Saturday, February 14, 2009

The End of our "Mall-Centric" World?

I commend to your attention a brilliant essay, "Ghost Malls," by James Quinn in The Prudent Bear on the dismal future of retail development in the United States. I then invite you to ponder the implications for (a) commercial development in Virginia, (b) the public fisc, and (c) human development patterns.

Permit me summarize the key points.

Retail developers have built thousands of malls and shopping centers around the country predicated on the assumption that consumer spending would continue on the same trajectory as seen over the past two decades. In light of the vast liquidation of wealth in the housing sector and the stock market -- a sum measured in the multiple trillions of dollars -- American consumers have been shocked to their senses. They are retrenching, restoring their collective savings rate from about zero to a figure that could approach eight percent of income, the level that prevailed before the great credit bubble commenced.

"No amount of fiscal stimulation will reverse this trauma," Quinn writes. "Consumer spending has accounted for 72% of GDP. It will revert to at least the long term mean of 65%." That's a shift of massive proportions, and the impact on the retail economy cannot be overstated. While some economists think that consumer spending eventually will rebound as consumers satiate "pent up demand," Quinn is not so sure. "Americans have bought everything they’ve desired for the last 20 years. There is no pent-up demand if you own 20 pairs of jeans and 60 pairs of shoes. The over-spending and over-leverage will take a decade to unwind."

I agree with Quinn, and I would add to his argument. Consumer spending is dominated in the United States by the Baby Boomer generation. Not only do Boomers have to pay down debt, they are awakening to the fact that retirement is fast approaching. And while a majority of Boomers have resigned themselves to working a few years longer than anticipated in order to fund their retirement, they also know they have to build up their savings. Accordingly, I would not be surprised to see the national savings rate shoot past 8 percent -- perhaps into the 10- to 12-percent range.

So, what are the consequences for developers of retail property? Major retail chains are already dropping like flies -- Circuit City, Linens N Things, Bombay Company, Sharper Image, Foot Locker and Pacific Sunwear, just to to mention the bigger ones. Other retailers are scaling back expansion plans. Quinn expects to see 15 percent of the nation's retail base disappear by 2011, and for vacancy rates in new malls to shoot up to 25 percent.

The next dominoes to fall will be the commercial real estate developers who speculated that consumer spending would increase without end. Writes Quinn:

Most of the retailers that are closing, lease their locations from mall developers. Many of these developers borrowed heavily to finance massive mall expansion. The term of these loans were generally five to seven years. The Wall Street wiz kids and their collateralized debt obligation (CDO) machine generated the vast preponderance of such financing in the last five years. According to commercial real estate expert Andy Miller, the collapse will come more rapidly than the residential collapse.
Billions in debt needs to be refinanced in the next two years and there is no one willing to make those loans, Quinn continues. As night follows day, we will see spectacular developer bankruptcies, and we'll see regional banks take huge hits on their original loans. I would add one point: While all retail developers will suffer, those who have built in fast-growth counties on the metropolitan fringe in the expectation of population growth that may never materialize, will be hit the first and the hardest.

Concludes Quinn: "As Americans realize that they don’t “need” a $5 Starbucks latte, IKEA knickknacks, Jimmy Cho shoes, Rolex watches, granite counters and stainless steel appliances, our mall-centric world will end."

I don't know if our mall-centric world will "end" but I do believe the United States is transitioning into a very different economy. What applies to the U.S. as a whole certainly applies to Virginia. The painful restructuring of the economy will send tidal waves ripping through state and local tax revenues. Former fast-growth counties will find themselves particularly hard hit. To avoid being inundated by the waves, Virginians need to re-examine all the old assumptions -- from population growth and tax revenues to the need for and location of new road capacity and other infrastructure. Failure to re-think fundamental assumptions will only compound the inevitable misery.

Friday, February 13, 2009

TIME'S LIST OF 25 TO BLAME

Before it goes away, you might take in Time’s list of 25 people to blame for the Global Financial Meltdown. (Time just calls it a “financial crisis.”)

The list is fun, the voting by citizens on the rankings is very interesting.

Note that Phil Gramm comes in number one in the "Average Rank" voting but in total votes “The American Consumer” gets the most nods (well deserved) followed by G. W. Bush and Alan Greenspan.

All in all it is a great summary – except of course it is all about people and nothing about location, settlement pattern or Wrong Size House in the Wrong Location.

