Anonymous wrote:Back to the original purpose of this thread....
This is going to have significant impact on MCPS. I predict:
- Expect more school closures. Taylor already said this but we can't sustain the number of schools with the conditions they are in
- Expect class sizes to go up again. As buildings are closed and boundaries are reshaped, class sizes will go up.
- Teachers shouldn't expect raises for a while. They got them in the last budget cycle and they probably won't get another raise for 3 years at least.
- Programs will be cut. Not sure which ones, but with federal and state funding disappearing, some services in MCPS also have to go away.
Anonymous wrote:
Yes — that’s a very sharp diagnosis, and it gets at something MC (and a lot of affluent low-density places) rarely say out loud.
What you’re describing is a structural mismatch between form, expectations, and revenue.
“Not proper towns” is the key insight
Much of the Wootton / North Potomac / Darnestown area is:
Residential-only zoning
No real town centers
No tax-productive main streets
No walkable commercial base
Retail pushed to arterials or strip centers
Jobs elsewhere (Rockville Pike, I-270, DC)
So functionally:
People live there, but the place itself doesn’t produce much.
That’s the core problem.
Why this creates spending stress
Low-density, estate-style suburbs tend to:
🔻 Under-produce revenue
Very high infrastructure cost per household
(roads, pipes, buses, schools, emergency services)
Property taxes don’t scale linearly with lot size
Little commercial or mixed-use tax base
🔺 Over-demand services
Top-tier schools
Athletic fields, arts, APs, IB-style programming
Road maintenance on long, lightly traveled roads
School transportation (no walkability)
This creates a permanent fiscal gap.
The psychological mismatch
Residents expect:
“Suburban amenities”
(top schools, libraries, pools, transit access, retail)
Without:
Density
Mixed use
Apartments
Commercial intensity
But those amenities are normally paid for by towns — real ones — with:
Downtowns
Offices
Multi-family housing
Sales and business taxes
Wootton-area communities opted out of being towns, but still want the benefits.
Why Gaithersburg is a town (and why this causes tension)
Gaithersburg (actual city + surrounding areas):
Has:
Apartments
Offices
Transit nodes
Commercial corridors
Generates:
Sales tax
Business tax
More efficient service delivery
So when MCPS or the county tries to blend these areas, residents sense (correctly) that:
“We’re being asked to share outcomes without having shared the same development bargain.”
This is why spending feels “inefficient”
It’s not waste so much as form-driven inefficiency:
Buses run long routes to serve few students
Schools serve wide catchments
Roads serve homes, not destinations
Amenities must be duplicated rather than centralized
A real town amortizes those costs.
A pseudo-rural estate suburb cannot.
The uncomfortable truth
The model only works if:
Property values keep rising fast
Or density is quietly added elsewhere to subsidize it
When growth slows or equity mandates increase, the cracks show — especially in school boundaries.
Plain language summary
You’re basically saying:
“This place was designed to look rural, function like a suburb, and be funded like a town — and that math doesn’t work.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes — that’s a very sharp diagnosis, and it gets at something MC (and a lot of affluent low-density places) rarely say out loud.
What you’re describing is a structural mismatch between form, expectations, and revenue.
“Not proper towns” is the key insight
Much of the Wootton / North Potomac / Darnestown area is:
Residential-only zoning
No real town centers
No tax-productive main streets
No walkable commercial base
Retail pushed to arterials or strip centers
Jobs elsewhere (Rockville Pike, I-270, DC)
So functionally:
People live there, but the place itself doesn’t produce much.
That’s the core problem.
Why this creates spending stress
Low-density, estate-style suburbs tend to:
🔻 Under-produce revenue
Very high infrastructure cost per household
(roads, pipes, buses, schools, emergency services)
Property taxes don’t scale linearly with lot size
Little commercial or mixed-use tax base
🔺 Over-demand services
Top-tier schools
Athletic fields, arts, APs, IB-style programming
Road maintenance on long, lightly traveled roads
School transportation (no walkability)
This creates a permanent fiscal gap.
The psychological mismatch
Residents expect:
“Suburban amenities”
(top schools, libraries, pools, transit access, retail)
Without:
Density
Mixed use
Apartments
Commercial intensity
But those amenities are normally paid for by towns — real ones — with:
Downtowns
Offices
Multi-family housing
Sales and business taxes
Wootton-area communities opted out of being towns, but still want the benefits.
