Thursday, September 15, 2011
Kansas City: Rope in the 'burbs?
There is a terrific article out now at The Atlantic (link below) telling of "The Beginning of the End of the Suburb." To which I say, good riddance. It has separated us horribly, it has added, also badly, to heavy traffic, pollution, bad air days, highways that go on for miles and eat up farmland, etc. And we--Kansas City--are famous for our sprawl, of course. We're one of the worst spots in the nation for it. Heaven forbid we tell any developer "no", right? It seems that, between the downturn in the economy and the higher price of fuel, at least, people are far less likely to keep buying ever further out of cities. Again, thank goodness. It's long overdue. As the article says: "We need a new model for American prosperity that doesn't require ever greater injections of fossil energy." All that said, though, I'm sure the Kansas City metropolitan area and all its various cities will never institute any hard and fast policy, limiting growth even if for the benefit of the city, the way they did long ago in Oregon and the likes. We're way too insecure about business and even the thought of pushing business away. Links: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/The-Beginning-End-Suburban-atlantic-1156625650.html?x=0; http://www.pitch.com/kansascity/in-kansas-city-tax-breaks-dont-cure-blight-andmdashandnbspthey-create-sprawl/Content?oid=2190006; http://www.pitch.com/plog/archives/2011/04/18/kansas-citys-sprawling-ways-make-growing-old-a-bitch; http://www.kansascity.com/2011/04/16/2804933/a-long-way-home-challenges-faced.html; http://www.kansascity.com/2011/04/17/2807142/getting-around-kc-is-tough-for.html
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