Look forward to thoughts about who else should be on the list. Time just listed one from each “category” (circle of Hell) so the list could easily be the top 75 with more bankers and more hedge fund types on the list.

EMR

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Whatever happened to sustainable industries?

For better or worse, here's a story I did for Richmond's alternative newsweekly, Style Weekly. The topic involves how lots of bets go bad when it comes to economic development.

A few examples:

Republican Governor George Allen went heads over heels with Motorola showed interest in two silicon chip making plants in the Richmond area back int he 1990s. One was finally built with about $80 million in public goodie money. Well, Qimonda, a German firm, is going through its death throes and just about everyone at the Henrico County facility faces job extinction.

Democratic Governor Mark Warner went heads of heels when Wachovia Securities wanted to move after merging with Prudential Securities about a decade later. The goodie basket was opened again. Well after staying in downtown Richmond for maybe four years, the firm merged with brokerage A.G. Edwards and split for St. Louis. You know the rest of the story -- Wachovia is now owned by San Francisco-based Wells Fargo after it got screwed by buying up a lot of toxic, subprime mortgages.

There's plenty more. Here's the URL:

http://www.styleweekly.com/ME2/Audiences/dirmod.asp?sid=&nm=&type=Publishing&mod=Publications::Article&mid=8F3A7027421841978F18BE895F87F791&tier=4&id=7A5BF133D55A4499A7D807A1FC72232D&AudID=AE6FBAD9A9574D429566425E856C8C66


Let me know what you think.

Peter Galuszka

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

THANK YOU LARRY

Your citation to BELTWAY BURDEN

http://commerce.uli.org/misc/BeltwayBurden.pdf

is a real service.

Since moving to a Beta Village in the Countryside in 2002 EMR’s focus has been on understanding the economic, social and physical reality outside the Clear Edge around the Cores of New Urban Regions.

EMR was not aware of this work but it is a worthy successor to the 6th item listed in ANATOMY OF A BAD COMMUTE. In fact those little red “employment centers” are the “activity centers” that could grow to be the Cores of Balanced Communities.

BELTWAY BURDEN is consistent with all the well founded work EMR has seen over the past three decades.

There are a few problems:

The great graphics make the file very large to download and print.

The work was done just before the roof fell in vis a vis gasoline prices, so some will discount the work because gas in now “cheap.”

Of course the data is aggregated by municipal jurisdiction and there is some use of Core Confusing Words but one cannot have everything.

Someone needs to step up and look at these issues in light of the new reality. In the meantime all those interested in evolving functional human settlement patterns should have this in their libraries.

EMR

Monday, February 09, 2009

Death to Dead Ideas!

This isn't terribly Virginia-specific but I thought I'd share it. Just heard NPR this morning talk with Matt Miller, a Fortune magazine columnist who has written a book titled "The Tyranny of Dead Ideas."

His thesis is that many assumptions that have been true in America for decades are no longer true. This really rngs true. A fe:

Children will make more than their parents: For years it was assumed that as the American dream unfolded, each generation got better jobs and pay. This is no longer the case as a paradigm shift in the economy takes hold. I know it's not true in my case but that's my choice. I wanted to be a journalist and not a doctor. But I think our kids will not have the high-paying jobs that many of us have.

Your company will keep paying for your welfare. Dead long ago. We are the ONLY country in the world that has employers pay for our health insurance in most cases. So, we get really expensive health care that makes our companies uncompetitive in the world markets. Universal health insurance, here we come.

Tax are bad
This will be a tough one to swallow to dogmatic BR bloggers but it is true. The current downturn has shown that financial markets can't regulate themselves and we can't rely on them for our welfare. Sure we'll lower taxes to get us out of this mess, but then watch out. All the TMTs of the world are going to have to accept a fndamental shift that will make the U.S>more like tax-happy FRance (or so Newsweek says). Government will be playing a much bigger role in our lives and will need more taxes to help pay for it. Miller says the real issue is tochange who pays the tax. Rather than have a regressive payroll tax that hurts the poor and middle class, tax polluting industries like coal-fired utilities.

BR bloggers. It's a Brave New World.

Peter Galuszka

Sunday, February 08, 2009

NOTE FOR NMM ON ECONOMIC REALITY

Rather than add this note to the ANATOMY OF A BAD COMMUTE post, EMR will put it here because it is important to understand these issueS. Why is it important?

