Quantcast willametteLive.com || Urban Growth Framework will weaken guidelines
ADVERTISEMENT
willametteLive.com advertising
willametteLive.com promotions
willamettelive.com - your source for news in the willamette valley Search - Classifieds - About / Advertise
Urban Growth Framework will weaken guidelines
By WillametteLive Editors
from WillametteLive, Section Green
Posted on Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 01:53:01 PM PDT

The amendment to weaken the Marion County Urban Growth Management Framework passed last night with a vote of 6-2 in favor.  

According to Tresa Horney of Oregon League of Conservation Voters, the Framework ensures that local residents have choices in housing and transportation while protecting community identity and economic opportunities. It also encourages more efficient urban land use by adopting specific residential density guidelines for cities to meet and helps protect agricultural land.  

Sid Friedman, a Willamette Valley Advocate for 1000 Friends of Oregon attended the hearing and called the evening a discouragement.  

"Those amendments significantly weaken the guidelines for residential density within Marion County's 20 cities," he said.

According to Friedman, eight people spoke in opposition to the amendments, raising issues of farmland protection, carbon footprint, the health benefits of walking and biking and the increased costs to taxpayers to serve more sprawling development. He also said the County received 8 or 10 letters in opposition.  

"No one testified in support of the amendments nor were there any written comments submitted in support of the amendments," Friedman said. Horney says that the Framework also protects farmland from urban sprawl, which, she says, is extremely important.

"The guidelines for compact development reduce our carbon output by making new development more walkable and bikable and making driving trips shorter. The guidelines should be strengthened, not weakened."

The speakers who attended the hearing represented 1000 Friends of Oregon, Salem Audubon, and several individuals, including at least one commercial farmer.  

"It was great to see both environmentalists and the agricultural community on the same side," Friedman said.  

Like this story? Share it!






Post Comment

Your opinion matters! This is your chance to add to the story and voice your opinion. Links are welcome and encouraged.

We also encourage you to register an account and to login prior to posting comments. However, this is not required to post a comment. If you are not logged in, the comment will be posted as "Anonymous."

Subject:

Comment:

Enter the two words below to prove that you are a legitimate user.

ADVERTISEMENT