Abolish Zoning—All of It
It'll be better for economic growth, housing, and the environment.

As Americans, we take comfort in the idea that we have the right to plan our own lives. We are unique in our confidence that it is within our power to move to a better life, as so many of our ancestors did. Where other countries talk about managing stagnation and even decline, we stand undaunted in our assurance that the limits of our wealth and the frontier of innovation lay well into the future. Liberated from Old World hierarchies, we Americans fancy our home a place where any person, regardless of their color, creed, or class background, can improve their lot. And if there are broader forces that threaten our way of life, so much the worse for them; progress, and the change it brings, is intrinsic to who we are.
The idea that a stodgy rule book could set the terms of our lives from on high is fundamentally at odds with our national ethos. And yet, such is the state of America under zoning. From unremarkable origins, the arbitrary lines on zoning maps across the country have come to dictate where Americans may live and work, forcing cities into a pattern of growth that is segregated and sprawling. Once the exclusive domain of local planners, concurrent crises surrounding housing costs, underwhelming economic growth, racial and economic inequality, and climate change have thrust zoning into the public consciousness.
Now more than ever, there is an appetite for reform. Yet we can do better: It's time for America to move beyond zoning.
At surface level, zoning is an impossibly boring topic, even by the terms of public policy debate. The mere thought of a weeknight zoning hearing or a 700-page zoning ordinance is enough to make even the most enthusiastic policy wonk's eyes glaze over. Until recently, zoning might have been blithely dismissed as a mere technical matter, simply a way of rationalizing our cities, a planning policy so obvious as to be beyond reproach.
But zoning is at once so much less and so much more. While occasionally used as a stand-in for city planning or building regulations more broadly, its scope is far more limited: At a basic level, all zoning does is segregate land uses and regulate densities. Your local zoning ordinance sets out various districts, each with detailed land use and density rules, while an associated local zoning map establishes where these rules apply. The bread and butter of what most people think of as city planning—such as street planning or building regulations—has almost nothing to do with zoning.
Yet from these seemingly innocuous zoning rules have emerged a set of endlessly detailed parameters controlling virtually every facet of American life. Arbitrary lines on zoning maps determine where you can live by way of allowing housing to be built here but not there. Through a dizzying array of confusing and pseudoscientific rules, from "floor area ratio" restrictions to setback mandates, zoning serves to heavily restrict the amount of housing that may be built in any given neighborhood and the form it may take. In most major cities, zoning restricts roughly three-quarters of the city to low-slung, single-family housing, banning apartments altogether.
The combined effect is that, in already built-out cities, zoning makes it prohibitively difficult to build more housing. As a result of the further tightening of zoning restrictions beginning in the 1970s, median housing prices have dramatically outpaced median incomes in many parts of the country over the past half-century, such that millions of Americans now struggle to make rent or pay their mortgage each month. That is if they have the luxury of having a stable home at all: In places where demand for new housing is especially high—as in cities like New York and Los Angeles—zoning restrictions have facilitated acute housing shortages, with attendant surges in displacement and homelessness. The COVID-19 pandemic has only expedited these trends, with home prices in 2020 rising at the fastest rate since 1979.
The arbitrary restrictions that zoning places on cities also show up in our capacity to grow and innovate as a nation. By severely limiting new housing production in a handful of our most productive cities—including San Jose and Boston—we have made moving to our most prosperous regions a dubious proposition. Your income might double if you were to move from Orlando to San Francisco, but your housing costs would quadruple. Should we be surprised that many people are turning down that deal? For the first time in history, Americans are systematically moving from high-productivity cities to low-productivity cities, in no small part because these are the only places where zoning allows housing to be built. According to the 2020 census, the population of California—one of our most productive and innovative states—is now basically stagnant, such that the Golden State will be losing a congressional seat for the first time in its 170-year history.
The downstream economic implications of this unprecedented reversal of historic trends are hard to overstate. After all, big cities make us more productive, in that they allow us to find a job perfectly suited to our talents and exchange ideas with colleagues working on the same issues. They provide a platform for individuals to experiment and innovate, nursing the young firms that go on to remake the American economy every few decades. To the extent that zoning has made it exponentially more difficult for Americans to move to these hubs of activity—for a software engineer to relocate to San Jose or for a medical researcher to relocate to Boston—we are all poorer as a result.
Even beyond so-called "superstar cities," zoning shapes American life in many subtle but nefarious ways. As the Black Lives Matter movement has thrown into stark relief, America still has a long way to go in providing equal opportunity for all. And yet, few American cities recognize the fact that their zoning codes were drafted with the express intention of instituting strict racial and economic segregation. To this day, "the wrong side of the tracks" is not merely a saying but a place that is written into law as a zoning district drawn on a zoning map. To the extent that zoning can prohibit apartments in this neighborhood, or require homes to sit on a half-acre lot in that suburb, zoning is perhaps the most successful segregation mechanism ever devised.
This state of affairs is as true in the conservative suburbs of southern cities like Nashville and Atlanta as it is in progressive midwestern college towns like Ann Arbor and Madison. Tucked away behind a veil of "protecting community character," zoning has been used to determine who gets to live where since its inception. In practice, this has been used toward the end of rigid economic segregation, which in the American context often means racial segregation. In virtually every suburb in America, zoning maintains a kind of technocratic apartheid, preserving those areas most suitable for housing for the wealthy while locking less privileged Americans into neglected areas far from good jobs and quality public services.
Similarly, zoning makes more environmentally friendly forms of urban growth effectively illegal. By banning developers from building up, zoning forces them to build out. In the 2020s as in the 1950s, the lion's share of American housing growth continues to occur out on the edge of town, gobbling up farmland and natural areas that might otherwise have remained unbuilt. Despite burgeoning demand among a cross-section of Americans for apartments and town houses closer to job centers, zoning locks cities into an urban design pattern—single-family homes sitting on vast lawns—that increasingly doesn't make environmental sense. Smaller homes with a shared wall can dramatically reduce residential energy consumption, and thus emissions, yet this is precisely the type of housing that zoning makes most difficult to build.
