote NO when
this Act comes up for a vote.