I like the way size is being controlled. Through legislation. Call it Mature Growth Zoning, but zoning it is and all of us are used to living with zoning regulations of one sort or another.
Zoning can also apply to proliferation of Starbucks and McDonald's, although here I think the constitutional lawyers would be brought into the fray. arthur -----Original Message----- From: Karen Watters Cole [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, June 11, 2003 10:07 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: Stephen Straker Subject: RE: [Fwd: RE: [Futurework] Local living economies] Stephen, there are organizations collecting and distributing this accountability data for citizens and land use development professionals to use. More important however is that the general public is realizing that it is not an inevitability that Corporate Rule will prevail. Maybe this is the Second American Revolution, where independent-minded people realize that they don't really have to be trapped in an imperial corporate state. The point here is NOT to overthrow large multinational corporations, but to provide a viable ALTERNATIVE, and the role of public policy in the last decades has clearly been on the side of the corporation. The Movement, if it can be called that, is calling for leveling the playing field. How old fashioned American does that sound? As I read the literature and explore websites, just as I would on anything else new to learn, I am trying to differentiate between the essence and those who take it too seriously. Building alternatives to runaway corporate ownership appears to be focusing on issues of scale, issues of place and issues of ownership. The Old Paradigm of "grow or die" and accepting that all competition is fair and/or healthy, is in decline. More companies are examining business practices with a "triple bottom line" - profits, people and planet - for a healthier measurement of performance representing all stakeholders. Even megastores have to be interested in their long term market viability in an area in order to realize a sustainable growth. ILSR is promoting their The New Rules web site, described as a "searchable collection of public policies that support strong local economies" and their banner reads Designing Rules as if Community Matters. (see www.newrules.org) Again, according to the Institute for Self-Reliance and others like it, there are dozens of cities banning stores over a certain size: Easton, MD capped stores to 65,000 sq ft (about half the size of a typical Home Depot). Hood River, Oregon, just up the Columbia River from me, set 50,000 sq ft (it's hilly and relies on one interstate for traffic and swamped with wind surfers most of the year now but already famous for apples and pears). Boxborough, MA set 25,00 sq ft (which is smaller than most Borders bookstores), indicating that depending on the size of the town smaller limits can be achieved. Chain stores are taking notice, of course. Some are interested in a less centralized approach. Here in Gresham where I live there is a new modified mixed use retail project that has brought developers and professionals from all over the country to see for themselves. We have light rail and this has contributed to the success of these smaller, walk-around developments. Other communities are banning formula retail like McDonald's, tying future expansion to per capita growth. Some object to the proliferation of a Starbucks on every other corner, some want more variety in their architectural sense of place. These are not outright bans to prohibit their operating business, but insisting on diversity. Some might also say it is insisting on fair commerce, a novel idea, wouldn't you say? Other communities are actively promoting local merchants first. Boulder, CO, Salt Lake City, Santa Fe are a few out here. Others are creating regional alliances, such as the Cape Cod Commission. Of course, some will consider this anti-American. I see it as just another exercise in independence and diversity and very much in the American spirit. When one force tends to dominate and suffocate another, there is change all right, but that change may be short lived. My interest, as a non businesswoman, is the re emergence of the human spirit towards community. The human spirit does not want to be suppressed forever and will seek to breathe freely, seek the light and grow. KWC See: American Independent Business Alliance @ www.amiba.net Business Alliance for Local Living Economies @ www.livingeconomies.org Council of Independent Restaurants of America @ www.ciraonline.org National Main Street Center @ www.mainst.org Sprawl Busters @ www.sprawl-busters.com SS: This is excellent stuff. And yet, Arthur is completly right - people "vote" for these things whenever they're made available. The only cases of opposition I know of - such as the town of Greenfield, Massachusetts - occur *before* the fact when political leadership takes a stand, such as a city council refusing a zoning or building permit. It occurs to me that in this as in so many things there is not a proper ACCOUNTING. The reason WalMart has low prices is because you're paying for that propane barbecue everywhere else where its cost is disguised (as Stacy & co. say, in property taxes, etc.). I'd like to see some creative accounting put out that shows, say, - the real "price" of a propane barbecue at Wlamart - the real "price" of a litre/gallon of gasoline This would be, like, a progressive rebuttal to the right-wing think tanks - like BC's Fraser Institute - that have learned to garner publicity with dishonest crap like TAX FREEDOM DAY (when to much fanfare on the day they put out a news-release explaining that "until today everything you have earned has been taken by the government; only today do you get to keep your own earnings ..." I always want to say - OK you buggers, have your tax freedom on 1 January and we'll follow you around and BILL you whenever you cost us money ... rise & shine! - flushing the toilet - 3�, brushing your teeth - 1�, use of sidewalk - 4�, traffic light - 1� ... and so on. My goodness those guys make me mad. Has anyone done this proper kind of "social cost" accounting? THEN people would have a better idea of whether they're saving money or whether the convenience is worth it when they choose Home Depot. Stephen Straker _______________________________________________ Futurework mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://scribe.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework _______________________________________________ Futurework mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://scribe.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework _______________________________________________ Futurework mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://scribe.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework
