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| BATTLING SPRAWL | |
May 30 , 2000 |
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Lee Hochberg of Oregon Public Broadcasting has our story on drawing the lines on urban sprawl. |
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LEE HOCHBERG: This piece of farmland, 463 acres for sale outside Portland, Oregon, is the type developers crave.
LEE HOCHBERG: The land is flat, says Kelly Ross of the Portland Home Builders Association. It's close to a highway, right on the edge of an existing subdivision that's busting at the seams for more room. KELLY ROSS: Served by transportation, water, sewer, cities on both sides that would love to bring this piece of property in.
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SPOKESPERSON: The urban growth boundary around the Portland metropolitan area has served the region well. LEE HOCHBERG: A quarter-century later, Oregon proudly touts the approach in videos like this as a model for other states. While the Portland area population has surged 25% in two decades, its developed land has increased only 2%. Compare that with Chicago, where with only a tiny population increase, the amount of developed land there has ballooned by 50%. Oregon farmers, especially, seem to have benefited. For three generations, the Vanderzandaen family has grown grass, peas, and corn on these 1,250 acres 15 miles from Portland, just outside the growth boundary. Land they used to farm for people inside the boundary has been chewed up by suburbs.
LEE HOCHBERG: The Vanderzandaen property, and other plots just outside the boundary, are still farms. The Portland area farm economy generates $500 million in sales a year. And 86% of the state's top agricultural commodity, nursery products, are grown in Portland's metro area. BOB VANDERZANDEN: We would not be farming here if it weren't for that boundary. The growth would have just kept coming out.
LEE HOCHBERG: Jerry Johnson advises developers on land use laws. He says the boundary is choking Portland. Traffic congestion is as bad as New York City's. Though the boundary has been expanded some, Johnson claims it's a sacred cow among Portland's slow growth leadership and is nearly impossible to move. JERRY JOHNSON: We can't move it. I believe they've lost the ability to move it. Politically it's too much of a hot potato.
KELLY ROSS: The Portland region has gone from one of the most affordable housing markets in the country, to one of the least affordable. We're seeing home ownership decrease in the Portland region, at a time when it's increasing the rest of the nation.
LEE HOCHBERG: Rents are going up, too, prompting citizen protests. Homeless advocates say the number of low-income apartments in downtown Portland has dropped by one-third in five years.
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LEE HOCHBERG: Melissa Baker ended up in a shelter after the rent on her downtown apartment jumped from $395 to $475. The 23-year-old single mother is struggling to locate housing she can afford.
LEE HOCHBERG: And the inner-city infrastructure upon which low- income people like Baker depend, doesn't exist in the older suburbs to which they're moving. Critics say planners should've anticipated that when they put the boundary into place. JERRY JOHNSON: The huge problem is how do you serve this population? They're no longer concentrated, they're very difficult to serve. And, you know, they don't line up very well for transit now, in a ring around the metropolitan area that's roughly three miles out of the center. LEE HOCHBERG: But policy analysts say it's unfair to blame all of the price increases on the growth boundary. Ethan Seltzer directs Portland state university's institute of Portland metropolitan studies.
LEE HOCHBERG: And political leaders accuse developers of demagoguing the issue to erode support for the boundary. Mike Burton heads the Portland- area regional government. He says there are still 35,000 vacant acres inside the boundary-- enough for a 20-year supply of new homes-- but they're just not the most profitable parcels for builders to build upon. MIKE BURTON, Portland Area Regional Government: Those folks have built subdivisions and malls, and want to do them easy, cheap, and they're trying to make as much money right now as they possibly can before the market begins to flatten out.
LEE HOCHBERG: Critics blame the growth boundary for prompting such disincentives to hiring, at a time when Portland still has a 4% unemployment rate. JERRY JOHNSON: So we sort of get these perverse incentives for an employer not to hire people, which is actually what best serves the metropolitan area. LEE HOCHBERG: For all of its unintended results, Oregon leaders say the boundary's opponents haven't come up with anything better to keep sprawl out of the state's cherished countryside.
MIKE BURTON, Portland Area Regional Government: Look at places that are now having booms, like Colorado, where they're all... You know, the sprawl issue in Colorado/Denver area has businesses announcing to the government, "we may move," as they did in Atlanta, "because the quality of life here isn't any good." And here, we have businesses paying to stay.
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