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| [Reprinted from a
transcript of the question and answer session following a
presentation at the National Building Museum, 27 March 2000] |
QUESTION:
Miss Jacobs. My name is Bert Ely, I'm from across the river in
Alexandria VA. I'm one of the leaders in a citizens group that is
fighting against a plan by the highway engineers to build a new two
billion dollar bridge across the Potomac River that is probably far too
large. My question comes back to the issue of urban sprawl. As I look at
sprawl, there are a number of financial and tax incentives that favor
sprawl. One is the under taxation of land relative to the development of
land, another is the under taxation of roadways again because of the
land that they take up and other factors that influence urban
development. If you could wave a magic wand and change one or two or
three public policies, specifically tax policies, that effect urban
areas, particularly tax policies, what changes would you make
JANE JACOBS:
Every kind of vicious circle, whether it is an individual's drug
addiction, whether it's one of these great terrible things like the cod
fisheries collapse, or whether it is urban sprawl, needs subsidies. They
are driving to a dead end. And they are being artificially sustained and
supported until they reach their dead end which they will eventually. No
vicious circle lasts forever. You have mentioned several of the kind of
subsidies that are supporting urban sprawl. If those subsidies could be
figured into the costs that somebody pays for sprawl, sprawl would have
priced itself out of the market quite a long time ago. Now, there is no
use asking me if I could wave a magic wand what would I do. I can't wave
a magic wand. If there was anything I could do, It's what I'm already
doing. It's trying to get people to understand these things, because
policies, even when they are supported by powerful interests, they only
exist as long as people in a democracy allow them to exist. And when
they learn better, these change. My only effort is to try to get people
to learn better. That's the only solid foundation for changing these
things, not waving magic wands. Nobody's going to save us except
ourselves.
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