Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county report suggests that one house could actually be converted into 8 units. They are potentially allowing a subdivision of a previously single family lot and then a quadplex for each new lot. IMO, this does not make sense. It needs to allow for more gradual infill denisty that will encourage efficient utilization of existing infrastructure. Allowing 4x to 8x density in large swaths of the county risks creating situation where population growth rapidly outpaces our ability to create capacity for government services. If we are going to do MM zoning, limit the proposal to duplex and triplex units and scrap the lot splitting provision.
I disagree. “Large swaths” of the county will not instantaneously become 4x or 8x. It will take years to ramp up to any major level like that.
Then we can all just wait to draw the short straw and have one built next door.
It is really interesting to track the various arguments in opposition. To be sure, there are some that have merit, such as ensuring appropriate infrastructure.
But then there are comments like this, which reveal that much of the opposition is not wanting something different "next door." It is literally the definition of NIMBYism.
…yes?
Some of it stems from carefully planning where one lives and chooses to raise their family, and that doesn’t include have an apartment building next door. Of course. Are you slow?
“Something different.”
LMAO. You act like they are building a larger than average mailbox.
You can make plans all you like. Then stuff happens that is not under your control. If you want to control what happens on your neighbor's property, you need to get your neighbor to sell you the property.
Or you can rely on the zoning of the area and adequate local input to public processes to change that zoning.
Or not, as has been the case in MoCo of late.
That is literally what they are doing right now.
Nope. They are not doing this on a neighborhood basis or even a cluster of neighborhoods basis. Totally top-down. Inadequate local input, and underhanded to change the definition of the zoning categories, themselves, rather than go through the process that had been set up for changing the zoning of a property or group of properties.
When you don't like the outcome, you complain about the process.
Do you not see the irony in this? This is exactly what the kooky YIMBYs are doing. There is nothing short of the upzoning tantrum that will satisfy them, which means that we shouldn’t trust anything they do.
No, the kooky YIMBYs are getting outcomes they favor. The kooky YIMBYs are actually getting stuff done! Meanwhile, you're complaining about the process.
It’s funny how everyone the YIMBYs “get something done” housing gets more expensive.
No, it's not funny, it's just a factually incorrect statement.
You don’t seem familiar with housing policy, production, or prices in Montgomery County.
I sure am familiar with housing policy, production, and prices in Montgomery County. Your statement is just wrong.
Have prices have gone down in your world?
Can you point to an example of "YIMBY policy" or upzoning that has been in effect long enough for significant housing to be built in Montgomery County that it could even potentially have an effect on housing policy?
Look at 14th Street in DC. There must be five times as many housing units as there was 20 years ago, and it's far, far, far more expensive than it was 20 years ago. Just because you add to the housing supply doesnt mean demand doesnt also go up too or even go up much faster. Housing is complicated and hard and shouting dumb bumper sticker slogans like "upzoning" and "NIMBY!" is not helpful to anyone.
Bad reasoning. What’s the counterfactual? It’s very likely that it would be more expensive had the extra housing not been added
Can you point to a city where upzoning has lowered prices?
Minneapolis.
Nope:
https://kevinerdmann.substack.com/p/the-minneapolis-miracle
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county report suggests that one house could actually be converted into 8 units. They are potentially allowing a subdivision of a previously single family lot and then a quadplex for each new lot. IMO, this does not make sense. It needs to allow for more gradual infill denisty that will encourage efficient utilization of existing infrastructure. Allowing 4x to 8x density in large swaths of the county risks creating situation where population growth rapidly outpaces our ability to create capacity for government services. If we are going to do MM zoning, limit the proposal to duplex and triplex units and scrap the lot splitting provision.
I disagree. “Large swaths” of the county will not instantaneously become 4x or 8x. It will take years to ramp up to any major level like that.
Then we can all just wait to draw the short straw and have one built next door.
It is really interesting to track the various arguments in opposition. To be sure, there are some that have merit, such as ensuring appropriate infrastructure.
But then there are comments like this, which reveal that much of the opposition is not wanting something different "next door." It is literally the definition of NIMBYism.
…yes?
Some of it stems from carefully planning where one lives and chooses to raise their family, and that doesn’t include have an apartment building next door. Of course. Are you slow?
“Something different.”
LMAO. You act like they are building a larger than average mailbox.
You can make plans all you like. Then stuff happens that is not under your control. If you want to control what happens on your neighbor's property, you need to get your neighbor to sell you the property.
Or you can rely on the zoning of the area and adequate local input to public processes to change that zoning.
Or not, as has been the case in MoCo of late.
That is literally what they are doing right now.
Nope. They are not doing this on a neighborhood basis or even a cluster of neighborhoods basis. Totally top-down. Inadequate local input, and underhanded to change the definition of the zoning categories, themselves, rather than go through the process that had been set up for changing the zoning of a property or group of properties.
When you don't like the outcome, you complain about the process.
Do you not see the irony in this? This is exactly what the kooky YIMBYs are doing. There is nothing short of the upzoning tantrum that will satisfy them, which means that we shouldn’t trust anything they do.
