Explain the hypocrisy here. And explain it in a way that distinguishes it from any politician, or person for that matter, who advocates for policies that help people in circumstances that they do not place themselves in. |
These community meetings are performative. They are not gathering data or changing anything based on citizen feedback. My main concern is the environmental disaster caused when all the green space is ripped out to build driveways and parking lots. This is passed off as environmentally a net positive and it’s not. There are lots of places to build condos but the council wants no limits on development except in their neighborhoods. Fact. |
The hypocrisy has been explained to you and it’s blatant. You clearly work for developers. You are not just a citizen. |
OK then, so at least we are getting somewhere....you don't think they are hiding what they are doing or trying to keep the public from knowing about it, right? You think that they are not making changes to the proposal that you think should occur as a result of community feedback. Do I have that right? |
It is not hypocritical to live in a SFH and still believe that there should be an option to build different types of units. It just isn't. This is like saying it is hypocritical to own a luxury car but believe that the industry should produce more affordable vehicles. |
I'm genuinely curious here. Do you sincerely believe that anybody who supports upzoning is only doing so because of a financial tie to developers? You think it is impossible for anybody to believe in this policy on its merits? |
Apparently for you, "SFH" and "home" are synonyms. But they are not synonyms. All types of housing are homes. |
Could you please name the specific county council members who live in areas where the proposed zoning changes will not apply? I assume that you're referring to county council members who live in incorporated municipalities with their own zoning authority. Maybe you think it's hypocritical for someone who lives in an incorporated municipality in Montgomery County to be a county council member? |
If investors won't want to build multi-unit housing on septic, and actually I'm not sure that multi-unit housing on septic is even allowed, then how is this hypocrisy? What it actually seems to be, to me, is an opportunity for you to ask the council to add language that says that the zoning changes only apply to properties on public water and sewer. |
No, that is not the point they are making. It is hypocritical because they are unwilling to live the urbanist lifestyle their policies promote. They are pulling up the ladder behind them now that they own houses in leafy single-family neighborhoods. This policy will drive up the value of their homes by reducing the supply of single-family houses. They expect everyone else to live in sub-1500 sq foot quadplexes without parking, but they choose to live in million-dollar 6000+ sq ft houses in neighborhoods that won't be impacted by the zoning changes they are pushing on the community. If most of this progressive county council is not interested in living the lifestyle promoted by their own policies, why should we believe that this is the right direction for the county? The planning commission did not even research what housing types residents want to live or what lifestyles residents want! If their own lifestyle choices are any indication of what most residents want in MOCO, then this policy is a terrible decision for the county. There are plenty of condos in walkable locations throughout MOCO, but almost none of these people making decisions on behalf of voters want to live in one. Expand housing affordability by zoning to increase the supply of single-family homes. Don't bother with this nonsense that reduces the supply of the housing type with the highest level of demand and pushes residents to become permanent renters in small apartment units. |
They are not saying that everybody needs to "live that lifestyle". They are saying there should be more opportunities for people to live that lifestyle. Just like Jawando will be able to continue living in his large SFH, so will you if you choose to. On the bolded, I'm curious what that would look like. Do you have any ideas? |
If you don't even understand how comprehensive sewer plan works then you are very clueless about this whole process. Some of these neighborhoods that our council members live in are literally right next to existing sewer infrastructure, but the county policies are written in a way explicitly forbid their neighborhoods from connecting to sewer infrastructure. So they can change the zoning, but the county's existing sewer policies effectively ban the these housing types in their own neighborhood. This is a backdoor way to exempt themselves from their own policy proposals. They could promote housing affordability even more by relaxing sewer connection policies, but they are not willing to do that because it impacts the place that they live. |
IF this is accurate, strongly recommend you advocate for relaxing sewer connection policies and investments in sewer infrastructure. |
I don't get it. Are they hypocrites because they live in areas with private well/septic but are voting on zoning changes that affect areas with public water/sewer? Are they hypocrites because they live in areas with private well/septic but oppose expanding the areas served by public water/sewer? Do you want to expand the areas served by public water/sewer? In my experience, most people with private well/septic do not want to expand the areas served by public water/sewer, but who knows, I don't know everybody. Who are these hypocrites, by the way? It seems very detail-oriented to know which councilmembers live on private well/septic. |
DP. That would be counter to umpteen master plans, Thrive 2050 (mostly), and state smart growth policies. Developers would love it, though. |