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CPoW NOTE: The following article provides great
insight into the Federal Land Grab commonly known
as “Smart Growth”. The links
immediately below this comment are the Federal and
State of Wisconsin side of the story. They sure do
paint a rosy picture of directing how people can
use their own land…
American Planning Association -
http://www.planning.org/resources-yc/epa.htm
Smart Growth Network - http://www.smartgrowth.org
Wisconsin Historical Society -
http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/histbuild/smartgrowth/index.htm
Monday, November 19, 2001
Federal land-use planning in the works?
Property rights group rallies opposition to
Clinton-era project
By Sarah Foster © 2001 WorldNetDaily.com
WASHINGTON Bob Harrison couldn't believe what he
was hearing. Even when his visitor, "John Smith,"
placed the document on his desk and said, "Look at
this," Harrison wasn't convinced.
As director of public policy for the Defenders of
Property Rights, a non-profit legal group based in
Washington, D.C., Harrison had heard of many
outrageous schemes that would impact the rights of
property owners, but what Smith a business owner
and member of DPR was telling him went far beyond
anything he'd heard of to date.
"Quite frankly, I thought he had been taking
drugs," Harrison recalled. "But what he was saying
and showing me made my hair stand on end."
It was a document Smith claimed was a mechanism for
the federalization of land use in the United
States, something many states and many Americans
have opposed for years.
Titled "Growing Smart Legislative Guidebook," the
2,000-page document is the product of Growing
Smart, a seven-year project of the American
Planning Association, a non-profit organization of
professional land use planners and persons
connected to the planning community through a
shared interest in the subject. The Guidebook is
essentially a collection of model enabling statutes
(with commentary) that state legislatures would
adopt to authorize planning, land development
controls, regulations, procedural processes;
everything states and local governments might need
for in the authors' words "planning and the
management of change." The statutes would be new
requirements placed on state agencies and local
governments to make often-significant changes in
their ordinances and policies.
Several chapters have been released, and are
already being used and under consideration by some
states. Phase III, the finalized version, that
includes some important chapters, has not been
released, but is on the APA website.
Smith stressed to Harrison that the Guidebook,
which had been funded in part by the Department of
Housing and Urban Development to the tune of $1.78
million, was expected to be approved by HUD
Secretary Martinez no later than Nov. 22 less than
a month away at the time.
According to the APA website, the Growing Smart
project was initiated in October 1994, with seed
money provided by the Seattle-based Henry W.
Jackson Foundation, founded in honor of the late
senator from the state of Washington. In addition
to funding from HUD (the lead federal agency),
money had also come from the Department of
Transportation, EPA, FEMA, the Department of
Agriculture, the Annie Casey Foundation, the
Siemens Corporation and the American Planning
Association.
There were no public hearings, no public notice,
and Harrison discovered that few if anyone on
Capitol Hill were aware of the Growing Smart
Project or the planned Legislative Guidebook. This
was preposterous. How could something like this be
developed without somebody knowing about it, he
wondered. How had proponents managed to evade the
radar detector of private property rights advocates
and government watchdog groups?
"Well, lo and behold, how quickly we have
forgotten Hillary Clinton's Health Care Plan,"
Harrison observed sardonically, referring to the
discarded project which like the Guidebook was
developed clandestinely. "This is for zoning and
land use what Hillary wanted imposed on health
care."
Smart growth with a turbo-charger Attorney Nancy
Marzulla, president of Defenders of Property
Rights, and the senior staff attorney virtually
closeted themselves in a room for a week to go
line-by-line through the Guidebook, all of its 15
chapters, with a fine-toothed comb. They emerged
only for breaks and to go home in the evenings.
They were "absolutely appalled and horrified" by
what they discovered, said Harrison.
"It [the Guidebook] is intricate; it is complex it
is smart growth with a turbo-charger put together
by some of the smartest folks in the smart growth
movement. And there are some awfully smart people
in the smart growth movement, from land use
planners to attorneys and they've covered the
map."
The APA, Harrison learned, had sought out
"like-minded folk in the Clinton administration who
loved the idea of top-down, massive nuts-to-bolts,
A-to-Z, cover-the-globe type of comprehensive
approach to land use planning."