No, the kooky YIMBYs are getting outcomes they favor. The kooky YIMBYs are actually getting stuff done! Meanwhile, you're complaining about the process.
It’s funny how everyone the YIMBYs “get something done” housing gets more expensive.
No, it's not funny, it's just a factually incorrect statement.
You don’t seem familiar with housing policy, production, or prices in Montgomery County.
I sure am familiar with housing policy, production, and prices in Montgomery County. Your statement is just wrong.
Have prices have gone down in your world?
Can you point to an example of "YIMBY policy" or upzoning that has been in effect long enough for significant housing to be built in Montgomery County that it could even potentially have an effect on housing policy?
How many years do you need?
Four sounds right. And I’d also need a way to isolate the impact of the “YIMBY policy” t I’m other factors that also impact housing (ex: supply chain and credit issues in the financial market)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county report suggests that one house could actually be converted into 8 units. They are potentially allowing a subdivision of a previously single family lot and then a quadplex for each new lot. IMO, this does not make sense. It needs to allow for more gradual infill denisty that will encourage efficient utilization of existing infrastructure. Allowing 4x to 8x density in large swaths of the county risks creating situation where population growth rapidly outpaces our ability to create capacity for government services. If we are going to do MM zoning, limit the proposal to duplex and triplex units and scrap the lot splitting provision.
I disagree. “Large swaths” of the county will not instantaneously become 4x or 8x. It will take years to ramp up to any major level like that.
Then we can all just wait to draw the short straw and have one built next door.
It is really interesting to track the various arguments in opposition. To be sure, there are some that have merit, such as ensuring appropriate infrastructure.
But then there are comments like this, which reveal that much of the opposition is not wanting something different "next door." It is literally the definition of NIMBYism.
…yes?
Some of it stems from carefully planning where one lives and chooses to raise their family, and that doesn’t include have an apartment building next door. Of course. Are you slow?
“Something different.”
LMAO. You act like they are building a larger than average mailbox.
You can make plans all you like. Then stuff happens that is not under your control. If you want to control what happens on your neighbor's property, you need to get your neighbor to sell you the property.
Or you can rely on the zoning of the area and adequate local input to public processes to change that zoning.
Or not, as has been the case in MoCo of late.
That is literally what they are doing right now.
Nope. They are not doing this on a neighborhood basis or even a cluster of neighborhoods basis. Totally top-down. Inadequate local input, and underhanded to change the definition of the zoning categories, themselves, rather than go through the process that had been set up for changing the zoning of a property or group of properties.
When you don't like the outcome, you complain about the process.
Do you not see the irony in this? This is exactly what the kooky YIMBYs are doing. There is nothing short of the upzoning tantrum that will satisfy them, which means that we shouldn’t trust anything they do.
No, the kooky YIMBYs are getting outcomes they favor. The kooky YIMBYs are actually getting stuff done! Meanwhile, you're complaining about the process.
It’s funny how everyone the YIMBYs “get something done” housing gets more expensive.
No, it's not funny, it's just a factually incorrect statement.
You don’t seem familiar with housing policy, production, or prices in Montgomery County.
I sure am familiar with housing policy, production, and prices in Montgomery County. Your statement is just wrong.
Have prices have gone down in your world?
Can you point to an example of "YIMBY policy" or upzoning that has been in effect long enough for significant housing to be built in Montgomery County that it could even potentially have an effect on housing policy?
Look at 14th Street in DC. There must be five times as many housing units as there was 20 years ago, and it's far, far, far more expensive than it was 20 years ago. Just because you add to the housing supply doesnt mean demand doesnt also go up too or even go up much faster. Housing is complicated and hard and shouting dumb bumper sticker slogans like "upzoning" and "NIMBY!" is not helpful to anyone.
Bad reasoning. What’s the counterfactual? It’s very likely that it would be more expensive had the extra housing not been added
Can you point to a city where upzoning has lowered prices?
Minneapolis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county report suggests that one house could actually be converted into 8 units. They are potentially allowing a subdivision of a previously single family lot and then a quadplex for each new lot. IMO, this does not make sense. It needs to allow for more gradual infill denisty that will encourage efficient utilization of existing infrastructure. Allowing 4x to 8x density in large swaths of the county risks creating situation where population growth rapidly outpaces our ability to create capacity for government services. If we are going to do MM zoning, limit the proposal to duplex and triplex units and scrap the lot splitting provision.
I disagree. “Large swaths” of the county will not instantaneously become 4x or 8x. It will take years to ramp up to any major level like that.
Then we can all just wait to draw the short straw and have one built next door.
It is really interesting to track the various arguments in opposition. To be sure, there are some that have merit, such as ensuring appropriate infrastructure.
But then there are comments like this, which reveal that much of the opposition is not wanting something different "next door." It is literally the definition of NIMBYism.
…yes?
Some of it stems from carefully planning where one lives and chooses to raise their family, and that doesn’t include have an apartment building next door. Of course. Are you slow?
