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Cross-Ideological Common Ground on Exclusionary Zoning
Policy analyst Justin Hayes summarizes the reasons why conservatives, progressives, and libertarians all have reason to support zoning reform.

Tennessee-based policy analyst Justin Hayes is writing a series of articles in which he "aim[s] to explore issues that could have broader appeal among the left, right, libertarians, and centrists on multiple fronts — from economic and philosophical perspectives to constitutional considerations and beyond." The first piece in the series focuses on the issue of exclusionary zoning:
As the U.S. grapples with a deepening affordable housing crisis, YIMBY (Yes-In-My-Backyard) Groups have sprouted around the country to advocate for major reforms to the exclusionary zoning practices prevalent in most major cities. These zoning policies often prioritize single-family homes and hinder the construction of more affordable housing options for low- and middle-income residents. A 2022 paper by Jonathan Levine describes the YIMBY movement as "a loose and shifting pro-housing alliance of renters, progressives, and libertarians who hold that exclusionary land-use policies in urban and suburban areas exacerbate housing unaffordability and racial segregation and increase long-distance commuting and greenhouse-gas emissions."
These coalitions primarily focus on zoning reform within local or metropolitan jurisdictions, where traditional party and ideological lines blur, and national culture wars have a limited reach, allowing people from diverse political backgrounds to unite in this cause. After all, the YIMBY movement's overarching goal—to create an affordable place for everyone to live — is challenging to argue against, regardless of one's ideological perspective.
However, despite the undeniable merits of ending exclusionary zoning, the path forward has not been so simple. Misconceptions about increasing housing density persist and surface at zoning hearings in nearly every city, voiced by concerned residents and NIMBY (Not-In-My-Backyard) groups. Their concerns range from traffic congestion to potential overcrowding in schools and the perceived threats of crime to "community character."
Hayes goes through a list of reasons why conservatives, libertarians, and progressives all have good reason to support the YIMBY cause. He also addresses a number of common objections.
I have made similar arguments myself (including some focusing on the cross-ideological nature of the issue), and Hayes cites some of my previous writings on this topic. So too have others, such as Richard Kahlenberg. But Hayes piece is nonetheless a very helpful summary of the case from the standpoint of each of these three major ideologies.
I would add a few points to his analysis. For libertarians, it's important to emphasize not only that zoning restricts property rights, but that it is the most widespread and severe restriction on property owners' rights in the United States today, preventing millions from using their land as they wish. For progressives, I would emphasize the long history of zoning as a tool of racial and ethnic exclusion - often deliberately used for that purpose. To this day, zoning restrictions disproportionately harm blacks and Hispanics.
Finally, for conservatives, I would emphasize that reducing exclusionary zoning would greatly help the working class, including the white working class whom the GOP claims to champion (and who are increasingly that party's biggest constituency). It would do so both by enabling more working-class people to "move to opportunity" and by stimulating a vast construction boom that would create many thousands of relatively well-paying working-class jobs. As I have long emphasized, zoning reform is a major underappreciated common interest of the mostly Republican white working class and its mostly Democratic minority counterpart.
For those particularly concerned - as many conservatives are - about expanding opportunities for working-class men, I would make the obvious point that construction workers are disproportionately male (almost 94%, according to the Construction Employers Association). But expanding job opportunities in this way would also help many working and lower-middle class women, albeit less directly. They, like men, benefit from being able to move to opportunity. Plus, increasing opportunity for male construction workers pretty obviously benefits their female wives and daughters, and improves the potential marriage market for single working-class women. If you care about family values, the latter is an important consideration in an age where working-class marriage rates have plummeted.
Much more can be said. And I have in fact said more in previous publications, and hope to write more in the future. In the meantime, Hayes' article is a very helpful introduction to the subject, covering a wide range of perspectives and issues. I also look forward to his analysis of the other issues he plans to cover in his series on cross-ideological common ground.
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Georgism is the answer.
True Georgism has never actually been implemented. It doesn’t fail people, people fail it.
As Ilya notes "For those particularly concerned—as many conservatives are—about expanding opportunities for working-class men, I would make the obvious point that construction workers are disproportionately male (almost 94%,"
The construction industry workers are disproportionately hispanic. African americans with their high unemployment rates should be flocking to the construction industry. Great place to develop job skills and work ethic. One of the most effective & successful anti poverty programs was "ending welfare as we know it" which was enacted during the second clinton administration. Unfortunately, there are no longer any democrats / progressives left that would support a program that actually worked.