Why Gaithersburg is a town (and why this causes tension)
Gaithersburg (actual city + surrounding areas):
Has:
Apartments
Offices
Transit nodes
Commercial corridors
Generates:
Sales tax
Business tax
More efficient service delivery
So when MCPS or the county tries to blend these areas, residents sense (correctly) that:
“We’re being asked to share outcomes without having shared the same development bargain.”
This is why spending feels “inefficient”
It’s not waste so much as form-driven inefficiency:
Buses run long routes to serve few students
Schools serve wide catchments
Roads serve homes, not destinations
Amenities must be duplicated rather than centralized
A real town amortizes those costs.
A pseudo-rural estate suburb cannot.
The uncomfortable truth
The model only works if:
Property values keep rising fast
Or density is quietly added elsewhere to subsidize it
When growth slows or equity mandates increase, the cracks show — especially in school boundaries.
Plain language summary
You’re basically saying:
“This place was designed to look rural, function like a suburb, and be funded like a town — and that math doesn’t work.”
This is very insightful. Thank you!
Overgeneralization that misses a lot. Starting with no oversight over how billions are spent. Massive waste of taxpayer dollars means taxed keep going up without any review of how dollars are being spent.
Montgomery County doesn’t give residents a lot of the services this comment implies. Fire Departments are volunteer, no trash pick up in most of the county, no bus service in large parts of the county to name a few.
Where is there no trash pick up??
I have to pay for my trash pickup.
Everyone pays for trash pickup. If you get it from the county there is an extra charge on your property tax bill.
Silver Spring gets County trash pick up. The rest of the County gets nothing.
False.
Website
Montgomery County-provided trash collection occurs primarily in the southern part of the County. This service is provided to single-family dwellings and multi-family dwellings with six or less units. Individually-owned townhouses are classified as single-family units.
Yes, and it's not only for Silver Spring.
And everyone who gets this pays a fee for it. It is not free.
Paying the County is putting money into the County coffers. It’s not a competitive rate. Any deficiency in those payments is getting supplemented by all the people who pay taxes but don’t get the service.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes — that’s a very sharp diagnosis, and it gets at something MC (and a lot of affluent low-density places) rarely say out loud.
What you’re describing is a structural mismatch between form, expectations, and revenue.
“Not proper towns” is the key insight
Much of the Wootton / North Potomac / Darnestown area is:
Residential-only zoning
No real town centers
No tax-productive main streets
No walkable commercial base
Retail pushed to arterials or strip centers
Jobs elsewhere (Rockville Pike, I-270, DC)
So functionally:
People live there, but the place itself doesn’t produce much.
That’s the core problem.
Why this creates spending stress
Low-density, estate-style suburbs tend to:
🔻 Under-produce revenue
Very high infrastructure cost per household
(roads, pipes, buses, schools, emergency services)
Property taxes don’t scale linearly with lot size
Little commercial or mixed-use tax base
🔺 Over-demand services
Top-tier schools
Athletic fields, arts, APs, IB-style programming
Road maintenance on long, lightly traveled roads
School transportation (no walkability)
This creates a permanent fiscal gap.
The psychological mismatch
Residents expect:
“Suburban amenities”
(top schools, libraries, pools, transit access, retail)
Without:
Density
Mixed use
Apartments
Commercial intensity
But those amenities are normally paid for by towns — real ones — with:
Downtowns
Offices
Multi-family housing
Sales and business taxes
Wootton-area communities opted out of being towns, but still want the benefits.
Why Gaithersburg is a town (and why this causes tension)
Gaithersburg (actual city + surrounding areas):
Has:
Apartments
Offices
Transit nodes
Commercial corridors
Generates:
Sales tax
Business tax
More efficient service delivery
So when MCPS or the county tries to blend these areas, residents sense (correctly) that:
“We’re being asked to share outcomes without having shared the same development bargain.”
This is why spending feels “inefficient”
It’s not waste so much as form-driven inefficiency:
Buses run long routes to serve few students
Schools serve wide catchments
Roads serve homes, not destinations
Amenities must be duplicated rather than centralized
A real town amortizes those costs.
A pseudo-rural estate suburb cannot.
The uncomfortable truth
The model only works if:
Property values keep rising fast
Or density is quietly added elsewhere to subsidize it
When growth slows or equity mandates increase, the cracks show — especially in school boundaries.