At the same time, zoning assumes universal car ownership and all the emissions and traffic violence this entails. It does so by strictly segregating uses—no more corner groceries in neighborhoods—and forcing developers to build giant parking garages even in contexts where most residents or employees might prefer to bicycle or take the train. If you have ever wondered why more Americans don't walk or ride buses to work, as in most other developed countries, the simple answer is that it's illegal. In most American cities, zoning prohibits the densities needed to support regular bus service, let alone light rail. The type of walkable, mixed-use, reasonably dense development patterns that might help to ameliorate climate change—patterns that prevailed before the 20th century—are outright prohibited under most American zoning codes.
The good news is that it doesn't have to be this way. Reform is in the air, with cities and states across the country critically reevaluating zoning. In cities as diverse as Minneapolis; Fayetteville, Arkansas; and Hartford, Connecticut, the key pillars of zoning are under fire, with apartment bans being scrapped, minimum lot sizes dropping, and off-street parking requirements disappearing altogether. Misbehaving suburbs find themselves under increasingly strict state scrutiny, with tighter rules requiring that each municipality allow its fair share of housing. More broadly, American urbanists are looking abroad for alternative ways to regulate land, including Japan's liberal approach to zoning.
But we can do better than small reforms. After all, zoning isn't merely a good policy misapplied toward selfish ends. Zoning is a fundamentally flawed policy that deserves to be abolished. Set aside for a moment the debilitating local housing shortages, the stunted growth and innovation, the persistent racial and economic segregation, and the ever-expanding sprawl: The very concept of zoning—the idea that state planners can rationally separate land uses and efficiently allocate density—has repeatedly failed to materialize. Far from the fantastical device imagined by early 20th-century planners, zoning today has little to do with managing traditional externalities and works largely untethered from any guiding comprehensive plan.
It's high time we accept the need for zoning abolition and start thinking about what comes next. Happily, zoning is hardly the final word on managing urban growth. Cities found ways to separate noxious uses and manage growth for thousands of years before the arrival of zoning, and they can do the same after zoning. Indeed, some American cities—including Houston, America's fourth-largest city—already make land use planning work without zoning. To the extent that zoning has failed to address even our most basic concerns about urban growth over the past century, it's incumbent on our generation to rekindle this lost wisdom and undertake the project of building out a new way of planning the American city.
The very first zoning code turned 100 years old in 2016—a zoning code predicated on keeping poor Jewish factory workers away from the posh Fifth Avenue shopping district. The Supreme Court decision that deemed zoning constitutional will turn 100 in 2026—a decision that infamously referred to apartments as "parasites" and tacitly endorsed class segregation. These dual centennials may be interpreted in either of two ways. On the one hand, they might speak to the inevitability of zoning. Perhaps zoning has been chiseled too deeply into the American city to be removed, leaving wounds too deep to be healed. Maybe the best we can do would be to make zoning ever so slightly less bad. If that's the case, so be it.
On the other hand, the fact that zoning is only now turning 100 might speak to the fact that we shouldn't take it for granted. A 100th anniversary is as good a time as any for a reevaluation: When zoning first started to come online in the 1920s, nationwide alcohol prohibition was the law of the land, the doctrine of "separate but equal" defined race relations, and eugenics captured the imagination of governing elites. Needless to say, the times have changed. This is certainly true of cities: Around the time of zoning's widespread adoption, nearly every major American city had doubled in size over the preceding 30 years, urban industry was still viable, and mass suburbanization and car ownership were only beginning to ramp up. The conditions that defined American cities have changed dramatically over the past century. Why shouldn't the way we plan them also change?
The premise behind zoning was simple: By defining and segregating different land uses and controlling densities, city planners would be able to separate incompatible neighbors and plan for orderly growth. Of course, it hasn't worked out that way; zoning has failed to efficiently deal with the messy spillover effects that nip at urban life, at once ignoring those activities that actually drive conflict—be it noise, or traffic, or lighting—while segregating uses with no such compatibility issues—such as the common zoning prohibition on small apartment buildings in single-family neighborhoods. At the same time, zoning has undermined the goals of efficient growth management, driving growth out onto the periphery, where new infrastructure must be built and new services must be provided, and out of existing urban areas, which could have accommodated additional growth at little additional cost.
The good news, at this ominous centennial, is that it doesn't have to be this way. In the near term, reforming zoning makes sense. Reining in the worst excesses of zoning, such as single-family zoning, minimum lot sizes, and off-street parking requirements, would certainly help to stop the bleeding. But we can do better. In no uncertain terms, zoning should be abolished. Zoning is not only ineffective in achieving its stated goals—it's also unnecessary. In our focus on drawing district boundaries or listing out permitted uses, we have lost touch with the innumerable ways that cities organize themselves, from the natural use separation helped along by land markets to the bottom-up agreements formed by neighbors. Where these institutions fail, a robust set of impact regulations for new development and a civil service committed to managing—rather than stalling—growth would do a far better job than zoning at keeping neighbors happy and quality of life up. Now is the time to rediscover these lost traditions and start planning for what comes after zoning.
This isn't to say that an urban utopia lies on the other side of zoning. Housing will always be slightly more expensive in superstar cities. There will always be considerations besides the cost of living that keep folks from moving to thriving cities. Healing the scars of racism and classism will take decades, if not centuries. And national action—better yet, international action—is needed to address issues like climate change. Indeed, zoning isn't even the only policy that stands in the way of better cities. In some states, misguided environmental review mandates are at least as likely as zoning to stymie new housing. State-based occupational licensing regimes often keep people locked in place. Historic preservation tools are increasingly misappropriated toward exclusionary ends. And subdivision regulations play no small role in driving sprawl, mandating wide roads and wasted open space.
Yet the fact remains that abolishing zoning is a necessary—if not sufficient—change if we want to build a more affordable, prosperous, equitable, and sustainable American city. While earlier generations may have been excused for ignoring the arbitrary lines that have impoverished American life, we don't have that luxury. We now know beyond a shadow of a doubt that our century-long experiment with zoning has been a failure. But rather than a condemnation, this realization should serve as an invitation: an invitation to rethink the rules that will shape American life—where we may live, where we may work, who we may encounter, how we may travel—across the century to come. If the task before us seems daunting, the good news is that we have nowhere to go but up.
This essay is adapted from Nolan Gray's new book, Arbitrary Lines: How Zoning Broke the American City and How to Fix It, by permission of Island Press.
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If you like Houston, you'll love this column. Unfortunately, no one does. People live there for the jobs and while now the 4th largest city in the US it's not even in the top 15 for tourism.
Orlando says Houston can suck it!
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You beat me to it. First thing I thought of reading this nonsense. Had a close relative transfered down there - even though they doubled the size of their house and had a pool, they couldn't wait to to get back to the sanity and common sense of zoning.
"Yeah, Houston is successful, but not the right kind of successful, and the reason for that is my total non-sequitur."
Or perhaps Houston is low on tourism because the weather is terrible and the beach is half an hour away (and terrible). You can't use zoning laws to control the weather.
New York has extremely tight zoning and is a tourism magnet. My double-regression analysis points to an extremely tight correlation. It's science, bro.
" US it's not even in the top 15 for tourism"
It's probably number one in the number of oil refineries within city limits.
Obviously, you have never seen the horrific city planning in socialist countries.
I have. It's surprisingly similar.
As I was saying: obviously, you have never seen the horrific city planning in socialist countries.
I have. It's uncannily similar.
I'll take one on my back yard if we can bring back at least $1 a Gallon gas, Mr. Watermelon.
Liberty —even of the anarcho variety— includes the freedom to adopt rules or to live in a neighborhood or a city which has certain rules.
Only if the neighborhood or city owns all the land and is merely renting it to you, or you voluntarily choose to abide by those rules.
The moment you enforce those rules on others on their own property, you're outside liberty.
That's the trick, isn't it? No matter where you go, you pay property tax. It's literally impossible to truly "own" property. You pay the money, you get the shiny piece of paper, but it's never truly yours.
That's incorrect. Many properties are covered by CC&R's, easements, and other private, contractual arrangements, enforceable rules against other people on their property.
The problem with zoning laws is not that they impose restrictions on other people's property, the problem with zoning laws is that they are the result of political processes rather than private agreements.
I like Houston... they have so many Buccee's. Also, lots of really good museums. Lots of rich people live there and because it's easy to build they do. Cool town.
Tourism jobs are not necessarily a great indicator of how livable a city is. City leaders should try to make it better for residents, not for guests. Houston has abundant housing, which is more affordable than housing in other more tightly regulated cities of comparable size. It also has abundant corporate HQs, with much better paying jobs than the tourism industry offers.
Fuck off, slaver. Zoning is a racket.
-jcr
Cities are for the people who live there, what does it matter if it is low in tourism?
PS Some Libertarians are getting into bed with leftist urban planners who think all zoning is inherently racist and this must end for their to be justice and "affordable housing" in our future - see Portland, Oregon where this is now official policy and the law. In my town, there is a movement for this based in a very young woke city council where the actual political opposition has come from black council members who's own historic neighborhoods are being ruined by apartment buildings. They weathered the expressways but now face this onslaught.
The libertarian argument against zoning is simple: if you own property you get to choose what to do with it without begging for permission from the government.
There is a reason they call certain people or ideas, 'simpleminded'.
If you must ask permission and risk being denied when you want to do something on your property, then it isn't your property. You're just paying rent to the local government.
Ohhhhhh, you weren't making an argument. You were trying to impress the trolls.
Sorry for confusing you with someone worth having a conversation with.
My bad.
Of course it's your property. If you can't tell the difference between paying rent an owning real estate you're really not up for this discussion.
Stop paying
property taxesrent to the town and tell me who really owns the real estate.You own the property sarcasmic. The property is in one governmental division or another and you will pay taxes to them, but still own it. Even Wyoming counties collect taxes. If you are a renter you will not pay taxes directly, though the landlord surely passes on that expense if he's not an idiot.
Sorry to break the facts of life for you.
Do something with your property without first
getting a permitasking the landlord and then tell me you're not renting it from the city.I pay taxes to the county in which I reside. When I build, I get a permit.
I am not renting from the county.
Any other requests?
it is also very libertarian to want to live in a place where a bar or a factory is not next door.
The alternative to zoning is not a pig farm in every backyard. See NOYB2's comment below.
That's the moral argument -- people should be free to do what they want with their property, unless they create a nuisance or safety hazard. It's also an economic argument -- you can't find the highest economic use of a piece of property if its uses are arbitrarily constrained to certain functions.
So zoning does maximize freedom and economic value. I'm not so sure about the environment though -- I'm thinking of high end condos and gated communities in Yosemite, and Branson/Vegas style mass entertainment in Yellowstone and at the Grand Canyon.
But, we have to consider how what you are choosing to do with it impacts other's and their property.
Hence, a 24 hour corner grocery store at the end of one's street would have significant impact on the enjoyment of one's property used for residential purposes. You know the old, "Your liberty to swing your arm freely through the air ends where my nose begins".
Hence, like laws against murder or theft, zoning. Along with planning related regulations. Another item that impacts the absolute freedom of each of us but might be necessary to coerce some to not impact the liberty of others.
I'm often frustrated by such restrictions myself. But I'm more frustrated when my next door neighbor sets up an archery shoot in his backyard with only the fence between our properties as a backstop.
"Hence, a 24 hour corner grocery store at the end of one's street would have significant impact on the enjoyment of one's property used for residential purposes."
Positive or negative enjoyment? I would love to have a 24-hr corner grocery store at the end of my street.
They're not getting into bed with leftist urban planners except out of convenience. Libertarians aren't opposed to zoning because it's racist; they're opposed to it because it's a wholly unnecessary violation of the NAP. You can say, "BUT HOUSTON!" and they'll reply, "what about it?"; this is why under no circumstances should zoning be anything more than a local issue.