There was a reason for the strategy, which critics
like Harrison view as a way to bring in federal
land use planning "through the back door." A
mid-1970s federal land use bill sponsored by Rep.
Morris Udall had been soundly defeated when a
massive outpouring of grassroots opposition forced
Congress to reject it. Congress would no doubt
reject a similar proposal again.
"A frontal attack by legislation is not really
feasible," Harrison said.
"And rather than have HUD get into zoning through
the use of its regulatory power, which would
subject the department to notice and comment
requirements and legal challenges, HUD and APA
adopted a different approach which could not be
challenged in court. What they pulled together was
a relationship where APA would develop this model
land use code for HUD as a guidebook for state
legislatures. HUD would pay them. HUD would review
the product as it was submitted, and at the end of
the process the secretary of HUD would then have
one of three choices: He could approve the
Guidebook (either by formal approval or default);
disapprove the Guidebook; or he could disapprove
the Guidebook and insist that a dissenting report
be contained in the massive tome."
If Martinez chooses the third option, the APA
would still own the Guidebook and could promote it
to state legislatures for adoption, but it would
not have the imprimatur of the government
approval.
"In essence, it will be the American Planning
Association enticing states to accept this," said
Harrison. "It's one step removed from the feds
imposing their views on the states. A
non-government organization would be having an
impact over the states' land use planning policies.
Their views, those of the APA, will be the
prevailing views."
Defenders of Property Rights has spent the last
week spearheading an effort to persuade Martinez to
choose the third option.
"We're struggling to catch up after seven years of
effort by the other side working under the radar
screen," said Harrison. "In the last three weeks
we've been going 100 miles an hour."
A letter has been drafted and over a dozen
commercial and non-profit organizations have signed
it. The letter which is being delivered today
reads, in part:
We write to urge you to exercise your authority
under the HUD/APA contract to disapprove the
Legislative Guidebook, to be finalized November 22,
on the grounds that we were excluded from the
process by which it was formulated, which the
product itself reflects.
The Legislative Guidebook as currently drafted
federalizes local and state land use control,
tramples private property rights, discriminates
against minority business owners, and impedes
economic development.
Those signing the letter by noon Friday included
the National Black Chamber of Commerce, the Small
Business Survival Committee, the National
Cattlemen's Association, Americans for Tax Reform,
Competitive Enterprise Institute, Conservative
Union, Frontiers of Freedom/People for the
USA.
The National Association of Manufacturers has
endorsed the effort but drafted its own letter
urging Martinez to reject the Guidebook.
Congress has been alerted. Mike Hardiman, lobbyist
for the American Land Rights Association, reported
Thursday that "alarm bells are ringing"
at the Capitol, and the Western Caucus a group of
representatives from western states headed by Rep.
Richard Pombo, R-Calif. was composing a letter
expressing similar sentiments to that by Defenders
of Property Rights. By Friday there were over a
dozen signatures, with more expected. The letter
will be delivered today. A staff person at the
Western Caucus said it would be "very good" if
people contacted their representatives and urged
them to sign the letter.
WorldNetDaily contacted "John Smith," who was
willing to discuss his findings and observations,
but requested anonymity for himself, his business,
and the trade organization with which he works.
"Just say I'm a business owner and a member of
Defenders of Property Rights," he said.
Smith said he "stumbled" onto the Guidebook during
an Internet surfing session. "I found the APA
website and there was information about it.
I just started following links and chasing names,
that sort of thing." Then he discovered chapters of
the Guidebook that had not been officially released
but posted on the site. One item in particular was
a red flag.
"Take a look at chapter 8 [on Local Land
Development Regulation],"
Smith said. "That's a chapter that hasn't been
released yet, but it is on there. I am particularly
concerned about the provisions for what they call
amortization, which is essentially taking property
without compensation. I'm a member of Defenders of
Property Rights, and when I saw that I went to see
Bob [Harrison] and asked him to take a look at
this."
Smith recalled that Harrison didn't believe him,
"but a week later he called and asked me to come
back and talk to him. They obviously did a lot of
research before they called me back."