“Something different.”
LMAO. You act like they are building a larger than average mailbox.
You can make plans all you like. Then stuff happens that is not under your control. If you want to control what happens on your neighbor's property, you need to get your neighbor to sell you the property.
Or you can rely on the zoning of the area and adequate local input to public processes to change that zoning.
Or not, as has been the case in MoCo of late.
That is literally what they are doing right now.
Nope. They are not doing this on a neighborhood basis or even a cluster of neighborhoods basis. Totally top-down. Inadequate local input, and underhanded to change the definition of the zoning categories, themselves, rather than go through the process that had been set up for changing the zoning of a property or group of properties.
When you don't like the outcome, you complain about the process.
Do you not see the irony in this? This is exactly what the kooky YIMBYs are doing. There is nothing short of the upzoning tantrum that will satisfy them, which means that we shouldn’t trust anything they do.
No, the kooky YIMBYs are getting outcomes they favor. The kooky YIMBYs are actually getting stuff done! Meanwhile, you're complaining about the process.
It’s funny how everyone the YIMBYs “get something done” housing gets more expensive.
No, it's not funny, it's just a factually incorrect statement.
You don’t seem familiar with housing policy, production, or prices in Montgomery County.
I sure am familiar with housing policy, production, and prices in Montgomery County. Your statement is just wrong.
Have prices have gone down in your world?
Can you point to an example of "YIMBY policy" or upzoning that has been in effect long enough for significant housing to be built in Montgomery County that it could even potentially have an effect on housing policy?
Look at 14th Street in DC. There must be five times as many housing units as there was 20 years ago, and it's far, far, far more expensive than it was 20 years ago. Just because you add to the housing supply doesnt mean demand doesnt also go up too or even go up much faster. Housing is complicated and hard and shouting dumb bumper sticker slogans like "upzoning" and "NIMBY!" is not helpful to anyone.
Bad reasoning. What’s the counterfactual? It’s very likely that it would be more expensive had the extra housing not been added
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county report suggests that one house could actually be converted into 8 units. They are potentially allowing a subdivision of a previously single family lot and then a quadplex for each new lot. IMO, this does not make sense. It needs to allow for more gradual infill denisty that will encourage efficient utilization of existing infrastructure. Allowing 4x to 8x density in large swaths of the county risks creating situation where population growth rapidly outpaces our ability to create capacity for government services. If we are going to do MM zoning, limit the proposal to duplex and triplex units and scrap the lot splitting provision.
I disagree. “Large swaths” of the county will not instantaneously become 4x or 8x. It will take years to ramp up to any major level like that.
Then we can all just wait to draw the short straw and have one built next door.
It is really interesting to track the various arguments in opposition. To be sure, there are some that have merit, such as ensuring appropriate infrastructure.
But then there are comments like this, which reveal that much of the opposition is not wanting something different "next door." It is literally the definition of NIMBYism.
…yes?
Some of it stems from carefully planning where one lives and chooses to raise their family, and that doesn’t include have an apartment building next door. Of course. Are you slow?
“Something different.”
LMAO. You act like they are building a larger than average mailbox.
You can make plans all you like. Then stuff happens that is not under your control. If you want to control what happens on your neighbor's property, you need to get your neighbor to sell you the property.
Or you can rely on the zoning of the area and adequate local input to public processes to change that zoning.
Or not, as has been the case in MoCo of late.
That is literally what they are doing right now.
Nope. They are not doing this on a neighborhood basis or even a cluster of neighborhoods basis. Totally top-down. Inadequate local input, and underhanded to change the definition of the zoning categories, themselves, rather than go through the process that had been set up for changing the zoning of a property or group of properties.
When you don't like the outcome, you complain about the process.
Do you not see the irony in this? This is exactly what the kooky YIMBYs are doing. There is nothing short of the upzoning tantrum that will satisfy them, which means that we shouldn’t trust anything they do.
No, the kooky YIMBYs are getting outcomes they favor. The kooky YIMBYs are actually getting stuff done! Meanwhile, you're complaining about the process.
It’s funny how everyone the YIMBYs “get something done” housing gets more expensive.
No, it's not funny, it's just a factually incorrect statement.
You don’t seem familiar with housing policy, production, or prices in Montgomery County.
I sure am familiar with housing policy, production, and prices in Montgomery County. Your statement is just wrong.
Have prices have gone down in your world?
Can you point to an example of "YIMBY policy" or upzoning that has been in effect long enough for significant housing to be built in Montgomery County that it could even potentially have an effect on housing policy?
Look at 14th Street in DC. There must be five times as many housing units as there was 20 years ago, and it's far, far, far more expensive than it was 20 years ago. Just because you add to the housing supply doesnt mean demand doesnt also go up too or even go up much faster. Housing is complicated and hard and shouting dumb bumper sticker slogans like "upzoning" and "NIMBY!" is not helpful to anyone.