I'm fine with however a city wants to handle the zoning issue, but as usual you can't countenance the idea that anybody else would have a different preference, or that you might have to live under a regime that doesn't reflect your sensibilities. Grow the fuck up already.
Zoning shouldn't just be a local issue, it should also be voted on only by property owners in a neighborhood. We call that kind of arrangement an HOA.
HOAs only apply to those in a given subdivision. So depending on how big it is you may be living next to a pig farm.
HOAs can be as big or small as they want to. In a libertarian society, you'd likely be a member of several HOAs, for roads, for architectural standards, etc.
Furthermore, subdivisions tend to have natural geographic boundaries anyway.
Not in the flatlands and newer sunbelt states they don't. Section lines and further divisions of them rule.
Yes, even in the flat lands and newer sunbelt states; there, those geographic boundaries are green belts created by the HOA, precisely in order to avoid exposing some home owners to neighboring hog farms.
See, these problems have perfectly good free market solutions.
? In your dreams! Developers design and build these places and will have a "green belt" only if forced to in most cases. They also create the legal framework for the HOAs so they can dump responsibility.
Well, maybe in the kind of fly-by-night HOAs you buy into.
In any case, if you buy a home on the edge of an HOA without a greenbelt, the risk that your neighbor may become a hog farm is priced in.
Still no government needed.
I'm not in an HOA. I live next to one. It was setup by the developer as part of the development, and he's long off the hook.
And HOAs naturally attract freedom loving individuals to govern them....
Well, somehow people need to coordinate their activities and share power in the real world.
You have a choice between (1) politically appointed career bureaucrats with no stake, no property, and raw power, and (2) representatives of property owners with an actual stake in the outcome.
The question isn't whether either organizational form attracts power hungry individuals, the question is which one is less bad.
Wrong! HOAs are like union closed shops. I can't buy a home in an HOA development without "joining", paying dues and having to abide by whatever rules the HOA wishes to lay down.
It's a contract made by force. It isn't two willing parties.
I did not know that all homes are in HOA control. Thanks for sharing your vast knowledge.
I'm also fine with local - city or county - control of zoning. Nowhere have I said or implied otherwise. That doesn't mean I'd agree with every zoning ordinance or urban plan.
If you live in Florida, local control is under assault by DeSantis and the Sate legislature. In Oregon, I believe they have passed some state laws going in the direction of Portland on zoning.
This headline is irresponsible and absurd click bait.
How about reducing several of the most onerous zoning laws before calling for all zoning to be abolished.
For once, Reason goes too far in advocating liberty?
Because only removing the worst zoning laws is like delicately trimming back the weeds in your garden. The worst zoning laws create the biggest problems, but the best zoning laws still create small problems. There's no good reason for them to be there at all, in any form, no matter how well crafted.
Excellent idea.
I've worked with planners and zoning in my profession. They love just pushing little colored pieces around on a city map and making statements such as, "What we want to see here is....". They assume the control of ownership, without ever gaining ownership.
This article is long- almost repetitive- on "Hey here are the reasons we need to change things" and extremely light on what those changes would look like. Vague references to "Civil Committees" and "Bottom Up" control.
But at the end of the day you need to explain to parents how your changes won't result in their neighbor opening a strip club next to the local school.
Or convince them that it wouldn't be such a bad thing. Maybe a weekly storytime session involving the local talent would help. Kids need all the culture they can get.
I hope a nasty smelling hide rendering plant gets built next door to this clown.
On topic, the goal of zoning is control by the government, not benefits to the citizens.
If he really wants this freedom utopia he will stop writing this stuff and work 24/7 to stop every democrat on the planet.
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Any fucktard who channels pseudo libertarian hatred for zoning deserves to buy house surrounded by a 12 story low income apartment building (with no dedicated parking), an outdoor concert venue, a cattle feed lot, and a Diesel engine testing facility.
How is it that these cosplay libertarians refuse to understand that residential zoning is essentially based on voluntary agreements? Some people wish to live with certain mutual restrictions, and buy houses and land accordingly. It does not sound very libertarian for others to tell those owners they can't do that.
Zoning originally was based on voluntary agreements, but it has become political, meaning that people with no economic interest in the properties are imposing their will on others through the political process. These days, zoning is often abused to impose progressive preferences on property owners. So, there are reasons for libertarians to reject zoning as it exists right now.
However, the answer is not a free-for-all. The libertarian answer to zoning is HOAs and CC&Rs: local restrictions within neighborhoods that are decided on only by property owners based on their economic interests.
But, both HOAs and CC&Rs - which the HOA is set up to enforce anyway - are attached to the property forever. (There are still od race restrictive CC&Rs on the titles of some properties even though they're illegal now and can't be enforced. But, the can't just be stricken from the title documents either.)
A buyer has no choice but to join the "club", pay dues and adhere to the actions of the local Karen's.
I have no objection to such restrictions if they are solely designed to protect the health and well being of the residents. But most go way, way beyond that. Including many esthetic elements.
That is incorrect: HOAs can dissolve themselves, and they frequently do.
You have the choice of every free citizen in a free country: you have the choice not to buy if you don't like the CC&Rs.
And why shouldn't blacks or Koreans or Jews or the Amish be allowed to have such restrictions?
And why shouldn't people have the choice to live in a neighborhood of upscale Roman-style villas, or Swiss mountain chalets?
Hey, I'd love having Creedence Clearwater & Revival as neighbors! 🙂
The premise behind zoning was simple: By defining and segregating different land uses and controlling densities, city planners would be able to separate incompatible neighbors and plan for orderly growth.
You've just described government. Hayek described this as "the fatal conceit", the idea that some group of elites was more suitable to run everybody's lives rather than allow everybody to run their own lives. The problem with things not working out as planned is that we just haven't found the right people to run things yet.
So, are people allowed to have CC&Rs for their neighborhoods? Do they vote on changes to the CC&Rs? Or is government going to prohibit CC&Rs by law?
I mean, that's effectively how the US started out, as a large collection of HOAs in which only property owners could vote, making voluntary, limited agreements for common defense.
