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Urban Sprawl

Lansing Takes Hands-Off Approach
Michigan is losing 100,000 acres of farmland annually, and the cities and towns are spreading out 800% faster than the population growth. Stopping sprawl is a high-profile bi-partisan issue in at least 15 other states across the nation, but Lansing is bowing to monied special interests to maintain the status quo.
In 1992 a blue-ribbon panel chosen by the Engler Administration found that the deteriorating rural and urban
landscape was one of the most pressing environmental issues facing the state. The panel's report, Michigan's
Environment and Relative Risk, sparked a well-organized and thoughtful response throughout the state to address the
problem. And yet, in a forceful demonstration of the power that monied special interests wield in Lansing, the reform
bills themselves became the vehicles that actually made the state's land use laws even worse than before.
The report:
Identified a need for a sound and workable planning process that considers the effect of haphazard
development on the environment.
Provided a solid factual base for the growing neighborhood movement to halt sprawl in Michigan.
Caused Michigan's environmental groups to place stopping sprawl at the top of their priority lists.
Spurred a citizens movement, which is especially active in the Grand Traverse region and in Washtenaw
County, to seek changes in the patterns of development.
Prompted follow-up studies by the Legislature, the Department of Agriculture, the Michigan Society of
Planning Officials, the Natural Resources Commission, and the Americana Foundation.
"Perhaps no other state has studied its land use patterns, and their social, economic and environmental consequences, so extensively as Michigan," said a 1997 report by the Michigan Environmental Council.
All of the follow-up studies reached similar conclusions:
Michigan is losing nearly 100,000 acres of farmland annually, or more than 11 acres each hour.
Cities and towns are spreading out at a rate up to eight times faster than the growth in population.
Three of the state's top industries -- agriculture, timber production, and tourism -- are threatened by
degraded natural resources and fragmentation of wild and recreational land.
Urban sprawl is costly; requiring new roads, sewers, emergency services, and schools, and growing expense
to maintain existing roads and public infrastructure.
Sprawl also has turned Michigan's metropolitan areas into "the most [racially] segregated places in America,"
concluded David Rusk, the former mayor of Albuquerque, N.M., in a national demographic analysis reported in the
Lansing-based Planning & Zoning News.
The Administration's Response
The land use reform issue transcends party lines. For example, both Maryland Gov. Parris Glendening, a
Democrat, and New Jersey Gov. Christine Todd Whitman, a Republican, have made halting sprawl the central
platform of their administrations.
Even so, despite the forceful conclusions of the Relative Risk report and the consistent findings of the
follow-up studies, the Engler Administration did not respond with the leadership other governors have shown
to rein in suburban sprawl and preserve farmland.
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