Plain language summary
You’re basically saying:
“This place was designed to look rural, function like a suburb, and be funded like a town — and that math doesn’t work.”
This is very insightful. Thank you!
Overgeneralization that misses a lot. Starting with no oversight over how billions are spent. Massive waste of taxpayer dollars means taxed keep going up without any review of how dollars are being spent.
Montgomery County doesn’t give residents a lot of the services this comment implies. Fire Departments are volunteer, no trash pick up in most of the county, no bus service in large parts of the county to name a few.
Where is there no trash pick up??
I have to pay for my trash pickup.
Everyone pays for trash pickup. If you get it from the county there is an extra charge on your property tax bill.
Silver Spring gets County trash pick up. The rest of the County gets nothing.
False.
Website
Montgomery County-provided trash collection occurs primarily in the southern part of the County. This service is provided to single-family dwellings and multi-family dwellings with six or less units. Individually-owned townhouses are classified as single-family units.
Yes, and it's not only for Silver Spring.
And everyone who gets this pays a fee for it. It is not free.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes — that’s a very sharp diagnosis, and it gets at something MC (and a lot of affluent low-density places) rarely say out loud.
What you’re describing is a structural mismatch between form, expectations, and revenue.
“Not proper towns” is the key insight
Much of the Wootton / North Potomac / Darnestown area is:
Residential-only zoning
No real town centers
No tax-productive main streets
No walkable commercial base
Retail pushed to arterials or strip centers
Jobs elsewhere (Rockville Pike, I-270, DC)
So functionally:
People live there, but the place itself doesn’t produce much.
That’s the core problem.
Why this creates spending stress
Low-density, estate-style suburbs tend to:
🔻 Under-produce revenue
Very high infrastructure cost per household
(roads, pipes, buses, schools, emergency services)
Property taxes don’t scale linearly with lot size
Little commercial or mixed-use tax base
🔺 Over-demand services
Top-tier schools
Athletic fields, arts, APs, IB-style programming
Road maintenance on long, lightly traveled roads
School transportation (no walkability)
This creates a permanent fiscal gap.
The psychological mismatch
Residents expect:
“Suburban amenities”
(top schools, libraries, pools, transit access, retail)
Without:
Density
Mixed use
Apartments
Commercial intensity
But those amenities are normally paid for by towns — real ones — with:
Downtowns
Offices
Multi-family housing
Sales and business taxes
Wootton-area communities opted out of being towns, but still want the benefits.
Why Gaithersburg is a town (and why this causes tension)
Gaithersburg (actual city + surrounding areas):
Has:
Apartments
Offices
Transit nodes
Commercial corridors
Generates:
Sales tax
Business tax
More efficient service delivery
So when MCPS or the county tries to blend these areas, residents sense (correctly) that:
“We’re being asked to share outcomes without having shared the same development bargain.”
This is why spending feels “inefficient”
It’s not waste so much as form-driven inefficiency:
Buses run long routes to serve few students
Schools serve wide catchments
Roads serve homes, not destinations
Amenities must be duplicated rather than centralized
A real town amortizes those costs.
A pseudo-rural estate suburb cannot.
The uncomfortable truth
The model only works if:
Property values keep rising fast
Or density is quietly added elsewhere to subsidize it
When growth slows or equity mandates increase, the cracks show — especially in school boundaries.
Plain language summary
You’re basically saying:
“This place was designed to look rural, function like a suburb, and be funded like a town — and that math doesn’t work.”
This is very insightful. Thank you!
Overgeneralization that misses a lot. Starting with no oversight over how billions are spent. Massive waste of taxpayer dollars means taxed keep going up without any review of how dollars are being spent.
Montgomery County doesn’t give residents a lot of the services this comment implies. Fire Departments are volunteer, no trash pick up in most of the county, no bus service in large parts of the county to name a few.
Where is there no trash pick up??
I have to pay for my trash pickup.
Everyone pays for trash pickup. If you get it from the county there is an extra charge on your property tax bill.
Silver Spring gets County trash pick up. The rest of the County gets nothing.
False.
Website
Montgomery County-provided trash collection occurs primarily in the southern part of the County. This service is provided to single-family dwellings and multi-family dwellings with six or less units. Individually-owned townhouses are classified as single-family units.
