By Andy Kerr
Another one million people are projected to
live in Oregon in 2025. That is 4.3 million
peopleabout one million more than today.
That translates to two more Portlands, six more
Eugene-Springfields, or thirteen more
Medford-Ashlands. The majority of the projected
increase is expected in the Willamette Valley,
but one or two of those new Medford-Ashlands
would be in the Rogue Valley.
In 1999, Jackson County grew at 1.5 percent
annually (Oregon grew at 1 percent). If such
continues, the population will double in 50
years. Inevitably, the time will come to rename
the place Ashford or Medland. Is that what you
want for your grandchildren? Perhaps excellent
land use, transportation, air quality, and water
quality planning can mitigate the worst effects
of this growth (look how well it has done so
far!), but any way you measure your quality of
lifecommute times, air quality, classroom
size, water purity, potholes, taxes, salmon,
natural habitat or elbow roomquality of
life decreases as population increases. This
specter doesn't have to be. A recent poll found
that 65 percent of Oregonians think the
population is just right; 29 percent think the
state is already overcrowded; only 2 percent
think that the state's population is too small.
This two percent must be the developers and their
chorus-bankers, suppliers of asphalt and house
parts, media moguls who want increased
circulation or viewers (so they can charge higher
advertising rates), and most insanely, chamber of
commerce- and booster-types drawn from the ranks
of downtown small independent retailers who
promote growth to the point that the megabox
stores locate on edge (for now) of town and blow
them away. A WalMart is in Ashland's future.
While boosters say the economy runs on
development, and if growth stops the town dies (a
cancer cell operates under the same
philosophy)some economists speculate that
population increase accounts for no more than 10
percent of the economy. No one knows for sure,
because society has been afraid to ask these
questions. If the grow-or-die thesis is correct,
then we have an economy that measures success by
the rate we foul our own nest. The growth machine
isn't necessary for economic health.
Western Europe and Japan have a comparable
quality of life without population growth.
Whatever amount the economy is dependent on
population and consumption growth, let's identify
and convert it to sustainable economic pursuits.
The developers of forests and farmlands can be
made into redevelopers of downtowns and
neighborhoods where people come before cars.
While these population projections need not
come true, they are based on the assumption that
government will do everything it can do to not
only accommodate, but encourage growth. That is
exactly what government is doing now. The average
new house in Oregon receives at least $33,000 in
tax subdues that aren't paid back by the
developer or owner. Rather than paying to foul
their own nests as they are now, taxpayers could
feather their collective nests by buying up all
the undeveloped land scheduled for development
and dedicate it to parks for people and nature
preserves for fish and wildlife. It would be less
expensive than subsidizing growth, not to mention
maintaining and improving the current quality of
life. Growth management is the equivalent to
giving painkillers to a patient. While it is very
important to relieve symptoms, it is as, or more,
important to treat the cause of the disease. Only
the end of growthnot slow growthcan
maintain quality of life.
Why is growth happening if 94 percent of
Oregonians don't want it? You get what you elect
and pay for. Elected officials facilitate growth
because they are not held accountable for growth
at the polls. They dole out tax dollars to
developers because developers make campaign
contributions. Growth is neither desirable, nor
inevitable. Tax dollars that subsidize growth can
be redirected, or not collected. Elected
officials that encourage growth can be ousted.
Ashland is on its way to a Palm Springs with
studded tires. Instead, it could choose another
path that we can see, that we know to be better,
but will take some courage to take. The only
thing more radical than not growing is growing.
Kerr, Andy. 2000. Commentary: Ashford, Medland
or something else. Ashland Daily Tidings.
May 4. 4
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