For those particularly concerned—as many conservatives are—about expanding opportunities for working-class men, I would make the obvious point that construction workers are disproportionately male (almost 94%,)
Also, a disproportionate number of construction jobs are held by illegal immigrants...
https://www.americanprogress.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2021/02/EW-Construction-factsheet.pdf
True lots of illegal Hispanic immigrants in the construction field.
It should also be noted that the construction industry provides a great opportunity for jobs for blacks yet blacks as a class are very under represented in the construction industry. Why ? Davis bacon ? Or some other reason for the under representation in the construction workforce? Culture? Work ethic?
Zoning takes landowners' property rights without compensation. It was always wrong.
Without zoning, someone can build a rendering plant next to my house if they feel like it. As a property-owner, I'm am glad the city limits my rights in this way!
Increased housing density must be accompanied by effective public transportation options that reduce traffic congestion.
In the future you will have no suburbs, and you will be happy.
Well, no, you won't be happy, but you won't dare say you aren't...
In this case, perhaps you should read the linked article (at least, the first one). While it does criticize the suburbs, it is mostly focused on the discriminatory and negative efficiency aspects of urban zoning and building restrictions, and cites a number of studies and 'experts' to that effect.
Even though they both directly address it, neither Somin nor Hayes really seem to see the problems with their discrepant treatment of zoning and HOAs. Hayes actually proposes that as a solution: if people want to keep single family homes, they should organize to create deed restrictions!
They did, guys - and they called it a "zoning board".
He can say "urban" all he likes, but he's complaining about single family housing, and genuinely "urban" areas, as most people understand the term, are not known for single family housing.
Rather, what he's talking about, as I understand it, are suburban areas adjacent, and subject to the control, of urban governments. Suburbs.
The real issue is not, IMO, single family vs high density. It's expensive vs cheap. Because local governments derive most of their income from property taxes, the last thing they want is people building cheap homes. So they set things like minimum house sizes to drive up the cost of housing; Entry level homes are zoned out of existence.
Which drives people into high density housing, of course, but not because they prefer it to small stand alone homes. Because small stand alone homes, except for old ones that are grandfathered in, are illegal.
Yes, increasing housing density is one of his big arguments. It's also a big argument in all the linked papers.
But there's also a lot of criticism about specifically urban areas - commercial and industrial zoning, transportation (both public and road), aesthetic restrictions, tax incentives (and perverse incentives), and so on - in the article and linked papers.
I don't disagree with you that Somin, Hayes, and many like them push hard to get rid of the suburbs, and to put other people into fixed slots in boxes, no matter what they want.
But Hayes's article is actually unusual because it does mention issues with urban areas, rather than spending all its time complaining about the suburbs.
But I'm not talking about housing density. You can build a McMansion on a 0.2 acre lot, (In fact, local governments LOVE that kind of property tax density!) or site a tiny home or trailer on an acre. Density is almost orthogonal to the cost of homes, because the land isn't most of the cost of a home when government is forcing you to build expensive homes.
True, girth is more important than length.
Housing density is the primary issue.
Developers, and governments, know that while you can build a single-family home on a quarter acre lot, you can also build 4 town homes that will retail for 80%-90%, and 16 apartments at almost as much value.
Earlier this year, Somin was pushing a local plan in his area that would replace a bunch of "expensive" single family homes with townhomes, condos, and apartments that would all retail at over $500,000. Not exactly affordable housing!
In Fairfax County (Somin's broader area), the typical single family home retails for between $650,000 and $1.3 million, depending on the neighorbood. And that's excluding Great Falls, the rich people/politician housing area, where the average home is about $3 million.
Of that, it costs between $150,000 and $400,000 to build a house (depending on size and features). The average cost is $200,000.
Near cities and areas of high demand, the land cost is the primary factor. Take a look at Zillow or some other real estate serive, and compare the prices of homes and lots near a city.
I think it's telling how many people seem to think that the free market would not give us suburbs.
The free market has given us suburbs, where residents want them to remain that way.
If you are suggesting that you think, should zoning restrictions be removed, the suburb neighborhoods near cities would not immediately begin being converted to high-density housing, I suggest you might want to read the article, or any of the linked papers... or any of the other zoning articles Somin and the people he links to have written over the past years. It's one of their favorite plans, and most popular proposals to local governments.
