In Santa Barbara, CA the group Preserve Our Santa Barbara (www.preserveoursantabarbara.com) has been organized principally to lower building heights in their downtown and to further general objectives of neighbourhood preservation. They are well funded and running a slate of candidates in the upcoming civic election in which the subject of lowering downtown building heights will be a referendum item (Measure B). This is an example of community activism at its best and demonstrates how individual…
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Added by John Zeger on September 27, 2009 at 7:12am —
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Urban planners hoping to help mitigate CO2 emissions by increasing housing density would do better to focus on fuel-efficiency improvements to vehicles, investments in renewable energy, and cap and trade policies say some commentators as a recent report by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences finds that increasing population densities in metropolitan areas would yield insignificant CO2 reductions.
read the article and the report: http://www.technologyreview.com/energy/23343/?nlid=2323
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Added by John Zeger on September 7, 2009 at 1:30pm —
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Jack Hart, former managing editor of the Portland Oregonian says that controlling population is the only real answer to our environmental problems. Cut and paste this link to your browser bar to read his op-ed piece: http://www.populationmedia.org/2009/05/27/treading-on-a-taboo-overpopulation-in-america/
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Added by John Zeger on June 21, 2009 at 4:24pm —
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In the recent article in the journal Building, Research & Information "The ecological crisis and self-delusion:implications for the building sector," William Rees writes that, "The world's top ecologists and climate scientists tell us that global civilisation is on a collision course with biophysical reality ... we have 'overshot' long-term carrying capactiy ... staying on our growth-based path to global development virtually guarantees eventual catastrophe for billions of people." Yet despi…
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Added by John Zeger on June 13, 2009 at 8:30am —
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Cut and post the following URL into your browser window:
http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2009/05/27/opinion/commentary/z1542fd2c43455508882575ac00594897.txt
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Added by John Zeger on May 27, 2009 at 6:30am —
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In an excellent article, the U.S. based organization Population-Environment Balance explodes some of the myths that are used by "smart growth" proponents and concludes that the only real solution to our environmental problems is population growth control.
http://www.balance.org/articles/sprawl.html
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Added by John Zeger on April 9, 2009 at 6:00pm —
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A study of 15,000 people done by professors of Dublin City University and the University of California concludes that social interaction declines with increases in urban density. But we already know this intuitively as we have all experience big cities to be less friendly than smaller communities. This is yet another blow to the "smart growth" crowd that wants to cram all of us into high density urban centres.
http://www.archnewsnow.com/features/Feature255.htm
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Added by John Zeger on April 9, 2009 at 4:30pm —
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Being curious about the differences in the impact of growth through densification compared to growth by geographical expansion on traffic congestion, I used some data that was organized by Wendell Cox on major U.S. cities to do an analysis. I first looked at those cities that gained at least 10 percent population between 1990 and 2000 for which traffic congestion figures had been collected by the Texas Transportation Commission. I came up with 12 such cities. I then grouped these cities into thr…
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Added by John Zeger on December 16, 2008 at 10:30am —
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I have been musing that the currrent global economic slowdown may actually be a blessing in disguise as it will slow the alarming rate at which we have been gobbling up unrenewable resources and give us an opportunity to reorganize our economy and move from the growth ethic to the sustainability ethic. But before posting my opinions, I checked the web to see if anyone was thinking along the same lines and came upon this article by Dr. Glen Barry:
http://www.mail-archive.com/issues@ru.openoffice.…
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Added by John Zeger on November 20, 2008 at 8:30am —
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One of the fundamental principles of “Smart Growth” is to increase residential density by infill in existing areas, and by redeveloping existing residential areas more densely. The claim is that this will somehow create livable cities, reduce energy requirements and emissions, save farmland, and protect green space. Or, as the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency puts it, “density is (an) integral component to the creation of neighborhoods that offer convenience, value and a high quality of life…
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Added by Rick Shea on November 19, 2008 at 8:57pm —
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It is not racist or misanthropic to try to protect the environment and our children’s natural heritage. Yet that is typically the knee-jerk response to those who point out environmental reasons for halting human population growth. Those reasons cited include the current human-caused “Sixth Great Extinction,” collapse of ocean fish stocks and other sea life, emissions and pollution affecting our oceans and our weather, soil exhaustion and continued loss of arable land to concrete and asphalt, and…
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Added by Rick Shea on November 12, 2008 at 5:22pm —
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GoNanaimo.com announces the creation of the Nanaimo 50-Kilometer Holiday with seven self-guided tours within a 50-kilometer radius of Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada. As gasoline prices continue to rise, vacationing locally becomes more attractive and Vancouver Island has so much to offer. The 50-Kilometer Holiday includes two walking tours within Nanaimo and five driving/bicycling tours to nearby mid-island destinations. Each tour is carefully crafted wi…
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Added by David Stanley on November 10, 2008 at 11:40am —
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(This is written by, and posted at the request of, Tim Murray)
“We have increased sprawl which is a real problem, it’s related to bad land use planning. It’s related to bad policies that’ll affect where immigrants settle….it’s a problem, but curbing immigration is really focusing on the wrong, and rather trivial aspect of the problem.” Elizabeth May, leader, Green Party of Canada , May 17, 2006.