"There's so much in chapter 8," said Smith.
"There's a list of things it says that zoning
ordinances can do. They can place restrictions on
buildings because someone might not be able to see
the stars or the sky those kinds of scenic things.
But every section of chapter 8 is of concern if
you're a business owner. There's a little section
on moratoriums. It's very crafty wording, but as I
understand it, a planner or planning board could
say, 'I'm thinking of making a change to the
ordinance, so I'm putting a moratorium on
everything until I decide what I want to do.' That
one is sort of interesting."
Smith said there were provisions for a "big
expansion" of the concept of development
agreements.
In his view: "The way we see development
agreements, and we've seen these harming our
customers many, many times a development agreement
gives the planner a chance to get in the back room
with the guy that owns the property and strong-arm
him to do things that the ordinance doesn't say he
has to do, but they hold the lever over his head of
not giving him a permit until he agrees to do so.
This would make development agreements even
stronger. Not only would you have planners writing
the regulations through things like development
agreements and design review requirements (which
would also be much stronger), they're setting
themselves up with a police power.
First they write the regulation, then they enforce
it."
Condemnation for 'non-conformity' As one whose
clientele includes storeowners, Smith is very
worried about provisions that restrict and regulate
signs, even more than is currently done. For
instance, chapter 8 includes language enabling a
local government to use condemnation (eminent
domain) to deal with a "nonconformity"
or "non-conforming" use, something Smith predicts
will be widely used.
"That's the scheme," he said. "And you notice it
mentions 'non-conforming' signs. Signs are
specifically mentioned. Up until now, and up until
any of this gets adopted somewhere, an on-premise
sign is a valid accessory use that relates to
commercial property. So if your property is zoned
commercial, a sign is a valid use. You have a right
to put up a sign to tell people you're in business
so you can sell things. But the people who put this
together are very slick. They've changed signs to a
land use, separate and having no relationship with
the property. That makes it possible to have
commercial land zoned commercial with no right to
tell people you're in business."
Like Smith, Harry Alford, president and CEO of the
National Black Chamber of Commerce, is concerned
about the signage clauses, and discussed with
WorldNetDaily just how and to what extent the
Guidebook statutes and ordinances would impact the
businesses in black and other minority
communities.
"They would be very much affected, especially by
those signage regulations,"
he said. "Our members rely on signage to do
business in their local communities dry cleaners,
restaurants, storefronts. Let's take San Francisco.
Let's take Chinatown. Imagine the signage there.
And then those people who own those businesses are
told they can no longer have signage to advertise
their wares to the tourists who walk through
Chinatown and look in the windows and at the
restaurants. Oakland is like this too. This would
destroy not only the businesses but the cultures,
the whole environment.
Alford said that signs would be permitted, but not
the kind that would be effective for the clientele
his membership serves.
"They want to have these pristine, or
subtle-looking, signs that won't blare out at the
community like a Dunkin' Donut sign. Those will be
passé,"
he said. "There will be no more Dunkin' Donut
signs. It's going to be all uniform signs, based on
essentially a western European concept of
signage.
They want signs that conform to their aesthetic
ideas, but which will not draw business in those
communities.
"In minority communities in Chicago, St. Louis,
Philadelphia wherever you have large Latino, Asian
or Black communities the only retail tool these
retail stores have are their storefront signs that
are designed to appeal to their particular
clientele. Our fear is that with these ordinances
in place, the planners and bureaucrats will say,
"Your signs are too loud, they're too big, they're
not color-coordinated, and therefore they're going
to have to be this way" which is going to kill
businesses, and people will have to be laid off.
It'll kill the communities and kill those
cultures."
And it's not just the signage issue.
"The statutes would add regulatory weight that
would be too heavy for little businesses to carry,"
Alford fears. "The National Black Chamber of
Commerce has long been a proponent of regulatory
reform. OSHA and EPA and all their regulations on
small business, taxation are just too burdensome on
a small business. We're trying to make it simple
for small businesses to keep them part of our
economic fabric. They're important because small
businesses today employ far more people than large
businesses do."
Moreover, Alford added, "If it weren't for
minority-owned businesses, the unemployment picture
and the welfare roles would be out of
control.