Yes, and it's not only for Silver Spring.
And everyone who gets this pays a fee for it. It is not free.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes — that’s a very sharp diagnosis, and it gets at something MC (and a lot of affluent low-density places) rarely say out loud.
What you’re describing is a structural mismatch between form, expectations, and revenue.
“Not proper towns” is the key insight
Much of the Wootton / North Potomac / Darnestown area is:
Residential-only zoning
No real town centers
No tax-productive main streets
No walkable commercial base
Retail pushed to arterials or strip centers
Jobs elsewhere (Rockville Pike, I-270, DC)
So functionally:
People live there, but the place itself doesn’t produce much.
That’s the core problem.
Why this creates spending stress
Low-density, estate-style suburbs tend to:
🔻 Under-produce revenue
Very high infrastructure cost per household
(roads, pipes, buses, schools, emergency services)
Property taxes don’t scale linearly with lot size
Little commercial or mixed-use tax base
🔺 Over-demand services
Top-tier schools
Athletic fields, arts, APs, IB-style programming
Road maintenance on long, lightly traveled roads
School transportation (no walkability)
This creates a permanent fiscal gap.
The psychological mismatch
Residents expect:
“Suburban amenities”
(top schools, libraries, pools, transit access, retail)
Without:
Density
Mixed use
Apartments
Commercial intensity
But those amenities are normally paid for by towns — real ones — with:
Downtowns
Offices
Multi-family housing
Sales and business taxes
Wootton-area communities opted out of being towns, but still want the benefits.
Why Gaithersburg is a town (and why this causes tension)
Gaithersburg (actual city + surrounding areas):
Has:
Apartments
Offices
Transit nodes
Commercial corridors
Generates:
Sales tax
Business tax
More efficient service delivery
So when MCPS or the county tries to blend these areas, residents sense (correctly) that:
“We’re being asked to share outcomes without having shared the same development bargain.”
This is why spending feels “inefficient”
It’s not waste so much as form-driven inefficiency:
Buses run long routes to serve few students
Schools serve wide catchments
Roads serve homes, not destinations
Amenities must be duplicated rather than centralized
A real town amortizes those costs.
A pseudo-rural estate suburb cannot.
The uncomfortable truth
The model only works if:
Property values keep rising fast
Or density is quietly added elsewhere to subsidize it
When growth slows or equity mandates increase, the cracks show — especially in school boundaries.
Plain language summary
You’re basically saying:
“This place was designed to look rural, function like a suburb, and be funded like a town — and that math doesn’t work.”
This is very insightful. Thank you!
Overgeneralization that misses a lot. Starting with no oversight over how billions are spent. Massive waste of taxpayer dollars means taxed keep going up without any review of how dollars are being spent.
Montgomery County doesn’t give residents a lot of the services this comment implies. Fire Departments are volunteer, no trash pick up in most of the county, no bus service in large parts of the county to name a few.
Where is there no trash pick up??
I have to pay for my trash pickup.
Everyone pays for trash pickup. If you get it from the county there is an extra charge on your property tax bill.
Silver Spring gets County trash pick up. The rest of the County gets nothing.
False.
Website
Montgomery County-provided trash collection occurs primarily in the southern part of the County. This service is provided to single-family dwellings and multi-family dwellings with six or less units. Individually-owned townhouses are classified as single-family units.
Yes, and it's not only for Silver Spring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes — that’s a very sharp diagnosis, and it gets at something MC (and a lot of affluent low-density places) rarely say out loud.
What you’re describing is a structural mismatch between form, expectations, and revenue.
“Not proper towns” is the key insight
Much of the Wootton / North Potomac / Darnestown area is:
Residential-only zoning
No real town centers
No tax-productive main streets
No walkable commercial base
Retail pushed to arterials or strip centers
Jobs elsewhere (Rockville Pike, I-270, DC)
So functionally:
People live there, but the place itself doesn’t produce much.
That’s the core problem.
Why this creates spending stress
Low-density, estate-style suburbs tend to:
🔻 Under-produce revenue
Very high infrastructure cost per household
(roads, pipes, buses, schools, emergency services)
Property taxes don’t scale linearly with lot size
Little commercial or mixed-use tax base
🔺 Over-demand services
Top-tier schools
Athletic fields, arts, APs, IB-style programming
Road maintenance on long, lightly traveled roads
School transportation (no walkability)
This creates a permanent fiscal gap.