Whatta libertarian. If suburbs require constant government property restrictions over market forces, what is their net social value?
Also, they seem ubiquitous to me. I think maybe they are no as in danger from zoning requirements.
[I think zoning has utility, but I also think it's way overused right now]
When I was deciding where to buy property, I had plenty of choice. Had I wanted to live in a high-density area, I could've done so. (Would've saved a bundle of $!) I picked a low-density suburban area. Saying that the zoning laws that keep it a low-density area are somehow un-libertarian is ... dumb. (Disingenuous, in your case.)
Saying that the zoning laws that keep it a low-density area are somehow un-libertarian is … dumb.
You're describing an optional, property-burdening *law* as libertarian.
Somin's dismissive attitude towards Americans' concerns on migration should lead readers to instinctively distrust Somin on every other topic.
Zoning has plenty of downsides. But loosened rules give everyone more latitude to act, for good or ill. Which acts will Somin champion?
Whichever it is, Somin has shown he will likely casually dismiss you and your concerns if you are harmed by whatever happens.
Ben's claiming people he disagree with are ignoring Americans' concerns, as though his spiteful ass speaks for America should lead readers to instinctively distrust Ben on every other topic.
Zoning has plenty of downsides. But loosened rules give everyone more latitude to act, for good or ill. Ben will choose no particular policy, just yell at Somin.
Ben has shown he will likely casually ignore all actual policy concerns so he can yell at individuals or Democrats for ignoring policy costs, even if they explicitly address them.
Don't be like Ben.
Somin casually disregards others' concerns. Meanwhile you mock and belittle others' concerns. No one should trust either of you on any subject.
Somin might stab anyone in the back for his causes and pretend it can be mitigated by rhetoric. You’d do it for fun and laugh at the injury you caused.
Somin thinks he’s right and they’re wrong, and he points out and argues against their concerns.
You’re the one who casually fails to engage with those who disagree with you.
Somin might stab anyone in the back for his causes and pretend it can be mitigated by rhetoric. You’d do it for fun and laugh at the injury you caused. Bwahahahaha. I’m a pure villain, existing only for evil.
Deciding they are a cartoon is always a sign of proper engagement with people who disagree with you.
The Somlins and Obama's of the world don't want suburbs that are safe, wealthy and White.
They have been attacking White security for decades.
A few thoughts.
1. The focus on single family homes is misplaced. Single family homes have a purpose, as it ensures that the individual family is responsible for the individual home and grounds.
2. The larger issue is "affordable" housing. This is due to a couple items.
a) The seeming lack of single family starter homes.
b) The tendency to build large luxury apartments or luxury condos, instead of low-mid price condos.
Now, the "answer" that is proposed too often is to require "Below Market Rate" apartments to be made as part of the construction deal. That doesn't fix the core issue however.
We need to ask a different question. What are the regulations and such that are being put into place, such that only McMansions and Luxury condos are profitable? And can those regulations be changed, such that a set of cheap, 1400 sq ft single family Starter homes, or 800 sq foot basic apartments become fiscally reasonable.
We need truly mobile homes in which every night from 2 am to 5 am full double wides are permitted on roads. So that way we put downward pressure on lot rents and people could own a little rural land outright that provides peace of mind.
Another thing is interest free loans for single family homes less than $175k that don’t require much of a down payment. So $176k the buyer has to get a mortgage and obviously the interest deduction.
It's not so much, in my experience, that only the McMansions are profitable. It's that only the McMansions are legal.
When I built my home in Michigan back in the 90's, I was single, and really just wanted a small shack to live in on the land I'd bought, while I saved up for building my dream home. That way I'd never have to go into debt. (Today they call those "tiny houses".)
Nope, not legally an option: The smallest house that was legal to build was 1,600 square feet. My parents raised a family of 5 in a house about half that size!
Nor could I build a "Michigan basement", a large basement with a roof that you live in while saving up to build the house atop it.
I considered a "carriage house" that would later become my garage after building the house I really wanted. No, also not a legal option.
I really think what's going on is that zoning and building codes are being used to try to maximize property tax revenues.
I really think what’s going on is that zoning and building codes are being used to try to maximize property tax revenues.
