Costly
Sprawl
Widespread, poorly planned growth
consumes more than just land: it also
wastes money.
Subdivisions typically cost
communities more than they pay in taxes. Public expenditures on new infrastructures
to support new commercial developments are rarely recouped. Large chain stores
consume locally-owned businesses. Traffic, environmental and quality of life
issues can also have an economic impact on a town. Sprawl also affects everyone
personally by changing our way of life, in ways that can’t be measured in
dollars. It is appropriate to view sprawl in terms of both economic and quality
of life costs.
This doesn’t make development bad.
The question, any planner will tell you, is not whether to grow: it’s HOW to
grow. The right developments in suitable places, and preservation in others,
combined with the numerous tried-and-true tools of smart growth, can make a
community a better place to live.
Issue: Character
Aesthetically
and historically, Canton has a lot to offer. It has open space, woods, charming
historical buildings and unique geographical features that endear it to
residents and those who drive through. Those qualities won’t preserve
themselves.
Issue: Traffic
Issue: The Environment
Development should be done with
minimal environmental impact, including noise and light pollution, affect on
streams and wetlands, and — a point sometimes overlooked — amount of paved
surface. The bigger a commercial development and the more cars it attracts, the
more extensive these impacts. In addition to buildings’ footprints, the size of
parking lots also must be considered, as both are impervious to water.
A University of Connecticut
satellite-mapping project now underway is showing photographic proof that
Connecticut is in the process of paving itself to its own environmental
destruction. UConn will soon be sharing this technology with town officials who
are growing increasingly concerned with making better development decisions.
Issue: Individuality
There is no other place like
Canton. Development is necessary and frequently good, but it should not come at
the expense of Canton’s character or pocketbook.
When sprawl overtakes more and
more of the country, the towns that have retained their individuality will be
the winners.