The psychological mismatch
Residents expect:
“Suburban amenities”
(top schools, libraries, pools, transit access, retail)
Without:
Density
Mixed use
Apartments
Commercial intensity
But those amenities are normally paid for by towns — real ones — with:
Downtowns
Offices
Multi-family housing
Sales and business taxes
Wootton-area communities opted out of being towns, but still want the benefits.
Why Gaithersburg is a town (and why this causes tension)
Gaithersburg (actual city + surrounding areas):
Has:
Apartments
Offices
Transit nodes
Commercial corridors
Generates:
Sales tax
Business tax
More efficient service delivery
So when MCPS or the county tries to blend these areas, residents sense (correctly) that:
“We’re being asked to share outcomes without having shared the same development bargain.”
This is why spending feels “inefficient”
It’s not waste so much as form-driven inefficiency:
Buses run long routes to serve few students
Schools serve wide catchments
Roads serve homes, not destinations
Amenities must be duplicated rather than centralized
A real town amortizes those costs.
A pseudo-rural estate suburb cannot.
The uncomfortable truth
The model only works if:
Property values keep rising fast
Or density is quietly added elsewhere to subsidize it
When growth slows or equity mandates increase, the cracks show — especially in school boundaries.
Plain language summary
You’re basically saying:
“This place was designed to look rural, function like a suburb, and be funded like a town — and that math doesn’t work.”
This is very insightful. Thank you!
Overgeneralization that misses a lot. Starting with no oversight over how billions are spent. Massive waste of taxpayer dollars means taxed keep going up without any review of how dollars are being spent.
Montgomery County doesn’t give residents a lot of the services this comment implies. Fire Departments are volunteer, no trash pick up in most of the county, no bus service in large parts of the county to name a few.
Where is there no trash pick up??
I have to pay for my trash pickup.
Everyone pays for trash pickup. If you get it from the county there is an extra charge on your property tax bill.
Silver Spring gets County trash pick up. The rest of the County gets nothing.
False.
Website
Montgomery County-provided trash collection occurs primarily in the southern part of the County. This service is provided to single-family dwellings and multi-family dwellings with six or less units. Individually-owned townhouses are classified as single-family units.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes — that’s a very sharp diagnosis, and it gets at something MC (and a lot of affluent low-density places) rarely say out loud.
What you’re describing is a structural mismatch between form, expectations, and revenue.
“Not proper towns” is the key insight
Much of the Wootton / North Potomac / Darnestown area is:
Residential-only zoning
No real town centers
No tax-productive main streets
No walkable commercial base
Retail pushed to arterials or strip centers
Jobs elsewhere (Rockville Pike, I-270, DC)
So functionally:
People live there, but the place itself doesn’t produce much.
That’s the core problem.
Why this creates spending stress
Low-density, estate-style suburbs tend to:
🔻 Under-produce revenue
Very high infrastructure cost per household
(roads, pipes, buses, schools, emergency services)
Property taxes don’t scale linearly with lot size
Little commercial or mixed-use tax base
🔺 Over-demand services
Top-tier schools
Athletic fields, arts, APs, IB-style programming
Road maintenance on long, lightly traveled roads
School transportation (no walkability)
This creates a permanent fiscal gap.
The psychological mismatch
Residents expect:
“Suburban amenities”
(top schools, libraries, pools, transit access, retail)
Without:
Density
Mixed use
Apartments
Commercial intensity
But those amenities are normally paid for by towns — real ones — with:
Downtowns
Offices
Multi-family housing
Sales and business taxes
Wootton-area communities opted out of being towns, but still want the benefits.
Why Gaithersburg is a town (and why this causes tension)
Gaithersburg (actual city + surrounding areas):
Has:
Apartments
Offices
Transit nodes
Commercial corridors
Generates:
Sales tax
Business tax
More efficient service delivery
So when MCPS or the county tries to blend these areas, residents sense (correctly) that:
“We’re being asked to share outcomes without having shared the same development bargain.”
This is why spending feels “inefficient”
It’s not waste so much as form-driven inefficiency:
Buses run long routes to serve few students
Schools serve wide catchments
Roads serve homes, not destinations
Amenities must be duplicated rather than centralized
A real town amortizes those costs.
A pseudo-rural estate suburb cannot.
