Yes, that's you, hand-waving away 40,000 deaths in the US per year, on grounds that other things kill more people per year, and everyone has to die of something eventually anyway. |
You can design resilient infrastructure such that strokes, seizures and heart attacks don't cause as much damage. |
Plus a transportation system and land use such that people likely to have strokes, seizures, and heat attacks can get where they need to go without driving. |
It should definitely be throughly and robustly debated, with current residents of the areas given ample opportunity to weigh in on the matter, along with everyone else. Those current units were likely approved individually, this is a global change to zoning. Again, you knew all of this. Why do the YIMBYs have to come across as so disingenuous and sleazy? It gives people the ick. |
The Planning Department is having FOUR ADDITIONAL COMMUNITY MEETINGS this month. Do you know what "the current units" within 500 feet of University Blvd. even are? |
The "resilient infrastructure", ie: concrete blocks, just makes it more likely that the person having the health emergency gets killed. It's trading one potential death for another and at best is death neutral. |
Nobody plans to have a stroke, seizure or heart attack. Those also aren't issues limited to any specific demographic. |
They are working from intellectually incoherent positions and haven’t delivered on their promise of cheaper housing here so being disingenuous and sleazy is their only play when they get outside their echo chambers. |
There's an important difference between "people likely to have strokes, seizures and heart attacks" and "people planning to have strokes, seizures and heart attacks"! |
You could say the same about guard rails. Do you want to get rid of guard rails? |
I think this is great. My memory only goes back to the 70s but, in my experience, EVERY transit project is actually a real estate development project. That's why I don't focus on whether things like the Purple Line with "break even." The upzoning of Chevy Chase Lake over the next decade might be enough to compensate for any Purple Line "losses". Wait, does that mean our public transit dollars are actually going into the pockets of real estate developers? 100%, buddy. 100%. |
This is not hand waiving and I’m not even saying that we shouldn’t try to reduce traffic deaths or that it doesn’t matter. What I’m saying is that we need to make sure the cost benefit numbers pencil out before the county decides to spend potentially hundreds of millions or even billions to change the roadways in order to prevent 10 or 20 yearly traffic deaths. |
Upzoning won’t break even. Most residential development does not create a fiscal surplus. The only residential development that consistently creates a fiscal surplus is senior housing and very high end residential. Everything else usually costs the county more than these residents contribute in taxes. |
Silver spring has always been the PG County of MoCo |
Are the units being forced (eminent domain of existing SFHs) or it’s up to each individual homeowner? I do not want a multi unit apartment building bumping up to my backyard or to be forced to sell my home) |