nancylebov: blue moon (Default)
nancylebov ([personal profile] nancylebov) wrote2006-06-03 06:09 am

The Feds and Land Use

An article from the NYTimes reviews two books which argue that large scale Federal policies have had a major and mostly bad, effect on land use in the US, partly a matter of encouraging people to build in dangerous areas and partly a matter of encouraging people spread out more than they otherwise would. In particular, one of the books argues the Federal highway system was designed in case of conventional war and the push to get people into the suburbs was dispersal in case of nuclear war.

The latter seems fairly stupid--I'm not sure if it didn't occur to them that small towns and cities would be a better idea, or if by the time it was clear that people were aggregating around big cities, the nuclear war thing had been forgotten, or if no one can figure out a way, even with the Feds leaning on it, to get people to live in small towns and cities. Or maybe the idea was to get people out of city centers, without much thought about where they'd decide to live instead. I leave open the possibility that encouraging people to move into the suburbs had some other purpose, though.

In any case, the article recommends looking for Federal solutions to the problem, which sounds rather risky--the whole point of Federal solutions is that they can override individual judgement on a large scale. Any suggestions for how the Feds could withdraw from that arena in a sensible way?

Re: People were moving away from US center cities as early as the 1830s

[identity profile] dr-zrfq.livejournal.com 2006-06-04 06:30 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't dispute the general anti-big-city bias, but [a] I don't think it has *anything* to do with the placement of state capitals -- that's far more a function of each state's particular politics at work, especially the desire to minimize RMS travel time to the capital in the age of horses; and [b] until the 20th century (and maybe not until after WW2) small towns, *not* suburbs, seem to have been more the norm.

Public Housing is put on cheap land. In the US, this was in the center cities near the urban core.

Only after the secretly (or not so secretly) racist Urban Renewal programs took hold.