WokeReason wants the government to prohibit voluntary limited agreements (HOAs etc) because all voluntary limited agreements are racist.
I wouldn't ban CC&Rs and HOAs...But the only thing I personally would want from an HOA is private utilities, private garbage collection, private lawn collection, private security, and private maintenance of amenities. You know, things that actually benefit homeowners.
I wouldn't want some Real Property Fashion Police telling me I couldn't have a vegetable garden, rose bushes, a worm bed, pets, or a flag pole. If they're going to do that, then the Promoters and and Attorneys for such organizations are a bunch of HOA-Mongers running a Sliver Estates or a revamped Stepford. I don't need so much organization as to live in a suburban BDSM commune.
Correction: Private lawn care, though collection of trimmings is a plus.
Which leads to nonsense like block after block of 8-story office buildings, with no residential apartments and no grocery stores and no restaurants, so people have to drive on the crowded city street to go get a cheeseburger, and then drive on the crowded highway to get home.
When you could have apartments on the top floors and restaurants on the bottom and office space in the middle.
I live in a small town in CA and drive 1hr to work in Sac. We don't want a factory in the mountains. End of story. We are willing to drive to the valley for work because where I'm at is no place for large industry. How would changing the zoning laws make living in my town better? Except for the business owners. Plus there is the issue of water.
People are willing to drive an hour to work in California because they can't afford to buy a house where the jobs are. Because of zoning restrictions and building restrictions.
Money is NOT the only consideration.
I love my suburb. I have always lived in suburbs. I like the yard. I like the open space. I like being able to see the horizon.
I'd prefer country living actually. But have never been able to swing it for many reasons. And money, other than having an income, wasn't the restriction.
I'd never live in an urban environment. I was born in one. I hate them. Loud. Dirty. Noisy. Expensive. I had four generations of family there (San Francisco) until the early 1970's, when the last one moved out......to the suburbs.
The writer here skirts dangerously close to the new urbanism I'm familiar with. Forcing everyone into rabbit warrens in dense, urban environments and limiting personal mobility to public transit, walking or biking. A very myopic view.
The new urbanist's proposition is fine for young, single professionals. Walking and biking are the dead give away as are all the elevation changes required for this vision. When you have kids, or grow old and physically can't walk a half mile and back to the ridiculously expensive, mom and pop market you'll understand. THERE IS NO ONE SIZE FITS ALL WHEN IT COMES TO WHERE AND HOW WE LIVE.
I live in a small town drive 1hr to work in Sac. We don't want a factory in the mountains. End of story. We are willing to drive to the valley for work because where I'm at is no place for large industry. How would changing the zoning laws make living in my town better? Except for the business owners. Plus there is the issue of water.
And wildfire. Part of the new urbanist response to the last few years of wildfires, other than PC theater vilifying the government regulated utility monopoly, is to use the disaster as an excuse to forbid building in the urban interface and open country.
"Smaller homes with a shared wall can dramatically reduce residential energy consumption, and thus emissions, yet this is precisely the type of housing that zoning makes most difficult to build."
Not in Hong Kong. Apartments the size of a parking space, about 100 sq ft, are increasingly popular. Those on a tight budget choose to live in a wire cage only 16 sq ft.
Sounds awesome.
I so miss hearing my neighbor banging his latest conquest and her screaming in ecstasy that I'm looking to move back into a studio apartment soon!
I lived in apartments when I was younger. Never again!
aFfoRdAblE hOus!nG!!!
Let's hear it for libertarian values!
Housing is a human right, right?
Well, according to all the editorials in our newspapers, letters to the editors and random activists on Quora spaces, yes, it absolutely is.
Didn't the author here even trot out the homeless problem is due to high housing prices argument?
Sure. Spend a few days with the homeless crowd and get back to us. All the money in the world or free housing isn't going to solve the real issues that put them on the street in the first place.
Mandatory section 8 vouchers and the dekulakization of the U.S.
The feds -coming to place a leftist authoritarian piece of shit in your neck of the woods. A wise woman once said, you’re going to run out of other peoples money. Federal taxpayers down to 40 percent.
You'd create more Liebenstraum by burning witches and forfeituring their property, like The Holy Mother Church and allied governments did, right?
Fuck Off, Witch-Burning Nazi! And keep your "future" off my lawn!
The libertarian answer to zoning isn't an unregulated free-for-all, it's HOAs and CC&Rs. Instead of voters making political decisions on a city-wide basis, you have property owners making financial decisions on a neighborhood basis. But, yeah, there is going to be a stodgy rule book.
The world in which you can do with your property whatever you like doesn't exist. There is always going to be civil lawsuits and conflicts, and many people are going to desire to live in a neighborhood, and investors are going to desire to invest in areas, where risk is reduced due to rules being spelled out in advance.
Furthermore, retroactively abolishing zoning is certainly not a libertarian policy, since zoning is a legal obligation that people have come to rely on. If you want to transition away from zoning, the zoning needs to be converted into a collection of CC&Rs along natural boundaries.
>>HOAs
stodgy rules *and* Napoleons at every turn.
At least those stodgy rules and the Napoleons are voted on by property owners with an economic stake.
That is a hell of a lot better (and cheaper!) than the stodgy rules and Napoleons in zoning, planning, and permitting departments.
truth.
Urban planners make up to 300k. All that taxpayer funded salary without taking a risk or picking up a hammer. Utopian dreaming and sci for is popular on white savior leftist Twitter.
But CC&Rs are NOT voted on by the property owners. Standard procedures:
A developer buys a large tract of land and proposes and build houses within the zoning regs. Said developer's team works sets up an HOA that they are initially the officers of and draws up CC&Rs which are legally attached to title on each property.
After a certain number of properties are sold, the HOA is transferred to the purchasers of the new homes. Anyone buying a home in that development from that point on, is compelled to pay HOA dues and follow the CC&Rs.
Yes, as a member they can work to add, eliminate or change a CC&R. But, these are mini governments without oversight. Lots of people with nothing better to do appoint themselves Gestapo officers and start looking for property owners to bully. Good luck in doing anything at all in that environment.