Because NovaMiddleMan’s idea of economic reality is exactly why those who made bad location decisions are hurting now and will be hurting far more in five years. All those still alive will still be hurting in fifty years if there is not Fundamental Transformation of human settlement patterns and Fundamental Transformation of governance structure.

NovaMiddleMan said:

“Look dude the free market is at work.”

Was this the ‘free market’ that was declared “dead” in Davos last week?

The US of A is a democracy and a clear majority are inclined to think Behavioral Economics is now in control and that a “free market” – which according Adam Smith presumes informed buyers and sellers – has only rarely existed since 1870 outside the minds of those who perpetuated the myth to gain economic and political leverage.

Some think the “popular” backlash against the current stimulus packages is due to belief in “free markets.” Not so, the popular backlash is driven by revolution over what happened to the money that was doled out and wasted in the last stimulus package.

“People make decisions and face consequences.”

But “people” had no idea what the consequences would be.

Tell us how you feel when you are 75 and still have to work ten hours a day and have no health benefits because of the $75-Trillion in unfunded liabilities for those ahead of you in line.

Or do you plan to be one of the few lucky ones at the top of the ziggurat? Watch out for the pitchforks, machetes and pikepoles.

“Here is my perspective. Pardon me for not having as much context. I'm a bit younger than you folks :-p.”

What is that about those who do not understand history having to repeat it?

In this case there are not enough resources left support a second round of mass overconsumption with 6 billion humans all wanting and deserving a slice of the pie.

“Its 2003 and I am one of the young people powering the new economy of Northern Virginia.”

Lets say “overpowering” the resources upon which a market economy depends. It is not your fault NMM, it is all of our faults but some of us have been pointing out the cliff since 1973, many for longer. Nouriel Roubini has come lately to the Common.

“Some people want to get married and have kids. In 2003-2006 there were only a couple choices.”

Choices about getting married or choices about getting married and having children and living the American Dream as portrayed by MainStream Media advertising? (See “A Yard Where Johnny Can Run and Play,” 1 Dec 2003.)

Even for the later there were many choices unless they relied on Autonomobile and shelter advertising and stories in MainStream Media for guidance. Millions of couples made more intelligent choices than those in Bristow and Dale City.

Check out the story about Grace Church in Saturday’s WaPo Real Estate Section. Just for starters, if small groups of your friends got together they could have created real dooryards from the hundreds of similar buildings inside R=10.

Too busy playing video games to understand the real world? Not smart.

“Finding a place under 500k...”

See above.

“... in a good school district ...”

As noted in the 3 February WaPo story if one bought when they got married, by the time their children were ready for school the schools were over crowded.

“... with low crime.”

Define “low crime.” Check out the “safest” places by Prof Lucy’s calculations.

“The only choices were the two places mentioned in the article and outer Loudoun.”

Not in “outer” Loudoun (R=30 to R=45) and not “inner” Loudoun (R=20 to R=30 – the same Radius Band and Prince William) either. Both inner and outer Loudoun have different conditions.

For example, dwellings in the same price range as those in Bristow and Dale City were Attached Dwellings in the eastern Loudoun Beta Communities because they were closer to Jobs and Services due to the existence or Reston and Dulles Airport. These places also did not make the Top 12 in commuting times among Census Designated Places.

The bigger issue is this:

In the profiled enclaves between the time they were married and the first child going to school they spent on average 3,375 hours pre Household commuting. If your cohort spent half that time creating functional Dooryards (see Grace Church for example) they could have also evolved safe Clusters and good Neighborhood schools.

OK, no agents make a profit from sweat equity and building safe Clusters and good Neighborhood schools from the inside and so there is no advertising and no MainStream Media stories... But you get the idea.

“This was insane.”

NOW YOU ARE TALKING

“There needed to be a housing correction.”


The question is: what kind of a “correction?”

“Now you can find a place for under 500k in many places.”

Not a place that meets your criteria because the schools are going down and the crime is going up faster than the price is changing.

“Problem solved all through market forces with no planning or nanny stateisims.”

The problem is not solved, it is only now coming into focus for most citizens.

“And I still say show me the demand for eoconoboxes right on top of each other with no cars.”

EMR dos not advocate “econoboxes” nor does he advocate depriving Households of vehicles. See performance measures in original post.

“Right.... Its not what the public wants”

If the full costs were fairly allocated, the public would in fact want (and need) different settlement patterns and the dwellings need not be “econoboxes” nor “on top of each other.”