Bad reasoning. What’s the counterfactual? It’s very likely that it would be more expensive had the extra housing not been added
Can you point to a city where upzoning has lowered prices?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county report suggests that one house could actually be converted into 8 units. They are potentially allowing a subdivision of a previously single family lot and then a quadplex for each new lot. IMO, this does not make sense. It needs to allow for more gradual infill denisty that will encourage efficient utilization of existing infrastructure. Allowing 4x to 8x density in large swaths of the county risks creating situation where population growth rapidly outpaces our ability to create capacity for government services. If we are going to do MM zoning, limit the proposal to duplex and triplex units and scrap the lot splitting provision.
I disagree. “Large swaths” of the county will not instantaneously become 4x or 8x. It will take years to ramp up to any major level like that.
Then we can all just wait to draw the short straw and have one built next door.
It is really interesting to track the various arguments in opposition. To be sure, there are some that have merit, such as ensuring appropriate infrastructure.
But then there are comments like this, which reveal that much of the opposition is not wanting something different "next door." It is literally the definition of NIMBYism.
…yes?
Some of it stems from carefully planning where one lives and chooses to raise their family, and that doesn’t include have an apartment building next door. Of course. Are you slow?
“Something different.”
LMAO. You act like they are building a larger than average mailbox.
You can make plans all you like. Then stuff happens that is not under your control. If you want to control what happens on your neighbor's property, you need to get your neighbor to sell you the property.
Or you can rely on the zoning of the area and adequate local input to public processes to change that zoning.
Or not, as has been the case in MoCo of late.
That is literally what they are doing right now.
Nope. They are not doing this on a neighborhood basis or even a cluster of neighborhoods basis. Totally top-down. Inadequate local input, and underhanded to change the definition of the zoning categories, themselves, rather than go through the process that had been set up for changing the zoning of a property or group of properties.
When you don't like the outcome, you complain about the process.
Do you not see the irony in this? This is exactly what the kooky YIMBYs are doing. There is nothing short of the upzoning tantrum that will satisfy them, which means that we shouldn’t trust anything they do.
No, the kooky YIMBYs are getting outcomes they favor. The kooky YIMBYs are actually getting stuff done! Meanwhile, you're complaining about the process.
It’s funny how everyone the YIMBYs “get something done” housing gets more expensive.
No, it's not funny, it's just a factually incorrect statement.
You don’t seem familiar with housing policy, production, or prices in Montgomery County.
I sure am familiar with housing policy, production, and prices in Montgomery County. Your statement is just wrong.
Have prices have gone down in your world?
Can you point to an example of "YIMBY policy" or upzoning that has been in effect long enough for significant housing to be built in Montgomery County that it could even potentially have an effect on housing policy?
Look at 14th Street in DC. There must be five times as many housing units as there was 20 years ago, and it's far, far, far more expensive than it was 20 years ago. Just because you add to the housing supply doesnt mean demand doesnt also go up too or even go up much faster. Housing is complicated and hard and shouting dumb bumper sticker slogans like "upzoning" and "NIMBY!" is not helpful to anyone.
Bad reasoning. What’s the counterfactual? It’s very likely that it would be more expensive had the extra housing not been added
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county report suggests that one house could actually be converted into 8 units. They are potentially allowing a subdivision of a previously single family lot and then a quadplex for each new lot. IMO, this does not make sense. It needs to allow for more gradual infill denisty that will encourage efficient utilization of existing infrastructure. Allowing 4x to 8x density in large swaths of the county risks creating situation where population growth rapidly outpaces our ability to create capacity for government services. If we are going to do MM zoning, limit the proposal to duplex and triplex units and scrap the lot splitting provision.
I disagree. “Large swaths” of the county will not instantaneously become 4x or 8x. It will take years to ramp up to any major level like that.
Then we can all just wait to draw the short straw and have one built next door.
It is really interesting to track the various arguments in opposition. To be sure, there are some that have merit, such as ensuring appropriate infrastructure.
But then there are comments like this, which reveal that much of the opposition is not wanting something different "next door." It is literally the definition of NIMBYism.
…yes?
Some of it stems from carefully planning where one lives and chooses to raise their family, and that doesn’t include have an apartment building next door. Of course. Are you slow?
“Something different.”
LMAO. You act like they are building a larger than average mailbox.
You can make plans all you like. Then stuff happens that is not under your control. If you want to control what happens on your neighbor's property, you need to get your neighbor to sell you the property.
Or you can rely on the zoning of the area and adequate local input to public processes to change that zoning.
Or not, as has been the case in MoCo of late.
That is literally what they are doing right now.
Nope. They are not doing this on a neighborhood basis or even a cluster of neighborhoods basis. Totally top-down. Inadequate local input, and underhanded to change the definition of the zoning categories, themselves, rather than go through the process that had been set up for changing the zoning of a property or group of properties.
When you don't like the outcome, you complain about the process.
Do you not see the irony in this? This is exactly what the kooky YIMBYs are doing. There is nothing short of the upzoning tantrum that will satisfy them, which means that we shouldn’t trust anything they do.