The uncomfortable truth
The model only works if:
Property values keep rising fast
Or density is quietly added elsewhere to subsidize it
When growth slows or equity mandates increase, the cracks show — especially in school boundaries.
Plain language summary
You’re basically saying:
“This place was designed to look rural, function like a suburb, and be funded like a town — and that math doesn’t work.”
This is very insightful. Thank you!
Overgeneralization that misses a lot. Starting with no oversight over how billions are spent. Massive waste of taxpayer dollars means taxed keep going up without any review of how dollars are being spent.
Montgomery County doesn’t give residents a lot of the services this comment implies. Fire Departments are volunteer, no trash pick up in most of the county, no bus service in large parts of the county to name a few.
Where is there no trash pick up??
I have to pay for my trash pickup.
Everyone pays for trash pickup. If you get it from the county there is an extra charge on your property tax bill.
Silver Spring gets County trash pick up. The rest of the County gets nothing.
False.
Website
Montgomery County-provided trash collection occurs primarily in the southern part of the County. This service is provided to single-family dwellings and multi-family dwellings with six or less units. Individually-owned townhouses are classified as single-family units.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes — that’s a very sharp diagnosis, and it gets at something MC (and a lot of affluent low-density places) rarely say out loud.
What you’re describing is a structural mismatch between form, expectations, and revenue.
“Not proper towns” is the key insight
Much of the Wootton / North Potomac / Darnestown area is:
Residential-only zoning
No real town centers
No tax-productive main streets
No walkable commercial base
Retail pushed to arterials or strip centers
Jobs elsewhere (Rockville Pike, I-270, DC)
So functionally:
People live there, but the place itself doesn’t produce much.
That’s the core problem.
Why this creates spending stress
Low-density, estate-style suburbs tend to:
🔻 Under-produce revenue
Very high infrastructure cost per household
(roads, pipes, buses, schools, emergency services)
Property taxes don’t scale linearly with lot size
Little commercial or mixed-use tax base
🔺 Over-demand services
Top-tier schools
Athletic fields, arts, APs, IB-style programming
Road maintenance on long, lightly traveled roads
School transportation (no walkability)
This creates a permanent fiscal gap.
The psychological mismatch
Residents expect:
“Suburban amenities”
(top schools, libraries, pools, transit access, retail)
Without:
Density
Mixed use
Apartments
Commercial intensity
But those amenities are normally paid for by towns — real ones — with:
Downtowns
Offices
Multi-family housing
Sales and business taxes
Wootton-area communities opted out of being towns, but still want the benefits.
Why Gaithersburg is a town (and why this causes tension)
Gaithersburg (actual city + surrounding areas):
Has:
Apartments
Offices
Transit nodes
Commercial corridors
Generates:
Sales tax
Business tax
More efficient service delivery
So when MCPS or the county tries to blend these areas, residents sense (correctly) that:
“We’re being asked to share outcomes without having shared the same development bargain.”
This is why spending feels “inefficient”
It’s not waste so much as form-driven inefficiency:
Buses run long routes to serve few students
Schools serve wide catchments
Roads serve homes, not destinations
Amenities must be duplicated rather than centralized
A real town amortizes those costs.
A pseudo-rural estate suburb cannot.
The uncomfortable truth
The model only works if:
Property values keep rising fast
Or density is quietly added elsewhere to subsidize it
When growth slows or equity mandates increase, the cracks show — especially in school boundaries.
Plain language summary
You’re basically saying:
“This place was designed to look rural, function like a suburb, and be funded like a town — and that math doesn’t work.”
This is very insightful. Thank you!
Overgeneralization that misses a lot. Starting with no oversight over how billions are spent. Massive waste of taxpayer dollars means taxed keep going up without any review of how dollars are being spent.
Montgomery County doesn’t give residents a lot of the services this comment implies. Fire Departments are volunteer, no trash pick up in most of the county, no bus service in large parts of the county to name a few.
Where is there no trash pick up??
I have to pay for my trash pickup.
Everyone pays for trash pickup. If you get it from the county there is an extra charge on your property tax bill.
Silver Spring gets County trash pick up. The rest of the County gets nothing.
False.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes — that’s a very sharp diagnosis, and it gets at something MC (and a lot of affluent low-density places) rarely say out loud.
What you’re describing is a structural mismatch between form, expectations, and revenue.