Not another conspiracy, Brett. Jesus.
If you have ever been to a zoning board meeting, you should know it's not revenue-based; it's much pettier than that.
You keep pumping this 30-year-old anecdote to fuel a conspiracy theory about how municipalities finance themselves. Without more specific information, it is impossible to verify your claims; but having spent more time than I probably should reviewing zoning maps and regulations, I have to tentatively conclude that your story is bullshit.
Of the zoning requirements I've reviewed, I've found only one residential zoning requirement that says anything about the minimum square footage required for a dwelling unit. That zoning designation was rarely used in the jurisdiction I was looking at (Charleston, SC); instead, much more common were exclusionary, single-family only residential zones (in the suburban areas) and single-family permitted residential zones (in the urban areas) that provided for varying degrees of density.
So I'm inclined to think that - assuming you even accurately recall the predicament you found yourself in, back in Michigan, which is doubtful - you were trying to build something unusual for the zone, or in an atypical residential zone. Your experience, in any event, doesn't seem to reflect in any meaningful way how municipalities actually goose property tax bases to fund themselves (which they do through artificial scarcity and annexing suburbs).
I'm happy to be proven wrong. But assuming that you're not interested in specifying exactly where you were trying to build, way back when, I'm inclined to stamp "Bullshit" on this ancient anecdote of yours.
In Arlington, VA, an urbanizing suburb of Washington, DC where Mr. Somin and I both live, the County Board recently repealed all single-family home zoning, and now, with some limits based on the size and location of the lot, a building with up to six units may be built. Few, if any of these units will be "affordable" in any meaningful sense to "working-class" individuals or families. The principal problem is the price of land. Because Arlington has little vacant land, and many people who want to live here, quarter-acre lots with 70 year-old "tear-down" houses sell for $1 million or more. Buyers demand high-end amenities--e.g., granite counters, not Formica, and hardwood floors. The estimated selling price of even two-bedroom multi-family units is north of $700,000.
In cities and close-in suburbs where land is at a premium, eliminating single-family zoning will not solve the housing affordability crisis. It will also create additional problems because, at least in Arlington, there is little land available for the additional schools that will be needed. The last three new elementary schools have been built on land adjacent to existing middle or elementary schools, and no provision has been made for the additional traffic, or for neighborhood parking problems exacerbated by off-street parking requirements of only one space per unit, even in neighborhoods that have little access to buses or Metrorail stations.
Yes, you've done a very good job of rehearsing the NIMBY claims that Somin, et al., have spent some time refuting.
What will solve the "housing affordability crisis"? I start with the belief that more housing supply is needed. This would be true even if some people choose to build expensive, high-end housing for existing demand. So the question is, where do we build this new housing?
You cite infrastructure problems with eliminating exclusionary zoning in areas where demand would support increased density, but these problems also exist for the only conceivable alternative, which is to incorporate more greenfield land for development. These newly-developed communities will also require traffic, school, public safety, etc., solutions. And, once built, pressure will build to bulldoze valuable and productive land closer to urban centers in order to provide additional highway capacity to serve these suburban and exurban communities - thus perpetuating this whole intergenerational shell game.
Ending exclusionary zoning is just a first step. It will not, alone, solve all of our challenges in increasing housing supply. But it is a necessary step.
Precisely this.
Somin pushed that plan before it passed, celebrated it passing, and is now looking the other way as everything he explained would happen isn't happening.
A simple google search reveals a number of laws and regulations regarding minimum house sizes.
Ohio, for example, has a minimum house size of 950 square feet.
https://www.tinyhouse.com/post/ohios-tiny-home-rules-regulations#:~:text=Under%20the%20Ohio%20building%20code,typical%20dimensions%20of%20tiny%20houses.
You're a clown, AL.
One link you've provided is to a company that sells tiny houses, and describes restrictions on their placement only in vague, non-technical ways. (But says enough about those restrictions to make clear that it's not necessarily a "minimum size" restriction that blocks the use of these so-called "tiny houses.")
The other link you've provided is to a study that's 70 years old.
You promised "a number of laws and regulations regarding minimum house sizes," but strangely neither of your links is to a law or regulation.
Here is an entire report for you with minimum building sizes required in a variety of locations.
https://www.planning.org/pas/reports/report37.htm
That's probably a large chunk of it. Not necessarily "single family zoning" but many of the size restrictions, especially on the lower end.