“P.S. the people who live in the inner areas don't want what your development plan is anyway. Unless you can provide adequate infrastructure first and show the quality of life for existing residents wont be negatively impacted.”

Here NMM is correct.

These NIMBY-like criteria can be (and should be) met.

The first step is for those in your generation to understand the reality of the existing conditions and the real future options.

EMR

ANATOMY OF A BAD COMMUTE

On 3 February, WaPo published Eric M. Weiss’s story: “A Dubious Distinction: The Longest Ride in U.S. – Prince William Enclave Has Longest Commute In Nation; Three Others in Area [the National Capital Subregion] Make Top 12.”

If you have not read the story, it is a classic. This story is a poster child for why citizens have debilitating Geographic Illiteracy and why far too many struggle with long commutes and sub-optimum lifestyles that spell financial disaster for Agencies, Enterprises, Institutions and Households.

At first glance this is a story about earnest, well-intended citizens doing what they believe to be in their best interest. There are also concerned governance practitioners and sage transport experts facing an intractable problem laid out in award winning journalistic form. But look under the hood, and there is a different story.

The featured citizens are trapped in terrible Jobs / Housing / Services juxtapositions but they believe they have done the best they can. These citizens are in this position because they inhabit dysfunctional settlement patterns but they do not yet know what those words mean.

What citizens in these enclaves DO know, (although it is not reported) that they have rapidly deteriorating home equity but they do not yet know how their location decisions contributed to this condition.

And the “journalism”: The primary source of information is very badly informed citizens. “Human Condition” reporting (which IS much better than “He said / She said” reporting) provides no historical context, there is no reference to an overarching strategy to achieve functional settlement patterns or less onerous living conditions. Even worse, the “experts” avoid reality and toss up their hands. The politicians spin away with what they hope will get them elected one more time.

This review focuses on the two low-density urban enclaves that are located in the Virginia part of the National Capital Subregion. These enclaves are the “Census Designated Places” of Bristow and Dale City, Virginia. A similar story could be told about the two enclaves in Maryland noted in the story.

IT DID NOT NEED TO TURN OUT THIS WAY

Decades ago there were adopted Agency polices and plans that incorporated excellent strategies to guide the evolution of human settlement patterns and to match transport facility capacity with the travel demand generated by the settlement patterns.

Decades ago there were good examples of far better settlement patterns that were actually built in the Subregion.

There could have been better reporting had WaPo not Lancastered those who were starting to understand human settlement patterns out of the Region.

There could have been well informed, prosperous happy citizens living in functional human settlement patterns, but NO...

THE TRAGEDY OF MISSED OPPORTUNITIES

Here are just a few of the critical historical mile posts avoided by the story and by the experts:

1. In the mid-50s the Fairfax County Comprehensive Plan called for four Balanced Communities with Clear Edges in the R=10 to R=20 Radius Band and Compact urban fabric supported by a shared-vehicle system inside a Clear Edge (near R=10) around the Core of the National Capital Subregion. (Fairfax County and the Commonwealth of Virginia would be the villains in this story if naming villains was a productive approach to evolving a sustainable future.)

2. “The Year 2000 Plan for the National Capital Area” published in 1960 laid out in detail the basics of functional settlement pattern on the Alpha Neighborhood-, Alpha Village- and Alpha Community-scales. This plan also introduced a famous sketch that outlined the distribution of Alpha Community-scale components in what has evolve to be the Washington-Baltimore New Urban Region.

3. In the mid-60s a composite of municipal comprehensive plans for the northern Part of Virginia – as well as a similar one for much of the National Capital Subregion – presented a functional settlement pattern for the Subregion.

Had these plans been followed and had Balanced Communities evolved following these plans, policies, programs and strategies, then less than half the area now devoted to urban development would have been cleared and subdivided. Much of the vacant and underutilized land within 100 miles of the Centroids of the Washington-Baltimore New Urban Region would be in active nonUrban production and serve as a the green lungs of the Region. The Chesapeake Bay would not be on life support.

4. In the late 60s the federal government committed to fund 90 percent of METRO, and over the next three decades built, a world class “heavy rail” shared-vehicle system serving the Core of the National Capital Subregion. Contrary to a written agreement with the federal Agency, municipal Agencies did not uphold their end of the bargain. They did not plan and encourage station-area development with land uses that would support the METRO system.

To this day – over 40 years after construction on METRO started – the majority of the land in METRO station-areas is vacant and / or underutilized. There is no Balance between the METRO system capacity and the station-area travel demand. This is why most of the METRO trains leave most of the METRO stations essentially empty most of the time.