No, the kooky YIMBYs are getting outcomes they favor. The kooky YIMBYs are actually getting stuff done! Meanwhile, you're complaining about the process.
It’s funny how everyone the YIMBYs “get something done” housing gets more expensive.
No, it's not funny, it's just a factually incorrect statement.
You don’t seem familiar with housing policy, production, or prices in Montgomery County.
I sure am familiar with housing policy, production, and prices in Montgomery County. Your statement is just wrong.
Have prices have gone down in your world?
Can you point to an example of "YIMBY policy" or upzoning that has been in effect long enough for significant housing to be built in Montgomery County that it could even potentially have an effect on housing policy?
Look at 14th Street in DC. There must be five times as many housing units as there was 20 years ago, and it's far, far, far more expensive than it was 20 years ago. Just because you add to the housing supply doesnt mean demand doesnt also go up too or even go up much faster. Housing is complicated and hard and shouting dumb bumper sticker slogans like "upzoning" and "NIMBY!" is not helpful to anyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county report suggests that one house could actually be converted into 8 units. They are potentially allowing a subdivision of a previously single family lot and then a quadplex for each new lot. IMO, this does not make sense. It needs to allow for more gradual infill denisty that will encourage efficient utilization of existing infrastructure. Allowing 4x to 8x density in large swaths of the county risks creating situation where population growth rapidly outpaces our ability to create capacity for government services. If we are going to do MM zoning, limit the proposal to duplex and triplex units and scrap the lot splitting provision.
I disagree. “Large swaths” of the county will not instantaneously become 4x or 8x. It will take years to ramp up to any major level like that.
Then we can all just wait to draw the short straw and have one built next door.
It is really interesting to track the various arguments in opposition. To be sure, there are some that have merit, such as ensuring appropriate infrastructure.
But then there are comments like this, which reveal that much of the opposition is not wanting something different "next door." It is literally the definition of NIMBYism.
…yes?
Some of it stems from carefully planning where one lives and chooses to raise their family, and that doesn’t include have an apartment building next door. Of course. Are you slow?
“Something different.”
LMAO. You act like they are building a larger than average mailbox.
You can make plans all you like. Then stuff happens that is not under your control. If you want to control what happens on your neighbor's property, you need to get your neighbor to sell you the property.
Or you can rely on the zoning of the area and adequate local input to public processes to change that zoning.
Or not, as has been the case in MoCo of late.
That is literally what they are doing right now.
Nope. They are not doing this on a neighborhood basis or even a cluster of neighborhoods basis. Totally top-down. Inadequate local input, and underhanded to change the definition of the zoning categories, themselves, rather than go through the process that had been set up for changing the zoning of a property or group of properties.
When you don't like the outcome, you complain about the process.
Do you not see the irony in this? This is exactly what the kooky YIMBYs are doing. There is nothing short of the upzoning tantrum that will satisfy them, which means that we shouldn’t trust anything they do.
No, the kooky YIMBYs are getting outcomes they favor. The kooky YIMBYs are actually getting stuff done! Meanwhile, you're complaining about the process.
It’s funny how everyone the YIMBYs “get something done” housing gets more expensive.
No, it's not funny, it's just a factually incorrect statement.
You don’t seem familiar with housing policy, production, or prices in Montgomery County.
I sure am familiar with housing policy, production, and prices in Montgomery County. Your statement is just wrong.
Have prices have gone down in your world?
Can you point to an example of "YIMBY policy" or upzoning that has been in effect long enough for significant housing to be built in Montgomery County that it could even potentially have an effect on housing policy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county report suggests that one house could actually be converted into 8 units. They are potentially allowing a subdivision of a previously single family lot and then a quadplex for each new lot. IMO, this does not make sense. It needs to allow for more gradual infill denisty that will encourage efficient utilization of existing infrastructure. Allowing 4x to 8x density in large swaths of the county risks creating situation where population growth rapidly outpaces our ability to create capacity for government services. If we are going to do MM zoning, limit the proposal to duplex and triplex units and scrap the lot splitting provision.
I disagree. “Large swaths” of the county will not instantaneously become 4x or 8x. It will take years to ramp up to any major level like that.
Then we can all just wait to draw the short straw and have one built next door.
It is really interesting to track the various arguments in opposition. To be sure, there are some that have merit, such as ensuring appropriate infrastructure.
But then there are comments like this, which reveal that much of the opposition is not wanting something different "next door." It is literally the definition of NIMBYism.
…yes?
Some of it stems from carefully planning where one lives and chooses to raise their family, and that doesn’t include have an apartment building next door. Of course. Are you slow?
“Something different.”
LMAO. You act like they are building a larger than average mailbox.
You can make plans all you like. Then stuff happens that is not under your control. If you want to control what happens on your neighbor's property, you need to get your neighbor to sell you the property.
Or you can rely on the zoning of the area and adequate local input to public processes to change that zoning.
Or not, as has been the case in MoCo of late.
That is literally what they are doing right now.
