sprawl
Urban Sprawl And The Disappearance of Millions of American Birds
Posted June 22nd, 2007 by James RowenIt being the first day of spring, I've tied together the land rush in southeastern Wisconsin, the quest for diversions of Lake Michigan water to W. Waukesha County, and the disappearance of more than two-thirds of 20 species of American birds.
I'm not saying it's all Waukesha's fault, but there's national context for what's happening in southeastern Wisconsin, and vice-versa.
Details here.
When Thinking Job Creation, Don't Overlook Where Planners Put Big New Highways
Posted June 2nd, 2007 by James RowenWhat Causes Job Creation Far From Where Job-Seekers Live
A little while ago, I suggested that people check in with bloggers Rick Esenberg and Paul Soglin as they debate urban issues.
Rick, my colleague and the durable, conservative punching bag on Eric Von's "Backstory" Thursday afternoon drive-time roundtable on AM 1290 in Milwaukee, blogs here.
The liberal Paul, for whom I worked in his first incarnation as Madison Mayor, blogs here.
I tend to stay out of much of the bloggers' back-and-forth: a great deal of it is goofy-talk among journalist wannabees, but the Soglin-Esenberg discussion is worth reading because they both have something to say.
Read More »Running Out Of Water In All The Wrong Places: When Will They Come For Wisconsin's?
Posted May 31st, 2007 by James RowenArizona, Running Out Of Water, Moving Towards Growth Limits
First it was Florida, where fresh water is drying up.
Now Arizona.
Here are the key paragraphs from that AP story:
"PHOENIX — Arizona lawmakers voted Thursday to expand the state's growth management efforts, approving a bipartisan bill to empower counties and cities to place new restrictions on rural development without adequate water supplies.
The House's 50-1 vote completed legislative action on the bill, which now goes to Gov. Janet Napolitano, a supporter.
The Senate approved the bill on March 8 on a 26-2 vote.
Legislative approval of the measure came a quarter-century after the 1980 enactment of a historic groundwater management law imposing new pumping and irrigation restrictions in "active management areas." Those areas include Phoenix, Tucson and Prescott.
Those urban-oriented restrictions were aimed at curbing groundwater depletion that outpaced natural replacement.
Read More »Will Wisconsin Taxpayers Pay For A Shopping Mall Interstate Interchange?
Posted May 30th, 2007 by James RowenPabst Farms - - Not Taxpayers - - Can Pay For New Mall Interchange
Planning in southeastern Wisconsin has been legendarily bungled for years - - but the revelation that the vaunted regional freeway expansion plan doesn't contain funding for an interchange for Pabst Farms' shopping mall is a doozy.
Planning in Western Waukesha County has long been the nearly-private preserve of a handful of powerful interests.
A Pabst Farms' initial consultant was Ruekert & Mielke, the same firm that has done water supply studies for both fast-growing Waukesha and New Berlin, and is also managing the regional planning commission's (SEWRPC) three-year-long water supply study.
Dan Warren, Pabst Farms project manager, is the chairman of the Waukesha Water Utility commission.
Read More »Sprawl Marches On In Southeastern Wisconsin
Posted May 27th, 2007 by James RowenWhither Ruby Farm? Preservation, or Pabst Farms II
Another major piece of Waukesha County - - Ruby Farm - - is being tugged in opposite directions - - development, or 'development,' or preservation.
The key paragraph in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel story about Ruby Farm, linked above, tells the tale:
"A road-widening project scheduled for next year will demolish part of the farmstead. The fate of the remainder lies with a developer who bought the farm and adjacent vacant land."
You'd think that at some point there would be a therapeutic shock of recognition, a bolt of awareness, an "ah-ha" moment that would put the traffic congestion, water depletion and rising taxes for local services in Waukesha County into bold view, along these lines:
The more people you cram into once-open spaces, the more the negatives outweigh the positives, including lost heritage and future sustainability.
Who knows what it will take for people to see the light? Read More »












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