4. In the 70s full-scale, examples of much more functional settlement patterns were planed at the Alpha Community- and Alpha Village-scales. Several of these projects were built and while there were glitches, they were and ARE far more successful from economic social and physical perspectives than the vast majority of the land developed for urban land uses since 1973 in the National Capital Subregion.

These places proved that:

• A far higher percentage of the residents could live “on or near the water” and / or “in or near the woods,”
• Have better schools,
• Have far stronger identity and social cohesiveness,
• Serve a far wider range of housing needs,
• Achieve a far greater Balance of J / H / S / R / A,
• Have far more useable Openspace,
• Achieve higher and more stable home values per square foot
• And still take up less than one quarter of the total land at the Alpha Community-scale when compared to the land devoted to scattered subdivisions such as those in the enclaves (Census Designated Places) noted in the WaPo story

5. In the mid 80s a 54 member citizen task force drafted a plan that took the best of the 60s and 70s ideas for evolving Balanced Communities and created a plan for Fairfax Center. Fairfax Center was planned to be 5,500 acres where 55,000 citizen could work, live and seek services. Almost immediately the plan was nickled and dimed (least common denominatored) but today it is still far more functional than the other places of similar scale and intensity of use.

6. In the late 80s and into the 90s Wash COG carried out a process that could have guided the location of new jobs and dwellings to evolve Balanced Communities from the then existing “Activity Centers.”

While this was going on, in October 1973 OPEC, issued a wake up call that should have gotten every citizen and every governance practitioner on the board strategies to evolve functional and sustainable settlement patterns that did not rely on importing foreign oil and did not depend on Large, Private Vehicles for Mobility and Access.

Based on the strategies that existed from the mid 50s Agencies, Enterprises and Institutions could have leveraged the booming SubRegional economic activity that lasted from the late 50s until mid-2007 to build and rebuild functional and sustainable human settlement patterns.

The 3 February WaPo story did not refer to any of this context. It is as if the current result was inevitable and no one had ever given thought to a different outcome. In fact, clear, concise arguments in favor of alternatives to the current result have been published in every decade since 1920.

LOCATIONAL OBLIVIOUSNESS

The 3 February WaPo story also did not establish the Subregional Context of the featured enclaves.

These enclaves are NOT in the middle of nowhere. These enclaves are outside the location for the Clear Edges shown on the 50s and 60s plans. However, they are INSIDE the logical location for the Clear Edge around the Core of the Subregion based on the late 90 and early 00s work of Wash COG, the employer of one of the experts quoted.

It would have been very useful to point out that each of the enclaves are served by major limited access radial roadway corridors paid for by federal government – I-66 and I-95.

Both these corridors have HOV lanes and both have public AND private bus and van service using the HOV lanes.

Further, both of these corridors are also served by commuter rail – the Virginia Railway Express.

In addition both corridors are served by radial lines of the METRO system.

And there is icing on the cake: For over four decades the I-95 corridor has had the Shirley Express Lanes. By many measures these are the most effective applications of asphalt used by Autonomobiles on the planet.

It would have been informative for the experts cited in the story to point out that these two enclaves have access to every type of facility that federal, state and municipal jurisdictions have relied on to provide Mobility and Access to low-density, monocultures of auto-dominated settlement patterns.

Would it have been too much to ask these experts why all these billions of dollars in public facilities obviously do not work? It turns out relying of these facilities to support dysfunctional settlement patterns will never work for reasons spelled out in THE PROBLEM WITH CARS. But that is getting ahead of the story.

AND THEN THERE IS THE COST

Of course the CAPACITY of the radial and circumferential roadways could be increased and more vans, busses and trains could be added to the shared-vehicle services.

However if the COST of these facilities were allocated to those who would use them in the target enclaves, most of these citizens could not afford the fares / tolls / taxes to pay for the new facilities.

It is also clear that the bottom line result adding very expensive new capacity would be to shave a few minutes off of the record setting AVERAGE commute times but it would not “solve” the problem.

AND WHILE WE ARE TALKING ABOUT A FAIR ALLOCATION OF COSTS:

If all the current costs of the location decisions that resulted in putting these dwellings in these enclaves were fairly allocated many, if not most, of the present residents could not afford the FULL cost of living there.

