King Co CAPR Precautionary Principle Discussion

King County CAPR’s Thursday, December 6th meeting featured speaker Daniel Himebaugh, of the Pacific Legal Foundation, who spoke about The Precautionary Principle vs. Essential Nexus.

An in depth discussion on the over-dependance on the theory of the precautionary principle of many in government and others making decisions regarding the environment and land use.

Here is a link to allow reading of the Paper written by Brian Hodges and Daniel Himebaugh:  papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1533574 , thanks to the Social Science Research Network for providing this online content.

SFBayArea CAPR chapter on the Blaze!

Our San Fransisco Bay Area CAPR chapter has been busy and effective!  Thank you Mimi Steel!

San Fransisco Bay Area Property Rights Activists receive recognition from Glenn Beck on Blaze TV, promoting local involvement to restore America. 

Glenn looks at Agenda 21 language, “Sustainability” “Smart”, and the motivations of the “International Council of Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI).  Mimi Steel, Rosa Koire, Art Scevola, and Thelma Taormina discuss the details of Agenda 21 and what to look at locally, and the connectedness of many aspects of your life that the many facets of Agenda 21 seeks to control. 

Listen and see if anything discussed here rings a bell for you.  As Rosa Koire said, “Freedom is a non-partisan issue”.  It is worth your time to view the entire program, however, below you can choose from links to see portions of the show, to the entire program.

Here is a quick link to the SFBayArea CAPR website:

http://www.capr.us/SFBAYAREA/ 

 Mimi Steel on THE BLAZE TV, Nov. 19, 2012

Take a look at SFB CAPR’s Mimi Steel on Blaze TV!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4AhCMbfzmoU&feature=youtu.be

If you would like to see more of the program, watch this 4 minute highlights spot here.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P8B3TmudmJw&feature=youtu.be

Here is a link to the entire program:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dxndpTCHuAk

Central Planning

Hippodamus of Miletus was a Greek architect of the 5th century BC. He was the first practitioner of urban central planning. His first project was the city of Miletus, an ancient city on the western coast of Anatolia (in what is now the Aydin Province of Turkey), near the mouth of the Maeander River. The site was inhabited since the Bronze Age. It is first mentioned in Hittite records as Millawanda. In the time of Hittite king Mursili II (ca. 1320 BC), Millawanda became a bridgehead for the expansion of the Mycenean Greeks in Asia Minor. Miletus was an important center of philosophy and science, producing such men as Thales (who Aristotle called the founder of natural philosophy), Anaximander and Anaximenes. It was where Hecataeus invented geography. It was destroyed by the Persians in 494 BCE, after they had defeated the navy of the Ionian Greeks at Lade. Miletus was rebuilt on a promontory, north of the old town. The gridiron plan of the new town, designed by the Hippodamus, became the standard for urban planning. One photograph that accompanies this article shows a model of the rebuilt city; the other shows how it looks now.

A cynic might say that the two photos are proof that good central planners can indeed reverse growth and recreate functioning wetlands.

Most central planners would have you think that their profession was recently created and has newly invented “smart growth” and “sustainable development” and “livable cities.” The truth is that the problems that they would like you to think that only they can fix are the results of previous plans by central planners.

They wring their hands and beat their breasts because those who live in suburbia must drive long distances to work, shop, recreate, and worship. Do they think we are so dumb that we do not know it was the zoning forced by central planners and their political supporters that prevented all those types of use in suburbia? Perhaps it is they who are too dumb to be in charge of the current “smart growth” experiment that will cause all the problems for the next generation of central planners.

King County DDES is systematically removing all uses except housing and hobby farming (mostly horses) in the RA zones of rural King County and calling it growth management. King County staff routinely call the RA zones “residential area,” not “rural agricultural.” Homes on five-acre lots (the RA zone minimum) where people sleep and then commute to their job in the city is the definition of suburban sprawl. Rural to me (born in South Dakota) is where you can live and work on the same ground. If you don’t want an “economy” sullying where you sleep, buy a home in a subdivision with strong covenants instead of moving to the country and trying to change your neighbors uses.

Smart growth proponents cry endlessly about expensive infrastructure outside the Urban Growth Line while forcing the sales tax dollars of rural residents into the cities so they can afford their infrastructure. Meanwhile residents of unincorporated King County pay a property tax rate of 14.23585 compared to Kirkland at 9.99742 or Mercer Island at 8.60698 or Medina at 7.91028 or even Seattle at 12.18121.

The following quote is from an article “Smart Growth, Open Space & Farm Land” by Smart Growth America, a coalition of major Smart Growth organizations. “Cost of Community Services (COCS) studies conducted in more than 83 communities show that owners of farm, forest and open lands pay more in local tax revenues than it costs local government to provide services to their properties. Residential land uses, in contrast, are a net drain on municipal coffers: It costs local governments more to provide services to homeowners than residential landowners pay in property taxes.”

It turns out that “saving farms and forests” is just a Machiavellian scheme to reduce the taxes of city folks. We couldn’t possibly provide rural folks some of the services for which they are taxed!