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			<title>Reason Magazine - Staff</title>
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			<managingEditor>info@reason.com (Reason Online)</managingEditor>
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<title>A Desire Named Streetcar</title>
<link>http://www.reason.com/news/show/30039.html</link>
<description> &lt;p&gt;For Bob and Cathy Beck, the small community of Orenco, Oregon, seemed the perfect 
place to retire. Nestled in the heart of the scenic Tualitan and Willamette valleys, Orenco 
had roughly the same population--250 residents--that it had 50 years ago. Despite the rapid 
growth of Portland, located just 20 minutes away, Orenco is still surrounded by wide-open 
pastures, rickety barbed wire fences, and a nine-hole golf course built in 1953. &quot;Orenco 
seemed like the kind of place where we wouldn't be bothered,&quot; says Cathy Beck, who 
poured her savings into a new two-story home. &quot;It seemed so permanent.&quot;

&lt;p&gt;This permanence collapsed in the fall of 1995, when urban planners discovered 
Orenco's potential for &quot;transit-oriented development&quot; (TOD). The community happens to 
border a 28-mile light-rail line that connects downtown Portland with its western suburbs. 
Portland's regional planning board, Metro, announced that Orenco--a quiet section of the 
booming suburb of Hillsboro--would be an ideal site for a light-rail station. But Orenco's 
wide-open streets and spacious homes were too amenable to car travel. So, to encourage 
local residents to jump on the rails, the Hillsboro city council passed an ordinance requiring 
&quot;high density,&quot; multi-family TOD within Orenco's boundaries.

&lt;p&gt;The light-rail regulations are transforming a sleepy, suburban community into a dense,
 urban landscape. On a piece of undeveloped land directly behind the Becks's new home, 
workers have begun construction of 20 pink and white condominiums. Three more 
condominium and apartment developments, housing an estimated 120 new residents, will 
blanket Orenco's remaining undeveloped land. Urban planners hope developers will finish 
the construction by 1998, to coincide with the grand opening of Orenco's new light-rail 
station.

&lt;p&gt;While the Becks have no complaint with the light-rail system per se, they find the 
accompanying regulations needlessly stringent. In their spacious backyard, Cathy Beck had 
planned to build a small, one-story bungalow for her mother, who requires constant 
medical care. The local planning commission nixed the request. Under new minimum-
density zoning regulations, the Becks cannot build a one-room apartment unless they 
construct an additional four units on the same property--something they aren't willing to 
do.

&lt;p&gt;To avoid this hassle, the Becks considered selling their home and moving outside 
Portland's light-rail development area. But they say the market value of their property has 
fallen by 20 percent since the new development began earlier this year. Potential buyers are 
worried that Orenco has become too congested for a suburban home. &quot;We might as well be 
living next to an office building in downtown Portland,&quot; says Cathy Beck.

&lt;p&gt;The Becks are among many Oregon property owners frustrated with land-use 
regulations connected with Metropolitan Area Express (MAX)--the $2.6 billion light-rail 
project connecting downtown Portland with its swelling suburbs. Ever since Portland built 
its first MAX line a decade ago, light rail has been a regulatory quagmire.

&lt;p&gt;The new regulations require that all housing developments within two square miles of
a  light-rail station contain at least 12 units per acre--roughly double what was allowed under 
previous zoning laws. Moreover, most local governments in the Portland area have passed 
strict parking limits to discourage auto use near light-rail stations. In case these regulations 
are not enough, the state legislature recently passed Senate Bill 1156. This legislation gives 
Metro the power to overturn any local zoning law or ordinance that interferes with light-rail 
development.

&lt;p&gt;Developers who had planned to build commercial buildings or traditional suburban 
homes are now required to build apartment buildings, condominiums, or row houses. 
Homeowners who thought they were living in sleepy, suburban neighborhoods are finding 
themselves immersed in big-city neighborhoods.

&lt;p&gt;&quot;It doesn't matter how many people yell and scream,&quot; says Jon Chandler, director of 
governmental affairs for the Oregon Building Industry Association. &quot;If the government 
passes a law requiring apartment buildings, the government will get apartment buildings.&quot;
	
&lt;p&gt;Greg Specht, a Portland-area developer, knows that all too well. In 1988, he bought an
 option on 75 acres of prime land in Beaverton, a thriving suburb west of Portland. Specht 
planned to build on the land, which borders shoemaker Nike's corporate headquarters. But 
those hopes were dashed when the government announced plans for a new light-rail station 
next to his property. The Beaverton planning commission imposed minimum-density 
requirements and parking limitations on land surrounding the station. Then Metro required 
Specht to work with county and local governments to create a &quot;master plan&quot; for future 
development on his property.

&lt;p&gt;Although Specht was willing to comply with most of the new regulations, he found a 
limit of fewer than two parking spaces per housing unit--regardless of the size--
unreasonable. Most people, he insists, expect to have parking spaces for their cars, even--
perhaps especially--with a nearby light-rail station. After several meetings, however, the 
Beaverton planning commission refused to budge. So Specht sold his option to Nike, 
which declines to divulge any plans for the property. &quot;Had the government been just a little 
more lenient, I might still own that property,&quot; says Specht.

&lt;p&gt;Indeed, the political process offers property owners scant protection against these 
regulatory intrusions. Most Portland area residents do not own land near the new light-rail 
stations; they have little reason to sympathize with those who must overcome obstacles to 
development. Some are grateful the new regulations are confined to the light-rail corridor 
instead of their own neighborhoods. As a result, regular public meetings on light rail 
simply enable a majority--which reaps the benefits but not the costs of light rail--to demand 
more regulations on those who have the misfortune of owning land near a public 
infrastructure project.