Nope. They are not doing this on a neighborhood basis or even a cluster of neighborhoods basis. Totally top-down. Inadequate local input, and underhanded to change the definition of the zoning categories, themselves, rather than go through the process that had been set up for changing the zoning of a property or group of properties.
When you don't like the outcome, you complain about the process.
Do you not see the irony in this? This is exactly what the kooky YIMBYs are doing. There is nothing short of the upzoning tantrum that will satisfy them, which means that we shouldn’t trust anything they do.
No, the kooky YIMBYs are getting outcomes they favor. The kooky YIMBYs are actually getting stuff done! Meanwhile, you're complaining about the process.
It’s funny how everyone the YIMBYs “get something done” housing gets more expensive.
No, it's not funny, it's just a factually incorrect statement.
You don’t seem familiar with housing policy, production, or prices in Montgomery County.
I sure am familiar with housing policy, production, and prices in Montgomery County. Your statement is just wrong.
Have prices have gone down in your world?
Can you point to an example of "YIMBY policy" or upzoning that has been in effect long enough for significant housing to be built in Montgomery County that it could even potentially have an effect on housing policy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county report suggests that one house could actually be converted into 8 units. They are potentially allowing a subdivision of a previously single family lot and then a quadplex for each new lot. IMO, this does not make sense. It needs to allow for more gradual infill denisty that will encourage efficient utilization of existing infrastructure. Allowing 4x to 8x density in large swaths of the county risks creating situation where population growth rapidly outpaces our ability to create capacity for government services. If we are going to do MM zoning, limit the proposal to duplex and triplex units and scrap the lot splitting provision.
I disagree. “Large swaths” of the county will not instantaneously become 4x or 8x. It will take years to ramp up to any major level like that.
Then we can all just wait to draw the short straw and have one built next door.
It is really interesting to track the various arguments in opposition. To be sure, there are some that have merit, such as ensuring appropriate infrastructure.
But then there are comments like this, which reveal that much of the opposition is not wanting something different "next door." It is literally the definition of NIMBYism.
…yes?
Some of it stems from carefully planning where one lives and chooses to raise their family, and that doesn’t include have an apartment building next door. Of course. Are you slow?
“Something different.”
LMAO. You act like they are building a larger than average mailbox.
You can make plans all you like. Then stuff happens that is not under your control. If you want to control what happens on your neighbor's property, you need to get your neighbor to sell you the property.
Or you can rely on the zoning of the area and adequate local input to public processes to change that zoning.
Or not, as has been the case in MoCo of late.
That is literally what they are doing right now.
Nope. They are not doing this on a neighborhood basis or even a cluster of neighborhoods basis. Totally top-down. Inadequate local input, and underhanded to change the definition of the zoning categories, themselves, rather than go through the process that had been set up for changing the zoning of a property or group of properties.
When you don't like the outcome, you complain about the process.
Do you not see the irony in this? This is exactly what the kooky YIMBYs are doing. There is nothing short of the upzoning tantrum that will satisfy them, which means that we shouldn’t trust anything they do.
No, the kooky YIMBYs are getting outcomes they favor. The kooky YIMBYs are actually getting stuff done! Meanwhile, you're complaining about the process.
They certainly are doing so with end-arounds of more neighborhood-inclusive processes that would have seen more democratic participation and very different outcomes than the idea of cramming things in where there aren't adequate public facilities and where developers benefit at residents' expense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county report suggests that one house could actually be converted into 8 units. They are potentially allowing a subdivision of a previously single family lot and then a quadplex for each new lot. IMO, this does not make sense. It needs to allow for more gradual infill denisty that will encourage efficient utilization of existing infrastructure. Allowing 4x to 8x density in large swaths of the county risks creating situation where population growth rapidly outpaces our ability to create capacity for government services. If we are going to do MM zoning, limit the proposal to duplex and triplex units and scrap the lot splitting provision.
I disagree. “Large swaths” of the county will not instantaneously become 4x or 8x. It will take years to ramp up to any major level like that.
Then we can all just wait to draw the short straw and have one built next door.
It is really interesting to track the various arguments in opposition. To be sure, there are some that have merit, such as ensuring appropriate infrastructure.
But then there are comments like this, which reveal that much of the opposition is not wanting something different "next door." It is literally the definition of NIMBYism.
…yes?
Some of it stems from carefully planning where one lives and chooses to raise their family, and that doesn’t include have an apartment building next door. Of course. Are you slow?
“Something different.”
LMAO. You act like they are building a larger than average mailbox.
You can make plans all you like. Then stuff happens that is not under your control. If you want to control what happens on your neighbor's property, you need to get your neighbor to sell you the property.
Or you can rely on the zoning of the area and adequate local input to public processes to change that zoning.
Or not, as has been the case in MoCo of late.
That is literally what they are doing right now.
Nope. They are not doing this on a neighborhood basis or even a cluster of neighborhoods basis. Totally top-down. Inadequate local input, and underhanded to change the definition of the zoning categories, themselves, rather than go through the process that had been set up for changing the zoning of a property or group of properties.