Totally out of control."
"So we see this as a very big threat, and if HUD
is supposed to be the Department of Housing and
Urban Development, they should realize this is
anti-development. Secretary Martinez can easily
say, 'Hey, guys, I don't like this thing. I'm not
going to approve it.'"
Alford hopes that Martinez, who is a member of a
minority group, having been born in Cuba and raised
in Florida, is sensitive to the problems
minority-owned businesses face. From now until
Wednesday he's working to muster sufficient
opposition that the secretary will exercise the
third option and disavow the Guidebook.
"He [Martinez] should well know what would happen
if these laws are imposed," said Alford. "Miami
would be a case of where this would be devastating.
He should definitely have some sensitivity to this.
So we're trying to stir up some attention. I'm
getting ready to turn up the heat on it next week
and start working with the Hispanic chamber [of
commerce] and get the Pan-Asian Chamber involved
big time. On Monday and Tuesday I'll be out there
beating the drum about this."
Darrell McKigney, president of the Small Business
Survival Committee, another signatory to the letter
by the Defenders of Property Rights, is similarly
concerned, and said he and his organization view
the Growing Smart project and its Guidebook as a
"further attempt to extend federal control and
regulations over small businesses, to replace free
market-style growth with Soviet-style
planning.
"It's anti-entrepreneurial, and it's going to hurt
people. When you start restricting business
activities in terms of commercial space, where you
can locate, wherever you get any kind of central
planning of the economy obviously people suffer.
People suffer individually, but so do their
communities. We know that government central
planning is never good for the economy."
McKigney is cynical about assurances he has heard
that the Guidebook is not a blueprint for central
land use planning, merely a set of statutes a state
legislature could adopt if it wanted to control and
regulate urban growth and development.
"Sure, that's what they say," he said. "But the
practical effect is pretty much the same. They want
to get federal standards imposed about how they
think the most local units of government should act
and what they think cities should be like. I think
that's bad policy. It's anti-entrepreneurial.
We know these smart growth policies drive up the
cost of housing; they hurt the economy, they hurt
small business, and they destroy property
rights.
"If you look around the country at places where
smart growth projects have gone forward, you can
see that they severely restrict places where people
can conduct business, they attack basic things like
signage the ability of a business to advertise, and
it drives up all the costs of housing and
commercial property and commercial use. Frankly,
that hurts both customers and it hurts the ability
of small businesses to operate."
But Stuart Meck, principal investigator for the
Growing Smart Project at APA's research center in
Chicago, says the suggested statutes would go far
to relieve problems communities face across the
country.
"Growing Smart is actually model planning enabling
legislation that states would adopt," he told
WorldNetDaily. "These are not local
ordinances.
They are model statutes the states could adopt
that authorize planning, land development control,
tax abatement, tax increment financing, things like
that" at the state and local level.
Meck provided some history: "There were two prior
major efforts on model legislation that were
national in nature: the Standard States Zoning
Enabling Act and the other Standard City Planning
Enabling Act. These two acts were drafted in the
1920s by an advisory committee of the U.S.
Department of Commerce under Herbert Hoover. They
are called the Standard Acts, and they were
tremendously influential in the United States, and
most state enabling legislation up until 15 or 20
years ago were based on these acts. These were
model acts that states could adopt, and they did,
almost verbatim."
Meck said that a little less than half the states
have done some type of reform of their planning
statutes in recent years.
"The major reform states are states like Oregon,
Washington, New Jersey, Florida, Wisconsin,
Kentucky, Maine, Tennessee, and Rhode Island," he
said.
There, the statutes are "far more modernized." But
there are states in the Midwest for example Ohio,
Iowa, and Illinois "where the legislation has
remained pretty much unchanged for 50 years."
According to Meck, language from the portions of
the Guidebook that have been released have already
been adopted in some states.
"People would take language from it, which is the
idea," he said.
"The Guidebook is supposed to be a source book for
statutory language, and actually incorporated into
the bills. Sometimes they pass, sometimes they
don't. There was an Impact Fee statute that was
introduced in the Kentucky legislature that did not
pass."