&lt;p&gt;This is the political dynamic underscored in Richard Epstein's &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0674867297/reasonmagazineA/&quot;&gt;Takings: Private
Property  and the Power of Eminent Domain &lt;/a&gt; (1985). Public zoning laws, notes Epstein,
a University  of Chicago law professor, will almost always favor a broad majority interest over minority 
rights. &quot;Land-use regulation places the land back into a modified common pool,&quot; writes 
Epstein, &quot;where many persons can limit the future use of the land, even though only one 
person, the owner, can actually use it. Ill-defined rights replace well-defined ones.&quot;
Property rights groups such as Oregonians in Action are speaking out against the zoning 
and planning laws on the grounds that they are regulatory takings restricted by the U.S. 
Constitution. Unless the government can make a compelling case why these regulations 
will improve neighborhoods, argues Bill Moshovsky, vice president of Oregonians in 
Action, property owners should receive &quot;just compensation&quot; from those governments 
imposing the new regulations. &quot;We can't just let the government transform entire 
neighborhoods and communities without some accountability,&quot; he says.

&lt;p&gt;So far, Oregonians in Action has filed no legal challenges in the light-rail case,
choosing  instead to wage a publicity campaign against the onerous regulations. The group has had 
some notable successes. It prevailed in Dolan v. the City of Tigard (1994), a 
groundbreaking U.S. Supreme Court case that should offer some inspiration to property 
owners affected by light-rail regulations. In Dolan--a decision heavily influenced by 
Epstein's analysis--the Court ruled that a government must prove a &quot;rough proportionality&quot; 
between its regulations and the &quot;legitimate state interests&quot; it is trying to advance.
The Court ruled that a business owner could not be forced to build a public bike path and 
flood easement in exchange for a government permit to expand a hardware store. In this 
case, the &quot;state interest&quot; was to control traffic and floods. But the means--requiring one 
landowner to build public projects on her property--was ruled &quot;excessive.&quot;

&lt;p&gt;Oregonians in Action believes that Portland-area governments should be held 
accountable to this &quot;rough proportionality&quot; requirement. Zoning commissions, says 
Moshovsky, must explain how sweeping new regulations requiring dense development 
along a 28-mile light-rail corridor will accomplish a &quot;legitimate state interest.&quot; If this 
correlation cannot be made, then private landowners should be compensated for any costs 
incurred from the new regulations. 

&lt;p&gt;&quot;There is no reason why land-use planning should get all tangled up with light rail,&quot;
 says Moshovsky. &quot;Why target a minority of property owners to alleviate the excesses of 
the majority?&quot; If the streets are congested by automobile traffic and the environment 
damaged by engine emissions, continues Moshovsky, then the government should focus 
on auto users.

&lt;p&gt;Metro officials maintain that the state interest in light-rail regulations is that
dense living  arrangements and limited parking will keep thousands of people out of their cars. If more 
shops and housing units can be clustered near light-rail stations, Metro argues, then people 
will jump on the rails instead of the highways. That will mean less road building, reduced 
congestion, and less pollution. &quot;Unless government aggressively pursues planning 
opportunities [near light-rail stations], light rail is pointless,&quot; says Rajiv Batra, an urban 
designer with the city of Hillsboro.

&lt;p&gt;A combination of dense development and light-rail stations will create &quot;transit 
communities&quot; far preferable to traditional, suburban neighborhoods, say Metro officials. 
Once people ditch their cars, they will enjoy walkable neighborhoods, good bookstores, 
nice restaurants, and reduced pollution. &quot;Imagine a few years from now traveling home, at 
day's end, on Westside MAX. Along the way, you stop at one of the stations. Walking 
through the landscaped square, you order an espresso, stroll by a flower cart and stop at a 
newsstand to pick up a copy of the paper or your favorite magazine,&quot; reads one glossy 
Metro brochure. A computer-generated photograph depicts local residents making their way 
to the light-rail station by foot and bicycle.

&lt;p&gt;This idyll is based on the unproven assumption that people prefer rail transportation
to  auto use. Past evidence suggests that, even when Portland area residents have public-transit 
alternatives, they stick with their private vehicles. Since the city completed the first stage of 
its MAX line in 1986, more people are driving more miles every year. Although MAX 
ridership increased about 20 percent over the past decade, it remains far below predicted 
levels. In 1986, Portland's transit authority, Tri-Met, projected 42,500 daily riders; in 
1995, MAX carried only 25,000 riders per day. The percentage of work trips taken in the 
Portland area by light rail and buses actually dropped by 23.2 percent during the 1980s, 
according to Tri-Met. Virtually the same decline, 23.5 percent, occurred in Seattle, which 
does not have a light-rail line.

&lt;p&gt;The disappointing ridership of MAX should come as no surprise. With a few 
exceptions, Portland's light-rail project weaves through city traffic, making frequent stops 
along the way. The result is a scheduled operating speed of 19.6 miles per hour. That's 
roughly the same speed as a &quot;trolley car from the 1930s,&quot; notes Myles Cunneen, a 
Portland-based transportation consultant and former Tri-Met employee. &quot;Why would I 
jump on light rail and travel at 20 miles per hour when I could jump in my car and travel 
twice that speed?&quot; asks Cunneen.

&lt;p&gt;If the past is at all prologue in the Portland area, it seems unlikely that the
MAX-related  regulations will get people out of their cars and onto light rail. The more likely outcome, 
says Cunneen, is &quot;more people and more cars.&quot; With few parking spaces and tight living 
conditions, congestion will get worse. That's hardly brochure material.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">30039@http://www.reason.com</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 01 Nov 1996 00:00:00 EST</pubDate><author>info@reason.com (Christopher Serres)</author>
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