HOW THE WAR ON SPRAWL CAUSED HIGH HOUSING PRICES
HIGH HOUSING PRICES have reached crisis proportions in much of the country. You can blame the war on sprawl for that.
Since the 1960s, planners have convinced many state and regional governments to limit the physical spread of urban areas. They called this “growthmanagement planning,” and the most common growth-management tool was an urban growth boundary. Outside such boundaries, development was practically forbidden.
About 99 percent of Oregon, for example, is outside of an urban growth boundary. In most of those places, families cannot build houses on their own land unless they own at least 80 acres, actually farm it, and have thereby earned $40,000– $80,000 per year (depending on soil productivity) in two
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