What drives up the cost? The mix of dwelling types and the Regional and Subregional location of Jobs and Services result in settlement patterns that do not function. These patterns violate the basic laws of economics and physics. It is not a matter of policy or preference.

THE ROLE OF EXPERTS

In addition to not mentioning – or not mentioning forcefully enough to make it into the story – any of the history or context of the enclaves, the experts did not provide any insight on a path to sustainability.

They did not point out the necessity of evolving Balanced Communities in sustainable New Urban Regions – using what ever Vocabulary they might choose.

They did not point out that the Beta Communities in the municipal jurisdictions inside R=5 (primarily Alexandria and Arlington) have job to dwelling ratios on the order of 5 to 1. They did not point out that while one of the largest municipalities in the US of A occupies most of the territory within the R=5 to R=20 Radius Band (Fairfax County) has a ratio closer to 1 to 1, there is a gigantic imBalance of housing affordability to wages for the jobs in the jurisdiction due to exclusionary zoning.

Only two of the nine Beta Communities that fall all or part in Fairfax County have achieved anything like a Balance of Jobs / Housing / Services / Recreation / Amenity.

In explaining the difference between Fairfax County and Prince William County where the two enclaves are located, one of the experts demonstrated a complete lack of knowledge of the physical relationships that control human settlement patterns. By suggesting that Fairfax County once had “the same situation” he demonstrated ignorance of A= pi R sq. He further implied that Fairfax County is OK because there are now more jobs in the municipality than in past decades without regard to location or Balance.

It would have been useful to point out that the two Virginia enclaves (Bristow /Linton Hall in Greater West Prince William and Dale City in East Greater Prince William) were low-density, imbalanced enclaves in badly unbalanced Beta Communities.

Road scholar and congestion guru, Tony Downs famously pointed out that congestion is not the problem, it is the solution. Tony correctly noted that when congestion gets bad enough, citizens, Households, Agencies, Enterprises and Institutions make different location and settlement pattern decisions.

Tony correctly identified the political (SMALL “p”) and the unenlightened citizen self-interest that has prevented intelligent changes that have been advocated for 90 years.

Downs had two solutions:

First: Buy a big comfortable car (Large, Private Vehicle) with a great sound system to enjoy the ride. Addiction to this formula is EXACTLY why the Autonomobile Enterprises, supported by Agencies and “freedom” oriented Institutions have driven to the brink of Collapse.

Second: Drive to work with someone you REALLY like (wink, wink). According to domestic and divorce court records that “solution” is a major cause of divorce and social instability in the Household and at all other scales of human settlement.

Tragically, Tony did not take into consideration was that at some point, the total cost of Regional-scale settlement pattern dysfunction would leave citizens and their Organizations without the resources necessary to change the settlement patterns to more functional and less congestion generating configurations.

To his credit, Tony was first an economist and had no way to know that the incredible BOOM of the 80s, 90s and 00s would exterminate “rational man” / “wisdom of the crowd” / invisible hand economics and replace it with “behavioral economics.” See Column # 124 “Riding the Tiger,” 2 June 2008 and the two recent post on the Tragedy of Trickle Down.

THE ROLE OF THE MEDIA

For reasons spelled out in THE ESTATES MATRIX, MainStream Media has abandoned its responsibility to create informed citizens. Sadly, citizens are left to sort out advertisements for Autonomobiles and Wrong Size Houses in the Wrong locations that promise the American Dream without the facts or an overarching conceptual framework with which to organize their thinking. They believe the decisions they make are in their best interest and once made they defend them in the face of 46.3 minute AVERAGE commutes.

To his credit, WaPo reporter, Weiss only used one Core Confusing Word (suburban / suburb) and only used it three times. The use of “enclave” is very effective in this context and is a good choice. However, he used interchangeably two generic settlement pattern descriptors (neighborhood and community with no capital) seven times. Of course, it would have been helpful to point out that “political subdivisions” of the Commonwealth and “Census Designated Places” do not reflect the organic components of human settlement patterns.

THE BOTTOM LINE

Now, with a deepening recession, citizens and their elected representatives will support throwing more money at ‘infrastructure’ to remove fundamental drivers of dysfunction that cannot be solved except by evolving Balanced Communities.

There is no way to help commuters except to help them become noncommuters by building Balanced Communities.

See Column # 41“The Commuting Problem,” 17 January 2005, Column # 65 “Balanced Communities,” 23 August 2005 and Column # 92 “Solving the Commuter Problem,” 5 February 2007.

EMR