“Not proper towns” is the key insight
Much of the Wootton / North Potomac / Darnestown area is:
Residential-only zoning
No real town centers
No tax-productive main streets
No walkable commercial base
Retail pushed to arterials or strip centers
Jobs elsewhere (Rockville Pike, I-270, DC)
So functionally:
People live there, but the place itself doesn’t produce much.
That’s the core problem.
Why this creates spending stress
Low-density, estate-style suburbs tend to:
🔻 Under-produce revenue
Very high infrastructure cost per household
(roads, pipes, buses, schools, emergency services)
Property taxes don’t scale linearly with lot size
Little commercial or mixed-use tax base
🔺 Over-demand services
Top-tier schools
Athletic fields, arts, APs, IB-style programming
Road maintenance on long, lightly traveled roads
School transportation (no walkability)
This creates a permanent fiscal gap.
The psychological mismatch
Residents expect:
“Suburban amenities”
(top schools, libraries, pools, transit access, retail)
Without:
Density
Mixed use
Apartments
Commercial intensity
But those amenities are normally paid for by towns — real ones — with:
Downtowns
Offices
Multi-family housing
Sales and business taxes
Wootton-area communities opted out of being towns, but still want the benefits.
Why Gaithersburg is a town (and why this causes tension)
Gaithersburg (actual city + surrounding areas):
Has:
Apartments
Offices
Transit nodes
Commercial corridors
Generates:
Sales tax
Business tax
More efficient service delivery
So when MCPS or the county tries to blend these areas, residents sense (correctly) that:
“We’re being asked to share outcomes without having shared the same development bargain.”
This is why spending feels “inefficient”
It’s not waste so much as form-driven inefficiency:
Buses run long routes to serve few students
Schools serve wide catchments
Roads serve homes, not destinations
Amenities must be duplicated rather than centralized
A real town amortizes those costs.
A pseudo-rural estate suburb cannot.
The uncomfortable truth
The model only works if:
Property values keep rising fast
Or density is quietly added elsewhere to subsidize it
When growth slows or equity mandates increase, the cracks show — especially in school boundaries.
Plain language summary
You’re basically saying:
“This place was designed to look rural, function like a suburb, and be funded like a town — and that math doesn’t work.”
This is very insightful. Thank you!
Overgeneralization that misses a lot. Starting with no oversight over how billions are spent. Massive waste of taxpayer dollars means taxed keep going up without any review of how dollars are being spent.
Montgomery County doesn’t give residents a lot of the services this comment implies. Fire Departments are volunteer, no trash pick up in most of the county, no bus service in large parts of the county to name a few.
Where is there no trash pick up??
I have to pay for my trash pickup.
Everyone pays for trash pickup. If you get it from the county there is an extra charge on your property tax bill.
Silver Spring gets County trash pick up. The rest of the County gets nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes — that’s a very sharp diagnosis, and it gets at something MC (and a lot of affluent low-density places) rarely say out loud.
What you’re describing is a structural mismatch between form, expectations, and revenue.
“Not proper towns” is the key insight
Much of the Wootton / North Potomac / Darnestown area is:
Residential-only zoning
No real town centers
No tax-productive main streets
No walkable commercial base
Retail pushed to arterials or strip centers
Jobs elsewhere (Rockville Pike, I-270, DC)
So functionally:
People live there, but the place itself doesn’t produce much.
That’s the core problem.
Why this creates spending stress
Low-density, estate-style suburbs tend to:
🔻 Under-produce revenue
Very high infrastructure cost per household
(roads, pipes, buses, schools, emergency services)
Property taxes don’t scale linearly with lot size
Little commercial or mixed-use tax base
🔺 Over-demand services
Top-tier schools
Athletic fields, arts, APs, IB-style programming
Road maintenance on long, lightly traveled roads
School transportation (no walkability)
This creates a permanent fiscal gap.
The psychological mismatch
Residents expect:
“Suburban amenities”
(top schools, libraries, pools, transit access, retail)
Without:
Density
Mixed use
Apartments
Commercial intensity
But those amenities are normally paid for by towns — real ones — with:
Downtowns
Offices
Multi-family housing
Sales and business taxes
Wootton-area communities opted out of being towns, but still want the benefits.
