Oregon bans single family home zoning
Posted by freedomforall 5 years, 9 months ago to Politics
"On Sunday, Oregon lawmakers gave their final approval to House Bill 2001, which would eliminate single-family zoning around the state. In cities with more than 25,000 residents, duplexes, triplexes, fourplexes, and “cottage clusters” would be allowed on parcels that are currently reserved for single-family houses; in cities of least 10,000, duplexes would be allowed in single-family zones."
It doesn't forbid single family dwellings, it frees the property owner to build whatever he wants.
Young people are getting priced out of the housing market. Part of the reason is that zoning laws are being used to artificially raise the price of existing housing by limiting the stock. This is not a use of government we should be applauding.
If Republicans really wanted to “gerrymander” on the sly, has the long term vision, and the insight they would have been pushing locally for restrictions that limit density. They could pretty much get away with it as well - watch how people in a single family neighborhood get riled up over new large apartment complexes going in.
They could do it under the guise of traffic control and quality of life. If they teamed that up with allowing light commercial and even light a industrial in those areas, they get a lock on those areas. Those types of areas are highly “walkable”. Lower density combined with walkable districts where business and living mingle would be havens for people who don’t feel the need to control others.
I’ve seen people personally make the transition in both directions. I’ve seen leftists become classical liberal after moving to a low density area and living for a while, and I’ve seen the opposite in friends who move to the big city.
Usually it happens when a non-subdividable One get changed to be subdividable. When that happens the price almost always goes up, and quite a bit. Thus the property taxes due. In many jurisdictions a secondary effect kicks in where subdivisble property gets taxed at a higher rate as well.
I don’t know what Oregon’s property tax rates and conditions are any more (haven’t cared for more than a decade), but it is Oregon so I wouldn’t doubt there is an unspoken motivation there. After all, we are talking about a state that taxes you based on rainfall and if you can see the ocean from your property.
There is yet another aspect to consider: HOA/POA limits. Of course, there will be knock on effects such as roads no longer being sufficient and traffic becoming s problem as places go higher density.
And finally, it is well known that the higher the population density the more the residents want government interference. I also wouldn’t put it last then to finally be paying attention to that. We’ve known this for decades, and it is a bit surprising neither side has leveraged it. Then again, politicians aren’t exactly know for long term thinking of late.
“A limited, rights-respecting government would have no welfare system and no forced pension-paying system like Social Security in the U.S. It would not have agencies with open-ended and vaguely defined regulatory powers. There would be no anti-trust law, nor zoning laws, nor anti-drug laws.”
https://atlassociety.org/objectivism/...
I used to have a friend when we lived in PA who was from Oregon, married to a very reasonable nice guy. She was a rabid liberal which wasn't very obvious b/c nobody in the friendship circle agreed with her, so she was considered an anomaly, ignored.
She moved back to Oregon and we lost touch. But I am sure she is very happy with the environment she is in now.
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