I've never lived in an HOA controlled development. But, the stories I could tell of friends and family members experiences that have would scare anyone, even non-libertarians. The GIECO ad is more real than most know: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K5uthSOYNEo
It is akin to choosing which jail you want to reside in. But, you'll have abusive guards in the nicest one.
Here's the problem, though: HOAs are the Not-Ready-For-Prime-Time versions of Zoning and Land Use Planners.
Libertarians for $0 property value!
Zoning may be getting out of hand. This does not mean that abolition is the way to go. But such evidence-free policies are always a delight to those libertarians who like being et by bears.
"Et by bears?" You're a fine tribute to Gummint Skoolz!
The libertarian solution to the Grafton, NH problem to which you refer is to be entrepreneural and sell locking garbage cans, electric fencing, bear repèllant, and rifles, shotguns, and ammo. Then open a taxidermy shop. Problem solved.
>>The idea that a stodgy rule book could set the terms of our lives from on high is fundamentally at odds with our national ethos.
feel the same about speed limits.
Some zoning makes sense…like that guy who stores every motor vehicle he ever owned in his back yard
Why do you care if they're in his back yard? How does that impact you?
Reining in the worst excesses of zoning, such as single-family zoning, minimum lot sizes, and off-street parking requirements, would certainly help to stop the bleeding. But we can do better. In no uncertain terms, zoning should be abolished. Zoning is not only ineffective in achieving its stated goals—it's also unnecessary.
While I have flirted with various anarchist sensibilities, I had to grow up and realize that Anarchism, like all utopian ideals presumes you live in a society of saints. We don't.
Also, while I'm very much on board with attempting to achieve the goals of the first sentence in the quoted paragraph, the last sentence is plain false. We KNOW what life can look like if there is NO zoning.
Like all laws that attempt to control the worst impulses of your fellow citizens, things get tricky when you travel out to the edges. But if you stand right in the middle, basic zoning is a pretty damned good idea.
It's not an unreasonable proposition to say that we're going to separate family housing from a smoke-belching factory that operates 24x7 with large trucks rumbling into bays, industrial machines grinding and sawing, and trains backing into a railyard to move goods into an out of the factory. This is an extreme example, but that's why zoning was created, to temper the extreme examples.
If you allow people to do anything, I can tell you from PERSONAL experience, that there is a population that will push that privilege far and above where you think they will, and the next thing you know, you find yourself right back where you started: With people clamoring for some kind of "reasonable" zoning restrictions to help make things remotely livable.
Again, things get tricky, weird and nonsensical when you move outwards towards the edges: view preservation, right to not have your entire house in permanent shade when someone builds a multi-story behemoth next to your single family home, or have fourth story windows peering down into your private back yard etc.
We call might agree that there are zillions of zoning regulations which seem petty and nonsensical. And there's no doubt there's room for major reforms. But "abolishing zoning" isn't going to get libertarians the world they think they want.
This is where subsidiarity tends to come in handy. Pushing regulation as locally as possible tends to breed better regulation due to folks having the most investment in things. As much as I despise HOAs, I can't really fault them in a philosophical sense and think they're probably one of the better ways of dealing with things. They're somewhat analogous to small towns making their decisions.
's not an unreasonable proposition to say that we're going to separate family housing from a smoke-belching factory that operates 24x7 with large trucks rumbling into bays, industrial machines grinding and sawing, and trains backing into a railyard to move goods into an out of the factory.
I feel weird about this, because zoning doesn't just prevent a factory from being built next to my house, it often prevents me, if I own land next to a factory, from building a house. I'm sure there is some model of concentric loosened zoning regulations where each looser zone allows everything included in the tighter zones, but practically we tend to see a lot more Urban Planning style shit. Talk to someone really into Urban Planning and they're almost always authoritarians writ small who have absolute confidence into their ability to know exactly what people REALLY want.
We need another Sim City to channel their fixations into productive uses of their time. That is, playing Sim City because Sim City is wonderful and I miss Maxis.
Again, things get tricky, weird and nonsensical when you move outwards towards the edges
Yep, bad case makes bad law. It starts with some vaguely reasonable sounding claim like you can't build train tracks through the living room of an orphanage, it ends with a bureaucrat deciding that having a mini-home in my backyard is simply too dangerous of a proposition for our fallen world.
s much as I despise HOAs, I can't really fault them in a philosophical sense and think they're probably one of the better ways of dealing with things. They're somewhat analogous to small towns making their decisions.
HOAs, being almost universally despised and often the subject of much satirizing (the nosy, insufferable busybody HOA president measuring your grass and sending you nastygrams about the paint color you chose) are THE penultimate libertarian solution. They are a voluntary association of people who agree to a set of rules, limits and various regulations to help preserve the lifestyle and character of the neighborhood. And yet, even this libertarian hates them.
Yep, bad case makes bad law. It starts with some vaguely reasonable sounding claim like you can't build train tracks through the living room of an orphanage, it ends with a bureaucrat deciding that having a mini-home in my backyard is simply too dangerous of a proposition for our fallen world.
I don't know what the answer is to help preserve the "reasonable middle" (and by 'middle I don't mean wishy-washy both sides middle, I mean the obvious, central issues of why zoning exists) without spinning out of control with bizarre, nonsensical petty restrictions that no one can even articulate as to why they exist, except to keep regulators busy.
My only solution is, as above, subsidiarity. Have a strong bias towards localism in decision making and lower barriers of movement of people from jurisdiction to jurisdiction.
If by "anarchism" you mean "absence of rules", that's true.
But "anarchism" just means "absence of a state"; all the rules and restraints provided by the state can, in principle, be provided through private arrangements.
Depends on how you "abolish" it. If you replace zoning with private HOAs in which only property owners have voting rights, you have the benefits of zoning without the political abuse of the zoning power.
But "anarchism" just means "absence of a state"; all the rules and restraints provided by the state can, in principle, be provided through private arrangements.