Eliminating many of those may help dramatically.
When those that advocate for more housing on smaller lots or a certain number of low cost housing units in every apartment building or subdivision built, divide their 4000 square foot homes, into apartments of six, I'll believe they are serious about this issue.
Of course they will never do it. Just like they will never give up their job for illegal aliens. They will signal their virtue while they demand that YOU give up your hard-earned job and paid-for land and home for those that didn't do any work to earn it.
They can't give up their own job and home. For they are smart and deep-thinkers and they NEED their own private space in order to be able to think of those things they need to tell the poor peons to do. They need those apples and they need that milk. The deep-thinkers are special you see. It's all for the common good.
Don't exclude the middle.
Start with even letting high-density housing on the same block.
YIMBY's are into that, definitionally.
Prof. Somin is not "advocating for" any particular arrangement; he's advocating for the freedom of property owners to make decisions for themselves.
And your comment is too stupid to even dignify with a response (which raises the question of why I'm dignifying it with a response). He's not demanding that you "give up" anything that's yours.
What are the regulations and such that are being put into place, such that only McMansions and Luxury condos are profitable?
Reasonable question. But we should also ask, "What are the economic and market forces that lead to only McMansions and luxury condos being profitable?"
Why is it more lucrative to build a 6400 sq foot house on some big lot than to build four 1600 sq ft houses on that same lot?
I don't know the answer, but I think part of it may be that the mansion buyer is more willing, eager even, to pay for a lot of upscale amenities that provide bigger profit margins than basic functional kitchens, bathrooms, etc.
But the statistics are way against your conclusion
" research shows that the median house size has increased by some 1,000 square feet over the past 50 years. At the same time, the average size of the household has fallen as people have fewer kids than in earlier generations, he noted. “For the houses that don’t fit the families, the prices are going to have to fall.”"
FALL !@!!!!!!!!!!
The US auto industry doesn't bother with tiny cars, as nobody wants them, in spite of blabber. Their profits come through large cars and SUVs. Ford famously lost $2k per Escort just to keep government thugs happy with corporate fleet CAFE standards, so they could earn even more out of the larger vehicles.
As noted, same with housing. As long as a market for upscale housing continues, nobody will build cheap, small mass housing. Once the upscale market is saturated, then the lesser profitable stuff will have answers.
And there's a long way to go to get to that point.
"Oh, look. Another story where government finally got out of the way, and ritzy condos are being produced."
It's not small houses, so much as less expensive houses.
To use your car analogy, it would be akin to just luxury BMWs and Escalades being produced, where the cheapest new car value was $50,000.
Many people just want a normal Honda Civic (still produced in the US). But they're not being made? Why?
Why? same reason we are on here arguing teeny crap and the super-huge is overlooked.What do all you Takings,and eminent domain, and environment folks think of Biden's 30X30 plan to take land for public care in the name of common good and THEN
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management on Jan. 17, 2024, proposed opening 22 million acres for solar development in 11 Western states.
Just the biggest goddam mockery of the whole environmental claim.
You need to stop restricting issues to just those aspects that accord with your morals
Take Urban Sprawl , what is by a huge huge margin the main cause ? DIVORCE
17 years later NO ONE will even touch this research. Prove me wrong
If divorced households had combined to have the same average household size as married households, there could have been 7.4 million fewer households in these countries. Meanwhile, the number of rooms per person in divorced households was 33–95% greater than in married households. In the United States (U.S.) in 2005, divorced households spent 46% and 56% more on electricity and water per person than married households. Divorced households in the U.S. could have saved more than 38 million rooms, 73 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity, and 627 billion gallons of water in 2005 alone if their resource-use efficiency had been comparable to married households. Furthermore, U.S. households that experienced divorce used 42–61% more resources per person than before their dissolution. Remarriage of divorced household heads increased household size and reduced resource use to levels similar to those of married households. The results suggest that mitigating the impacts of resource-inefficient lifestyles such as divorce helps to achieve global environmental sustainability and saves money for households.
Environmentalists !!
Homelessness advocates!!!
CLimate Change freaks !!
Did you read it????
The group YIMBY does not actually advocate for housing in their own back yard. What they advocate for is those that own property to be forced turn it over to" those without" all for the "common good". They actually want more "zoning" in that they advocate for the government to force those building subdivisions on their own property to give a portion of that property to those that did not expend any labor or provide any money in developing the land and housing.