In the game of population growth,…
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Added by Rick Shea on September 28, 2008 at 8:30am —
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The City of Bloomington Environmental Commission has adopted a position statement and completed a report to increase awareness of growth and sustainable development. The statement, “Position of the City of Bloomington Environmental Commission on Economic Growth in the United States” is modeled on similar statements issued by the United States Society for Ecological Economics and over 40 other groups inspired by the work of the Center for the Advancement of a Steady State Economy (CASSE). The sta…
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Added by John Zeger on August 9, 2008 at 9:00am —
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Forbes reports that faced with the hugh investment required to expand Mexico City's infrastructure to accommodate significantly more growth, officials there have decided to use subisidies to encourage people to move elsewhere. According to Forbes, "'The plan is to curtail the growth of Mexico City (instead of facing it head on), ' says Owen Gutfreund, director of urban studies at Columbia University. That's not a bad approach, he figures, compared with the alternative: seeing the city's populati…
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Added by John Zeger on April 2, 2008 at 7:00am —
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"Growth has been the chief defining characteristic of our industrial economy. In the simpleminded commentary of the news business, growth is good (prosperity) and nongrowth is bad (depression). The more growth, the more business, the more prosperity, and vice versa. ... The boosters of this particular notion of growth -- namely, most mainstream economists -- do not recognize any limits to growth projected into the future. They'd prefer not to think about it because the conclusion is obvious: The…
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Added by John Zeger on March 25, 2008 at 8:00am —
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Faced with the potential of future water shortages, a majority of residents in Pheonix, Arizona favour population growth controls, a local newspaper has learned. In a survey of 3000 area residents, the Arizona Daily Star found that 55% were opposed to continued population growth. Sixty-seven percent of respondents expressed that fewer homes should be built and 71% favoured placing limits on building permits to conserve water. For the complete survey visit http://growth.azstarnet.com/result/surve…
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Added by John Zeger on March 24, 2008 at 9:46am —
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Further to my last post, here is an excellent article by Dr. Glen Barry that addresses the ubiquitous greenwashing of the destructive environmental practices prevalent in our society today. Dr. Barry clearly identifies the environmental crisis that we are in and condemns the half-measures that are being proposed to deal with it as being inadequate. He concludes that "To maintain a livable Earth there is no alternative to less people and consumption..." Cut and paste the following into your brows…
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Added by John Zeger on March 21, 2008 at 8:00am —
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In many communities such as the one where I live, growth controls are considered to be draconian measures that go against the principles of a free market economy. Residents of such communities that think of themselves as being progressively minded thus eschew such controls in favour of "green" development and advocate measures like LEED certified construction as a means to achieving sustainability.
In an excellent article posted on his blog, John Van Doren explodes the myth that such green cons…
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Added by John Zeger on March 9, 2008 at 4:00pm —
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"Sustainable development ... Many consider this noble policy morally superior to the laissez faire of business as usual. Unfortunately for us, these wholly different approaches, one the expression of international decency, the other of unfeeling market forces, have the same outcome: the probability of disastrous global change. The error they share is the belief that further development is possible and that the Earth will continue, more or less as now, for at least the first half of this centu
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Added by John Zeger on February 10, 2008 at 9:00am —
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