Stopping Sprawl by Growing Smarter
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Read first few paragraphs of article:
What do abandoned buildings, clogged highways, and new
mega-malls in farm fields have in common? According to a growing
list of national experts, all of these seemingly unrelated
phenomenon are the direct result of sprawl.
Planning and greenspace advocates have long lamented the
sprawling development that gobbles up huge tracts of prime
farmland and forests while spawning dawn to dusk traffic
congestion. But now they are being joined by low-income housing
advocates, social service organizations, church leaders, and
others concerned about urban decay and poverty.
In announcing a new legislative initiative to curb sprawl,
Maryland Governor Paris Glendenning declared that, "inner city
disinvestment and suburban sprawl are two sides of the same coin
... by curbing sprawl, Maryland can save farmland and forests
while simultaneously revitalizing our older suburbs and urban
centers."
While it is too soon to predict how Maryland's "Neighborhood
Conservation and Smart Growth Initiative" will fare with state
lawmakers, the initiative is significant because it addresses an
issue of growing national significance and it attempts to remedy
several of the major problems caused by sprawl.
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