So, they are actually "Yes, in YOUR back yard," and by force of the government if need be. Socialism had never worked. Giving it a fancy acronym has never made it work any better.
government to force those building subdivisions on their own property to give a portion of that property to those that did not expend any labor or provide any money in developing the land and housing.
That is not what Prof. Soming is describing as YMBY groups in the OP.
Seems you're off attacking some other policy group you don't care for.
Okay but that take the issue to be outside moral and religious and cultural bounds.
HERE IS THE EFFECT OF DIVORCE on climate, on energy, on inflation, on housing, on urban sprawl
If divorced households had combined to have the same average household size as married households, there could have been 7.4 million fewer households in these countries. Meanwhile, the number of rooms per person in divorced households was 33–95% greater than in married households. In the United States (U.S.) in 2005, divorced households spent 46% and 56% more on electricity and water per person than married households. Divorced households in the U.S. could have saved more than 38 million rooms, 73 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity, and 627 billion gallons of water in 2005 alone if their resource-use efficiency had been comparable to married households. Furthermore, U.S. households that experienced divorce used 42–61% more resources per person than before their dissolution. Remarriage of divorced household heads increased household size and reduced resource use to levels similar to those of married households. The results suggest that mitigating the impacts of resource-inefficient lifestyles such as divorce helps to achieve global environmental sustainability and saves money for households.
To read a post from Somin is to understand why the Libertarians get about 1% of the vote in a good year. Superficially interesting ideas in theory that don't work in the real world. Hayes writes using a structure Somin often uses: "Here's a libertarian idea. Here's why conservatives should like it. Here's why progressives should like it," as if these are revelations that just simply hadn't occurred to conservatives or progressives. There is already a cross-ideological consensus on ending single-family zoning; the consensus is it's a terrible idea.
Yes, rather obviously, if they start building duplexes, fourplexes, and apartments in your neighborhood of single-family homes, housing costs will drop dramatically, right along with the value of all the homes in the neighborhood. For most homeowners, their home is their most valuable asset. They are never going to get behind a plan to see the value of their most valuable asset plummet. This great libertarian plan to make homes more affordable is more likely to cause a catastrophic depression than anything else.
I like how “zoning reform” and “reducing exclusionary zoning” and “ending exclusionary zoning” are always treated as interchangeable concepts despite how they are three separate concepts. But mostly I like how we always hear of the “undeniable merits” of reforming/reducing/ending zoning and never let any of the undeniable issues to cloud up the discussion.
Zoning is the greatest restriction on property rights we have, if you don’t mention HOA’s. There isn’t a zoning officer in the land who is busier or more effective than your local HOA in terms of enforcing restrictions. HOA’s are also expert at “preventing millions from using their land as they wish.”
Y’all always have all kinds of great arguments to end zoning, but never have much to say about what replaces it. It’s the Underpants Gnome of land use law:
1. Reformreduceend exclusionary zoning
2. ???
3. ???
4. Freedom!
You’re always long on the (very broadly stated) benefits of reformreduceend without ever getting into the weeds about those “benefits.” And you all flat out ignore the harms. Is zoning the best method we have of controlling development? So far, yes. Getting rid of zoning will help the working class… live next to rendering plants and fertilizer warehouses while still being excluded from nicer jurisdictions through the usual non-zoning methods. But let’s not talk about that.
HOAs are voluntary and contractual, and if you don't like what they've done you can sue them. No QI for HOAs!
Who pays for all the infrastructure upgrades-sewage is really expensive and definitely not affordable? Water keeps going up, oh but we subsidize water for the affordable places. Food is going up, oh yeah we give out cash equivalent cards that end up in cartel hands. Besides the armed guard manned high rises in Denver, who pays for the majority of the states income and property taxes, or better put, all the six figure PLanNINg Government no accountability jobs?
Again, who pays for all the water, sewage, energy and school upgrades? Again, who pays for all the upgrades, inquiring minds want to know? Upgrades who pays?
Affordable housing, promoting socioeconomic diversity, property rights, local control, supply and demand economics, economic growth, workforce mobility, reducing commuting, environmental impact, and addressing racial and social segregation are potential areas of cross-ideological common ground on exclusionary zoning.
https://fusedpage.ca/