When you don't like the outcome, you complain about the process.
Do you not see the irony in this? This is exactly what the kooky YIMBYs are doing. There is nothing short of the upzoning tantrum that will satisfy them, which means that we shouldn’t trust anything they do.
No, the kooky YIMBYs are getting outcomes they favor. The kooky YIMBYs are actually getting stuff done! Meanwhile, you're complaining about the process.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county report suggests that one house could actually be converted into 8 units. They are potentially allowing a subdivision of a previously single family lot and then a quadplex for each new lot. IMO, this does not make sense. It needs to allow for more gradual infill denisty that will encourage efficient utilization of existing infrastructure. Allowing 4x to 8x density in large swaths of the county risks creating situation where population growth rapidly outpaces our ability to create capacity for government services. If we are going to do MM zoning, limit the proposal to duplex and triplex units and scrap the lot splitting provision.
I disagree. “Large swaths” of the county will not instantaneously become 4x or 8x. It will take years to ramp up to any major level like that.
Then we can all just wait to draw the short straw and have one built next door.
It is really interesting to track the various arguments in opposition. To be sure, there are some that have merit, such as ensuring appropriate infrastructure.
But then there are comments like this, which reveal that much of the opposition is not wanting something different "next door." It is literally the definition of NIMBYism.
…yes?
Some of it stems from carefully planning where one lives and chooses to raise their family, and that doesn’t include have an apartment building next door. Of course. Are you slow?
“Something different.”
LMAO. You act like they are building a larger than average mailbox.
You can make plans all you like. Then stuff happens that is not under your control. If you want to control what happens on your neighbor's property, you need to get your neighbor to sell you the property.
Or you can rely on the zoning of the area and adequate local input to public processes to change that zoning.
Or not, as has been the case in MoCo of late.
That is literally what they are doing right now.
Nope. They are not doing this on a neighborhood basis or even a cluster of neighborhoods basis. Totally top-down. Inadequate local input, and underhanded to change the definition of the zoning categories, themselves, rather than go through the process that had been set up for changing the zoning of a property or group of properties.
When you don't like the outcome, you complain about the process.
Do you not see the irony in this? This is exactly what the kooky YIMBYs are doing. There is nothing short of the upzoning tantrum that will satisfy them, which means that we shouldn’t trust anything they do.
No, the kooky YIMBYs are getting outcomes they favor. The kooky YIMBYs are actually getting stuff done! Meanwhile, you're complaining about the process.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county report suggests that one house could actually be converted into 8 units. They are potentially allowing a subdivision of a previously single family lot and then a quadplex for each new lot. IMO, this does not make sense. It needs to allow for more gradual infill denisty that will encourage efficient utilization of existing infrastructure. Allowing 4x to 8x density in large swaths of the county risks creating situation where population growth rapidly outpaces our ability to create capacity for government services. If we are going to do MM zoning, limit the proposal to duplex and triplex units and scrap the lot splitting provision.
I disagree. “Large swaths” of the county will not instantaneously become 4x or 8x. It will take years to ramp up to any major level like that.
Then we can all just wait to draw the short straw and have one built next door.
It is really interesting to track the various arguments in opposition. To be sure, there are some that have merit, such as ensuring appropriate infrastructure.
But then there are comments like this, which reveal that much of the opposition is not wanting something different "next door." It is literally the definition of NIMBYism.
…yes?
Some of it stems from carefully planning where one lives and chooses to raise their family, and that doesn’t include have an apartment building next door. Of course. Are you slow?
“Something different.”
LMAO. You act like they are building a larger than average mailbox.
You can make plans all you like. Then stuff happens that is not under your control. If you want to control what happens on your neighbor's property, you need to get your neighbor to sell you the property.
Or you can rely on the zoning of the area and adequate local input to public processes to change that zoning.
Or not, as has been the case in MoCo of late.
That is literally what they are doing right now.
Nope. They are not doing this on a neighborhood basis or even a cluster of neighborhoods basis. Totally top-down. Inadequate local input, and underhanded to change the definition of the zoning categories, themselves, rather than go through the process that had been set up for changing the zoning of a property or group of properties.
When you don't like the outcome, you complain about the process.
Do you not see the irony in this? This is exactly what the kooky YIMBYs are doing. There is nothing short of the upzoning tantrum that will satisfy them, which means that we shouldn’t trust anything they do.
No, the kooky YIMBYs are getting outcomes they favor. The kooky YIMBYs are actually getting stuff done! Meanwhile, you're complaining about the process.
It’s funny how everyone the YIMBYs “get something done” housing gets more expensive.
No, it's not funny, it's just a factually incorrect statement.
You don’t seem familiar with housing policy, production, or prices in Montgomery County.
I sure am familiar with housing policy, production, and prices in Montgomery County. Your statement is just wrong.
Have prices have gone down in your world?
Can you point to an example of "YIMBY policy" or upzoning that has been in effect long enough for significant housing to be built in Montgomery County that it could even potentially have an effect on housing policy?
