10/7/2008   MLUI Home | Growth Management | Land & Water | Transportation | Partner With Us


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Natural Prosperity
Detroit teaches Michigan a lesson in natural economics
Kids get the nonpoint picture
Cheaper by the wetlands
State fuels growth pressures
Homeowners scrub up after sprawl
Empty hooks on top rivers
Water watchers sound alarm up north
Fresh thinking spares a growing township and its creek
Here’s how
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NEWS AND ACTION
CHEERS AND JEERS
ELM STREET WRITERS GROUP
AT THE INSTITUTE
Guess what! Fake wetlands don’t work
  State Orders Big Fake Wetland
Out front on South Fox Island
Great Lakes drilling shifts political winds
Townships stand firm on growth
Detroit takes big transit step

 

 

     

 
 


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  Here’s How
Michigan can keep its water clean with Smart Growth

Michigan’s water — its value and vulnerability — is already a central theme of the 2002 election season.

But making sure candidates actually take Smart Growth action to protect water — safeguarding natural assets while growing local economies — is a matter of public pressure. Voters need to specify the land use reforms they want to protect the water they love.

The Michigan Land Use Institute offers the growth management and water protection agenda below for citizens, local officials, and the media to use as they evaluate campaign promises.

STATE LEADERSHIP
Make a high-level commitment to growth management. Michigan’s next governor must personally instill a Smart Growth ethic throughout state government and across township, county, and municipal lines.

Invest state funds the Smart Growth way. State financing for schools, government buildings, and public works projects should go only to areas already outfitted with infrastructure — water, sewer, and roads — or where communities plan to grow.

REGIONAL COORDINATION
Encourage communities to work together. State government should create incentives to reward local governments that work with neighboring communities when planning for growth. Rivers and watersheds do not obey political boundaries. Communities must collaborate to protect their common natural assets.

Make room for innovation. The Legislature should remove bureaucratic obstacles to local and regional innovations. Laws behind traditional planning and zoning, for example, have promoted sprawling development across the state.

QUALITY ASSISTANCE
Lansing must help not hinder. The state should cooperate with local, citizen-based planning efforts and assist them by upholding environmental laws.

State agencies often work at cross-purposes with local governments by allowing damaging development and by building new roads through farmland and wetlands that communities aim to keep free of pavement.

Provide resources for coordinated planning. State government should support communities across Michigan that are eager to plan for Smart Growth but do not have adequate financial or technical resources. PC


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