Portland is on a
growth splurge; between 2012 and 2014 its population grew faster than 81
percent of the nation’s metro areas. Sixty percent of the 59,016 new residents
moved to the area, a trend that is expected to continue. Portland is a magnet
for Millennials; the 18-to-34 years olds who move at nearly double the national
average. Since 2010 Portland, along with San Francisco, Denver, and Austin, has
experienced the highest influx of Millennials aged 25-34, the cohort crucial to
economic growth. Portland also attracts
Millennials with college degrees at double the national average. Their unemployment rate is 4.8 percent, which
is not the scenario Claire Miller laid out in her often-cited article, “Will
Portland Always be the Retirement City for the Young?”http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/21/magazine/will-portland-always-be-a-retirement-community-for-the-young.html?_r=0 Portland is prospering,
a lead city in a national urban renaissance.
Since 2008, its gross domestic product (GDP) has increased by 22.8
percent, the top rate in the nation. The
irony is that the city’s greatest attribute—a superior quality of life—is the product of intelligent planning, an
attribute the GDP does not measure.
The
GDP, as Robert F. Kennedy stated in a celebrated 1968 campaign speech, counts
"everything, in short, except that which makes life worthwhile." It
measures “the ambulances to clear our highways of
carnage” and “the loss of our natural wonder to chaotic sprawl.” Nor does
it measure “personal excellence and community values” that “are surrendered in
the mere accumulation of material things.” Kennedy’s speech struck a nerve across the
nation, and that year Portland’s revival took root after a task force recommended
replacing Harbor Drive with a public waterfront park. Within five years, Mayor Neil Goldschmidt had
a plan to renew the downtown and Governor Thom McCall had initiated the “Oregon
Experiment” in land use planning, which required cities to establish urban
growth boundaries (UGB). Over time, regulation
and innovation meshed the Portland region’s three elemental landscapes—wilderness,
rural, and urban—in sustainable and profitable form. Its lively
pedestrian-oriented, bike friendly, nature infused environment offers new
venues for work and leisure. And in a
period of political turmoil, it offers a model for conservatives as well as
liberals.
Conservatives
fear the nation has entered an “Age of Exhaustion,” as the Great Recession eviscerated capitalism of any moral certitude. Mass stupidity and speculative greed
brought the nation to the edge of collapse, and the problem confronting
Republicans is primarily “mental and spiritual,” according to David Brooks. Sounding much like
Robert Kennedy, his solution is to invest in communities and adhere to “a goal
more profound than material comfort.” (New York Times, October 20, 2015)
Brooks
believes America is flailing because suburbia is in decline. For conservatives, the sweet spot in American
history for lies between the 1950s and the 1970s: the period when the suburb
was in ascendancy, Leave It to Beaver
and The Brady Bunch were the
perceived norm, and suburban inhabitants “aspired to golf’s paradisiacal
vision.” The Great Recession sent the striving for “par,” Brooks’ metaphor for
balancing one’s commitment to community with individual desires, into the
rough.http://www.amazon.com/On-Paradise-Drive-Always-Future/dp/0743227395 Once pinnacles of stability, suburbia
is in transition and golf is in remission.
The sport has lost 24 percent of its participants since 2002, and for
every golf course that opens, eleven close.
Proximity to bike trails, not golf courses, now informs real estate
decisions, an indication of the new economic geography driving the post
Recession economy.
Portland, not
surprisingly, is the only major city in the United States to receive a Platinum
designation from League of Bicyclists. Twenty-five years ago, community activists set
the groundwork for creating an interconnected system of natural lands and bicycle
trails within the UGB. Today, over 200
miles of bike trails link 17,000 acres of system of parks, a project aided by two regional bond
measures and a levy–more than $400 million dollars. The Intertwine Alliance, a coalition of over 140 public, private
and nonprofit organizations, is working to expand the system and integrate
nature and recreation more deeply into the daily life of the region. At the same time the city of Portland is
completing a new comprehensive plan to accommodate a population increase of
over 200,000 in the next 20 years, and greenways, low stress bikeways, are key
components. They will link a system of
“complete neighborhoods,” places that allow people of all ages and abilities
safe and convenient access to the goods and services needed in daily life — where they can get to grocery stores, schools, libraries, parks and gathering
places on foot or by bike. They are well connected to jobs and the rest of the
city by transit. And they have a variety
of housing types and prices for households of different sizes and incomes.
Interestingly David
Brooks envisions a similar future. He thinks
Republicans and Democrats should unite and launch initiatives to enhance
opportunity in middle-, working- and lower-class neighborhoods. He is keen on
improving educational opportunity and “putting the quality of the social fabric
at the center of the politics.” First, however, Brooks must realize that a
neighborhood is not a subdivision, it is a place defined by livability--not the
groomed vision of a golf course.
Moreover, the policies to create complete neighborhoods are already in
place, and not just in Portland.
The Obama Administration restructured the Department of Housing and Urban Development on the Six Principles of Livability, which focus on making the automobile an option not a necessity. Establishing safe walkable neighborhoods with transportation choices is the best way to decrease living costs, improve air quality, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and promote public health. Investing in livability not only enhances the GDP, it fosters personal excellence and community values. Once this happens, we will all be shooting par.
The Obama Administration restructured the Department of Housing and Urban Development on the Six Principles of Livability, which focus on making the automobile an option not a necessity. Establishing safe walkable neighborhoods with transportation choices is the best way to decrease living costs, improve air quality, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and promote public health. Investing in livability not only enhances the GDP, it fosters personal excellence and community values. Once this happens, we will all be shooting par.
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