And I argue, and continue to argue that at some point, as those private arrangements mature, you're going to end up with the exact thing you started with as those private arrangements morph back into a state-like structure.
I don't have a moral objection to anarchism, I have a practical objection to it.
"Who said you wuz in charge?"
"Who gonna tell me I'm not?"
HOAs are very state-like; that's my point: absence of a state doesn't mean absence of state-like institutions.
The difference is that in an HOA, it is property owners, people with skin in the game, making decisions about their property. In a state, it is people with political power (these days, all citizens) who get to decide on what to do with the private property of others.
The fact that one of these arrangements can "morph into" the other doesn't change the fact that one is preferable to the other, so when you cross that line between the two, you have lost something.
The fact that one of these arrangements can "morph into" the other doesn't change the fact that one is preferable to the other, so when you cross that line between the two, you have lost something.
I'm sorry but I don't see a fundamental difference between a "non-state" arrangement that has to rely on force adjudicate the worst excesses of the people within that arrangement, and a state which does exactly the same.
"Oh, but these private associations wouldn't ever result in a use of force".
Yes they will. I've had this discussion for years and the best I've ever gotten from the 'anarchist' side of the debate is that... somehow these things can be adjudicated without force. Again, a society of saints is what's required.
If I live in a community that becomes large and mature in an "anarchistic" state-- ie no "recognized" state institution, and you eventually end up with specializations, one of those specializations will be "security". it doesn't take a lot of math to realize how use of force would become a method of dealing with those who break the rules of the voluntary association in the most excessive way.
Again, I'm not making a moral argument against anarchism, I'm merely arguing that your non-state associations... at some point, will both look AND act EXACTLY like state institutions.
I’ve lived in high density HOAS and, now, a low density single family HOA for all of my adult life. Quite the opposite. Board positions are volunteer. The reason I fled my perfectly nice high density townhome…a religious neighbor decided to rent to the nice Church ladies 18 year old kids (ski bums). These guys ended up with around 25 tweens in a two bedroom. They were drunk, threatening to kill each other and driving dirt bikes up and down the narrow shared driveway at 2am straight from the Jerry Springer show, cops etc. Anyway, the HOA could care less as they all decided to play landlord and stated -quote “we’re all making money aren’t we”. For us, our quality of life with a ten year old went down to the point of fleeing. All I wanted was a low density lot. Now the high density stuff is planned is spreading the costs of water sewer school expansions to homeowners, wheather its duplex single family condo, doesn’t matter. Our water are hyper inflated, while Colorado subsides energy and water bills based on income.
Residents who live here are subsidizing construction, economic growth, and federal welfare transfers through higher fees and property taxes.
The primary difference is that in an HOA, the power is held by the people owning the property and taking the risks; in a state, the power is held by arbitrary people, often unrelated to the property owners.
Furthermore, enforcement is also different. An HOA can impose your contractually specified penalties against you, nothing more (usually, in the worst case, that means auctioning off your property to cover your debts). A state can impose arbitrarily, politically motivated penalties on you.
And I'm saying you are fundamentally wrong: the difference between private, voluntary, contractual "state-like" arrangements and state/political arrangements is the very essence of libertarianism.
"Depends on how you "abolish" it. If you replace zoning with private HOAs in which only property owners have voting rights, you have the benefits of zoning without the political abuse of the zoning power."
Oh counterair! You have the political abuse on steroids with no oversight. HOAs are mini governments and you MUST join and participate if you want to live within their kingdom.
Having said that, with a recent new family moving in next door to my small development, I do sometimes wish we had set up the HOA that the developer turned over to the original buyers. Our privacy, quiet and enjoyment of our property has been greatly impacted by the actions of these people. But, only a couple of the things they're doing are in violation of the municipal code and even getting city action on those takes multiple requests.
So, this is definitely a place where the libertarian party could cause some good changes. Zoning is often a state and local issue, and so there are plenty of places where real change could be affected in ways that are nearly impossible at the national level.
Brazil
Cities and counties have a legitimate interest in zoning to achieve and maintain their goals. Fortunately, citizens control these governments through elections and contrary to NYOB's prescription, those who do not own land are also voting citizens. Also contrary to his prescriptions, voters are not limited solely to their economic interests.
Yes, that's what statists believe: that government in itself has "legitimate interests" separate from the citizens.
You may think that that is fortunate, but it really isn't. Wealth is created through capital investments. The less guaranteed, long term control people have over their private property in some location, the less capital investment you are going to see in that location.
Furthermore, the consequence of giving political power over other people's private property to non-property owners is an increasing polarization of the country, where large portions of the country simply adopt policies that make it impossible to live there without owning property, while the non-owners are stuffed into increasingly dismal slum-like cities.
No, that's what most inhabitants of democracies believe. Remember, Libertarians are competing with transgenders for smallest group in the country.
You must think the founders were "statists" since they drew up a constitution for a federal government - hey, you guys have your own cute language!
Counties and cities have legitimate goals which are determined by the elected representatives of the citizens. You really don't know how democracies work?
By the way, thanks for your efforts to slow down and end polarization by advocating for the disenfranchisement of non-property owning Americans.
As you may have noticed, Western democracies are not doing so well, socially or economically.
The Constitution the founders drew up was for a tiny federal government with minimal powers, with only land owners having the vote, and with maximum subsidiarity.
I'm not objecting to universal suffrage, I'm objecting to the use of universal suffrage to take people's private property and redistribute it. That is, I'm arguing for small government, subsidiarity, and respect for private property, all principles you evidently reject.
As far as I'm concerned, the US isn't polarized enough. While progressives and Democrats ostracize and discriminate against conservatives and libertarians, conservatives and libertarians need to grow the kind of backbone that allows them to reciprocate in kind. People like you should be treated as the deplorables you are.
You're arguing for some policies to be taken completely out of the hands of the people they affect, forever. Because you're just that smart and nobody will ever be smarter.
Sometimes you don't get your way in a democracy. The bigger problem is how little you'll get your way in a theocracy or whatever it is you think is superior.