How many years do you need?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county report suggests that one house could actually be converted into 8 units. They are potentially allowing a subdivision of a previously single family lot and then a quadplex for each new lot. IMO, this does not make sense. It needs to allow for more gradual infill denisty that will encourage efficient utilization of existing infrastructure. Allowing 4x to 8x density in large swaths of the county risks creating situation where population growth rapidly outpaces our ability to create capacity for government services. If we are going to do MM zoning, limit the proposal to duplex and triplex units and scrap the lot splitting provision.
I disagree. “Large swaths” of the county will not instantaneously become 4x or 8x. It will take years to ramp up to any major level like that.
Then we can all just wait to draw the short straw and have one built next door.
It is really interesting to track the various arguments in opposition. To be sure, there are some that have merit, such as ensuring appropriate infrastructure.
But then there are comments like this, which reveal that much of the opposition is not wanting something different "next door." It is literally the definition of NIMBYism.
…yes?
Some of it stems from carefully planning where one lives and chooses to raise their family, and that doesn’t include have an apartment building next door. Of course. Are you slow?
“Something different.”
LMAO. You act like they are building a larger than average mailbox.
You can make plans all you like. Then stuff happens that is not under your control. If you want to control what happens on your neighbor's property, you need to get your neighbor to sell you the property.
Or you can rely on the zoning of the area and adequate local input to public processes to change that zoning.
Or not, as has been the case in MoCo of late.
That is literally what they are doing right now.
Nope. They are not doing this on a neighborhood basis or even a cluster of neighborhoods basis. Totally top-down. Inadequate local input, and underhanded to change the definition of the zoning categories, themselves, rather than go through the process that had been set up for changing the zoning of a property or group of properties.
When you don't like the outcome, you complain about the process.
Do you not see the irony in this? This is exactly what the kooky YIMBYs are doing. There is nothing short of the upzoning tantrum that will satisfy them, which means that we shouldn’t trust anything they do.
No, the kooky YIMBYs are getting outcomes they favor. The kooky YIMBYs are actually getting stuff done! Meanwhile, you're complaining about the process.
It’s funny how everyone the YIMBYs “get something done” housing gets more expensive.
No, it's not funny, it's just a factually incorrect statement.
You don’t seem familiar with housing policy, production, or prices in Montgomery County.
I sure am familiar with housing policy, production, and prices in Montgomery County. Your statement is just wrong.
Have prices have gone down in your world?
Can you point to an example of "YIMBY policy" or upzoning that has been in effect long enough for significant housing to be built in Montgomery County that it could even potentially have an effect on housing policy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The county report suggests that one house could actually be converted into 8 units. They are potentially allowing a subdivision of a previously single family lot and then a quadplex for each new lot. IMO, this does not make sense. It needs to allow for more gradual infill denisty that will encourage efficient utilization of existing infrastructure. Allowing 4x to 8x density in large swaths of the county risks creating situation where population growth rapidly outpaces our ability to create capacity for government services. If we are going to do MM zoning, limit the proposal to duplex and triplex units and scrap the lot splitting provision.
I disagree. “Large swaths” of the county will not instantaneously become 4x or 8x. It will take years to ramp up to any major level like that.
Then we can all just wait to draw the short straw and have one built next door.
It is really interesting to track the various arguments in opposition. To be sure, there are some that have merit, such as ensuring appropriate infrastructure.
But then there are comments like this, which reveal that much of the opposition is not wanting something different "next door." It is literally the definition of NIMBYism.
…yes?
Some of it stems from carefully planning where one lives and chooses to raise their family, and that doesn’t include have an apartment building next door. Of course. Are you slow?
“Something different.”
LMAO. You act like they are building a larger than average mailbox.
You can make plans all you like. Then stuff happens that is not under your control. If you want to control what happens on your neighbor's property, you need to get your neighbor to sell you the property.
Or you can rely on the zoning of the area and adequate local input to public processes to change that zoning.
Or not, as has been the case in MoCo of late.
That is literally what they are doing right now.
Nope. They are not doing this on a neighborhood basis or even a cluster of neighborhoods basis. Totally top-down. Inadequate local input, and underhanded to change the definition of the zoning categories, themselves, rather than go through the process that had been set up for changing the zoning of a property or group of properties.
When you don't like the outcome, you complain about the process.
Do you not see the irony in this? This is exactly what the kooky YIMBYs are doing. There is nothing short of the upzoning tantrum that will satisfy them, which means that we shouldn’t trust anything they do.
No, the kooky YIMBYs are getting outcomes they favor. The kooky YIMBYs are actually getting stuff done! Meanwhile, you're complaining about the process.
It’s funny how everyone the YIMBYs “get something done” housing gets more expensive.
No, it's not funny, it's just a factually incorrect statement.
You don’t seem familiar with housing policy, production, or prices in Montgomery County.
I sure am familiar with housing policy, production, and prices in Montgomery County. Your statement is just wrong.
Have prices have gone down in your world?