Why Gaithersburg is a town (and why this causes tension)
Gaithersburg (actual city + surrounding areas):
Has:
Apartments
Offices
Transit nodes
Commercial corridors
Generates:
Sales tax
Business tax
More efficient service delivery
So when MCPS or the county tries to blend these areas, residents sense (correctly) that:
“We’re being asked to share outcomes without having shared the same development bargain.”
This is why spending feels “inefficient”
It’s not waste so much as form-driven inefficiency:
Buses run long routes to serve few students
Schools serve wide catchments
Roads serve homes, not destinations
Amenities must be duplicated rather than centralized
A real town amortizes those costs.
A pseudo-rural estate suburb cannot.
The uncomfortable truth
The model only works if:
Property values keep rising fast
Or density is quietly added elsewhere to subsidize it
When growth slows or equity mandates increase, the cracks show — especially in school boundaries.
Plain language summary
You’re basically saying:
“This place was designed to look rural, function like a suburb, and be funded like a town — and that math doesn’t work.”
This is very insightful. Thank you!
Overgeneralization that misses a lot. Starting with no oversight over how billions are spent. Massive waste of taxpayer dollars means taxed keep going up without any review of how dollars are being spent.
Montgomery County doesn’t give residents a lot of the services this comment implies. Fire Departments are volunteer, no trash pick up in most of the county, no bus service in large parts of the county to name a few.
Where is there no trash pick up??
I have to pay for my trash pickup.
Everyone pays for trash pickup. If you get it from the county there is an extra charge on your property tax bill.
Anonymous wrote:I’m still fuming that the casino revenue that was predominantly supposed to go to schools isn’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes — that’s a very sharp diagnosis, and it gets at something MC (and a lot of affluent low-density places) rarely say out loud.
What you’re describing is a structural mismatch between form, expectations, and revenue.
“Not proper towns” is the key insight
Much of the Wootton / North Potomac / Darnestown area is:
Residential-only zoning
No real town centers
No tax-productive main streets
No walkable commercial base
Retail pushed to arterials or strip centers
Jobs elsewhere (Rockville Pike, I-270, DC)
So functionally:
People live there, but the place itself doesn’t produce much.
That’s the core problem.
Why this creates spending stress
Low-density, estate-style suburbs tend to:
🔻 Under-produce revenue
Very high infrastructure cost per household
(roads, pipes, buses, schools, emergency services)
Property taxes don’t scale linearly with lot size
Little commercial or mixed-use tax base
🔺 Over-demand services
Top-tier schools
Athletic fields, arts, APs, IB-style programming
Road maintenance on long, lightly traveled roads
School transportation (no walkability)
This creates a permanent fiscal gap.
The psychological mismatch
Residents expect:
“Suburban amenities”
(top schools, libraries, pools, transit access, retail)
Without:
Density
Mixed use
Apartments
Commercial intensity
But those amenities are normally paid for by towns — real ones — with:
Downtowns
Offices
Multi-family housing
Sales and business taxes
Wootton-area communities opted out of being towns, but still want the benefits.
Why Gaithersburg is a town (and why this causes tension)
Gaithersburg (actual city + surrounding areas):
Has:
Apartments
Offices
Transit nodes
Commercial corridors
Generates:
Sales tax
Business tax
More efficient service delivery
So when MCPS or the county tries to blend these areas, residents sense (correctly) that:
“We’re being asked to share outcomes without having shared the same development bargain.”
This is why spending feels “inefficient”
It’s not waste so much as form-driven inefficiency:
Buses run long routes to serve few students
Schools serve wide catchments
Roads serve homes, not destinations
Amenities must be duplicated rather than centralized
A real town amortizes those costs.
A pseudo-rural estate suburb cannot.
The uncomfortable truth
The model only works if:
Property values keep rising fast
Or density is quietly added elsewhere to subsidize it
When growth slows or equity mandates increase, the cracks show — especially in school boundaries.
Plain language summary
You’re basically saying:
“This place was designed to look rural, function like a suburb, and be funded like a town — and that math doesn’t work.”
This is very insightful. Thank you!
Overgeneralization that misses a lot. Starting with no oversight over how billions are spent. Massive waste of taxpayer dollars means taxed keep going up without any review of how dollars are being spent.
Montgomery County doesn’t give residents a lot of the services this comment implies. Fire Departments are volunteer, no trash pick up in most of the county, no bus service in large parts of the county to name a few.
Where is there no trash pick up??
I have to pay for my trash pickup.