No, not at all. I'm arguing that decisions about private property are made by the people owning it. To the degree that people not owning the property are "affected by it", in the sense of being damaged by what property owners do with their property, they can recover damages in civil court.
I'm not arguing that I should make decisions, I'm arguing that property owners should make decisions about their own properties. That's not because property owners are particularly smart, it's because property owners actually have to pay for the consequences decisions they make about their own property.
If you don't own the property, you don't have to pay for the consequences of decisions you impose on the property owner through the political process.
Pretty much definitionally, property is a restriction on other people's freedom that's enforced by government. Without government restriction of other people's freedom, the concept of property would disappear into mist. So it's inherently a public concern, even before we start talking about esoterica like mineral rights.
"No, that's what most inhabitants of democracies believe.
As you may have noticed, Western democracies are not doing so well, socially or economically."
Compared to what? You favoring another system than democracy?
"The Constitution the founders drew up was for a tiny federal government with minimal powers, with only land owners having the vote, and with maximum subsidiarity."
That "tiny federal government" stretched from Maine to Georgia and from the Atlantic to the Appalachians. You left out slavery.
"by advocating for the disenfranchisement of non-property owning Americans.
I'm not objecting to universal suffrage, I'm objecting to the use of universal suffrage to take people's private property and redistribute it. That is, I'm arguing for small government, subsidiarity, and respect for private property, all principles you evidently reject."
As you clearly agree, there are limits to our private property rights whenever we live with other humans, and of course highly social animals humans have never existed in any other environment. For you the maximizing of those rights trumps the ability of humans to plan and advance social goals - as opposed to individual goals - since you oppose government as a matter of principle, even democracies which are in the control of the humans who are members. This is extreme and would hamstring the advancement of towns, counties, states, and nations, and by the way, will never happen.
"By the way, thanks for your efforts to slow down and end polarization
As far as I'm concerned, the US isn't polarized enough. While progressives and Democrats ostracize and discriminate against conservatives and libertarians, conservatives and libertarians need to grow the kind of backbone that allows them to reciprocate in kind. People like you should be treated as the deplorables you are."
Gee, a pleasant meeting of the minds, and hey fuck you too. Of course your side is blameless and clearly made up of a higher caliber of human beings, exhibiting admirable qualities universally recognized. That's how you ended up with Trump as your leader.
That is not true. HOAs all over the country (especially black Georgia homeowners) are banning investors. This, from what I see in Colorado and Arizona, lowers property values significantly and allows permanent residents to purchase. It doesn’t matter what I think of the policy, the HOAs or property owners have decided to take a hit on property resell values to free up housing for non investors or owners.
"large portions of the country simply adopt policies that make it impossible to live there without owning property"
Uh, I know a few homeless and many of their advocates that would beg to differ. They get to live anywhere they want and no action will be taken because they've been granted special status. And only a heartless person like me would demand that they get off my land.
To quote NOYB2 "Wealth is created through capital investments. The less guaranteed, long term control people have over their private property in some location, the less capital investment you are going to see in that location."
Surely if younreally think hard about all of the implications of that statement you see that this particular knife cuts both ways?
Cities and counties have a legitimate interest in zoning to achieve and maintain their goals.
Fuck you. The entire purpose of zoning has always been to create shakedown opportunities for politicians and bureaucrats.
-jcr
I agree completely with your assessment. The problem is it would eliminate thousands of phony baloney government overpaid jobs, it will never fly with the politicians????
The Author impresses me as a NIMBY type of guy who would no more like to live near a windmill, a gas well, or any type of "icky" production facility or city maintenance facility...just another leftist with expensive tastes for himself and sardine packing for you!
Perfect!
Then how will I explain Sim City to my grandchildren? After I pick them up from their school/strip club mini-mall.
You're a fat old gay man. You don't have any grandchildren.
I'm a rather fit gay man who's only old to Gen-Z. Which, fair enough.
until imported Muslims decide to build a foreign funded mega-mosque in your completely non-muslim neighborhood and the area becomes blighted.
This is where libertarian meets retardian. You can't have libertardian ideals without a homogeneous society as other groups have very different ideas and they are multiplying like cancer.
If you let developers build houses tightly packed, then you get flooding issues as there is less open space. My school district closed the very old administration building (a former school) and sold the land to a developer. People were livid that the lots were platted at 60 feet rather than 75 feet, which is the new standard. It turns out that the land was platted around 1900 at 60 feet. Then, the district bought the land.
My in-laws and their neighbors fought the building of a Home Depot next to their neighborhood, which was about 60 miles from Home Depot HQ. They know that deliveries come round the clock, because so many contractors show up at 6 am to buy supplies for their work.
They successfully kept the zoning code from being changed from small store to large store.
I can tell you in the suburb where I live that every condo/apartment building that is taller than three stories goes up with a major fight. People want the suburb to have grocery stores and shops instead high-rise residences and restaurants. But, the stores have left for the strip malls, or stores have closed as owners retire and have no interest in selling the business, or can't sell. Yet, so many people who live in town grew up in town, as did their parents. They want a small town feel, instead of feeling like a Chicago neighborhood with high density housing.
"Abolish zoning"? Abolish coercive govt.! Give private (free) enterprise a chance. Give citizens choice, rights, a chance to run their lives instead of obey authority, be exploited. Why submit?
Liberty does not exist without private property. If property is taken the owner must be compensated. I bought a home in a R4 zoned area and no doubt paid a premium price for it. Over the years I have made substantial investments in upgrading the property consistent with the R4 zoning. If zoning is canceled by government and a high rise is built next door then I lose a quiet neighborhood with trees and a private back yard. My property is worth less and I should be compensated for the public taking. Are local governments prepared for the class action law suits?
Change 'zoning' to 'cities' and you would have something. What is this worship of cities by libterds? Is the 'vibrant diversity' of theoretically being able to get some bizarre article of fourth-world haute cuisine -- roasted rat tail, perhaps -- at 3 a.m. worth destroying America? Well, look who I'm asking -- the same group that thinks cheap gardeners, maids, and sex workers are worth destroying America.