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Rep. Sharon Nelson, serving the 34th District Serving West Seattle, White Center, Burien, and Vashon and Maury Islands. |
Provide incentives for cities, residents to avoid sprawl
Op-Ed Published in the Seattle Times on February 5, 2009
Where do you want to live? How do you want to get to work?
We all ask
ourselves these questions, and every family has to make hard choices to
answer them. We are left with a disagreeable choice: an hourlong car ride
from a big house in a small town through nightmarish traffic to a job in the
city, or a small house in town that is close enough to work that you can
walk, and so expensive that you have to walk, because you can't afford a
car.
Suburban sprawl has spread and spread until you could put a
blindfold on a person and drive them two miles — or 200 miles — in any
direction, and he couldn't tell you where he was, because all he would see
are Home Depots, Starbucks and Taco del Mars.
Sprawl is also the most
expensive way to grow. It means extending roads and building new schools and
fire stations where we used to have farms, forests and wetlands.
Instead
of building new roads that will sprout strip malls and subdivisions, we can
try something different and smarter that will give us a higher quality of
life.
Consider the frustration of driving on Interstate 5 when it becomes
a parking lot, and of trying to drop the kids off at school, then drive to
work without being late, never knowing how long it will take.
There is a
better way to organize our neighborhoods and live our lives.
Instead of
being tied to our cars, and to more highways and suburban sprawl, we should
look to what our grandparents and great-grandparents did, and what people
all over the world are doing.
Consider our neighbor to the south,
Portland. Portland decided that everywhere a train would stop, they would
plan so each community around that station would include affordable housing
and neighborhood shops — and they would do it the right way from the
beginning, instead of waiting for haphazard growth and then trying to fix
it.
We can do that here too.
Next time you visit Portland, citizens of
that city can tell you that when you're not dependent on cars and highways,
your stress goes down, along with how much you pay at the pump and time
wasted sitting in traffic. What goes up? The time you can spend with your
family.
Less sprawl also creates a sense of community. Where people walk
instead of drive, neighbors know each other because they see each other
every day at the train station, the corner grocery store, the coffee shop.
You can build a community when everybody is not driving past each other in
their cars.
Sound Transit is building more rail lines — you've probably
seen construction near Sea-Tac Airport — and throughout our state, the
seesaw price of gas has more people riding trains, buses and passenger
ferries.
Across the state, people want to live next to mass transit
because it gives them better choices and a better quality of life.
For
this reason, I have introduced legislation in the state House of
Representatives that will help more families afford to live in communities
served by transit. It asks local governments to consider the impacts of
their land-use decisions on climate change and to ensure that new growth
around transit stations includes affordable housing.
This legislation is
needed because if we don't require affordable housing to be included as
these areas develop, only the wealthy will be able to afford to live near
mass transit. And we need to do it early, in the planning stages, because
once a station goes in, housing values shoot up — out of reach for working
families and the middle class.
I don't expect this to happen without a
fight, as special interests are already trying to kill this idea.
If you
want affordable communities where you can ride a train, a bus, or bike to
work instead of sitting in traffic, then please call or e-mail your local
lawmakers about this issue.
I believe that sense of community is worth
having, and that we simply cannot afford the high costs of suburban sprawl.
This legislation will help make transit-oriented communities an option for
everyone — not just the wealthy in the Puget Sound region. Our kids deserve
nothing less.
To view the story online, click
here.