Asked about the benefits of Smart Growth and the
new planning process, Meck answered that he likened
these to a fire extinguisher.
"This is my basic premise: Plans, land use
regulations, particularly land use regulations
themselves, and statutes are police power measures
and so are fire extinguishers," he said. "You
wouldn't trust a fire extinguisher that hadn't been
reexamined for 50 years. But many states are in the
position of having planning laws that were designed
for governmental structures and the thinking of the
1920s, and here we are in the year 2001 and we're
still trying to use those systems. That's number
one.
Number two, there's a lot of litigation on land
use law today, and the legal climate has changed
considerably since the 1920s. Citizens expect to be
allowed to be a lot more involved in plan-making,
and many of the statutes that are based on the
1920s model really provide only a minimal role for
citizen involvement like one public hearing at the
end of the process. Nobody thinks that's a good way
to do things anymore."
But Randal O'Toole, founder and chief economist of
the Thoreau Institute a non-profit group in Oregon
that, according to its mission statement, strives
to find and implement free-market incentives to
protect wildlife habitat, public lands and urban
livability is sharply critical of smart growth
policies and premises. Hence the title of a book he
has authored: "The Vanishing Automobile How Smart
Growth Harms American Cities."
Contacted for comment, he detailed his concerns,
developed through nearly 30 years of research, to
WorldNetDaily.
"My first objection is a simple one," said
O'Toole. "The planners think they know how other
people should live and they want to force them to
live that way, whether people want it or not. It's
social engineering. It isn't sitting down and
asking, 'How do you want to live? Let's make sure
it works that way.' Instead, it's sitting with
people asking how they want to live, but then they
say 'We're going to pretend we heard you say you
want to live the way we want you want to live, so
we're going to redesign your community the way we
want it.'"
The idea embodied in the model legislation, he
said, is that growth must be contained within an
area, that it can go "up," but not "out," over the
land.
That's why they denigrate neighborhoods of
single-family residences as "sprawl."
The fact is, said O'Toole, people generally want
to live in single-family houses and to travel in
cars. Smart growth runs counter to what people
want.
It entails "high-density development, no more
construction of highways, construction of transit
particularly rail transit instead of highways, and
mixed-use development, where you have both housing
and shops; the idea being that through high density
and mixed-use development they can minimize the
need for people to drive."
Smart growth is an "anti-automobile system,"
O'Toole continued, "But the problem is that it
doesn't really change people's habits. People still
drive, even if they live in high-density or
mixed-use areas. They still drive because even if
you build a whole bunch of light-rail or heavy-rail
or any kind of rail, people continue to
drive.
"The light-rail system in Sacramento is one of the
nation's failures.
They spent a bunch of money and it's had even less
of an impact on traveling habits than Portland.
They spent $5 billion building BART in the Bay
Area, which carries 2 percent of all travel in the
Bay Area. In Washington, D.C., they spent $10
billion building the Metro System, and it carries
less than 3 percent of all travel in Washington,
D.C., and only about 8 percent of all commuters.
Rail transit is really insignificant. But when you
combine rail transit with high-density development,
what do you get? You get a lot more people driving
in the corridors because you have a lot more people
living in those corridors because you've put in
high-density development.
Instead of spreading people around so they can
drive in a spread-around area that's called sprawl,
you concentrate them in corridors and they end up
all driving in the same corridors and you end up
with a lot more congestion."
O'Toole is cynical about much of the motivation
behind the push for smart growth legislation.
"It's basically a full employment act for the
planners," he said, and pointed out that there are
still a lot of counties that have no zoning. "If
you require them to zone and write plans, then you
make jobs for planners.
That's a big thing in Iowa. Most of the counties
in Iowa have no zoning.
They don't need zoning; it's all farmland. Nobody
is worried about urban sprawl in Iowa. But by
bringing in this kind of legislation they'll have
to do the planning, hire planners and attorneys and
so forth. So it's really a full-employment law for
urban planners."
"This Land Is Our Land," by Rep. Richard Pombo and
WorldNetDaily Editor Joseph Farah autographed by
Joseph Farah is available at WND's online
store.
Sarah Foster is a staff reporter for
WorldNetDaily.
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