Entries Tagged as 'Growth'

Stimulus loans versus grants

Word from DC is that the GOP is calling for making the stimulus package a loan to the States rather than grants because they feel it would make the States spend the money more wisely. Senate Minority leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY)

 Senator McConnell

has proposed that if President-Elect Obama wants to stimulate the economy quickly then he should sign the omnibus bill that was recently passed by both houses. The Senator’s suggestion is a good one, at least on passing the omnibus bill (and Bush should sign it rather than wait for Obama to begin his term in office), but it’s not nearly enough to stimulate the worsening economy. The economic downfall, caused by the bad economic policies of his own party, needs to have the recent bailout money for Wall Street diverted to Main Street in the form of grants, not loans, to many of the small communities that could use that money to rebuild roads, improve water and sewer systems and work on other infrastructure improvements. Mr. McConnell doesn’t seem to realize that making this money a loan would require voter approval because taxes would have to be increased in order to provide the funds to repay the loans. Asking permission from the voters to issue Bonds is precisely what Island Lake will have to do in order to build a new Police Department and to refurbish village hall. Grants from the Federal Government would certainly be a whole lot better. While this plan to sell bonds to fund the refurbishing is needed and it will provide jobs, it is asking people to dig into their pockets a little deeper at a rather bad time. Mr. McConnell doesn’t seem to realize that his bad policies of the past 8 years have caused the problems we have today. Those policies of tax breaks and overspending have put this nation in the spot of having to make some tough choices. Let’s not exasperate the situation further by demanding that Main Street repay a loan while Wall Street gets a bailout.

Growth

This was posted on my campaign web blog and I feel it’s still relevent…

Last summer attended a meeting about improving Route 176 from Route 31 to the Fox River. I have advocated for years the concept of true regional planning. What one community does affects their neighbor. If Prairie Grove builds 2500 homes those cars will come…through Crystal Lake, Island Lake, McHenry and Lakemoor. Each of these communities will pay the cost of that extra traffic through accelerated wear and tear of their infrastructure. We will see an increase in auto traffic that will require extra safe guards to protect our children while crossing the street. Prairie Grove’s neighbors shoulder the costs while Prairie Grove reaps the benefits from all those rooftops paying property taxes.  

What is needed is a Route 176 Corridor Group similar to the Route 120 planning council. Ten communities along Route 120 are working in unison to help create a corridor so that all who live along it will benefit. The communities along Route 176 need to come together to do the same type of planning. One bottleneck, one little kink along this route will cause it to fail unless we work together. Businesses will not locate anywhere on Route 176 so long as it is difficult to move product to and from the area. McHenry County lessons it’s own chances to develop properly so long as it has inadequate roads in which to travel. And it will continue so long as we do not work together for the common good. 

Find me at garling4rep.com

www.garling4rep.com

Water…or lack thereof

snow-and-ice-covered-creek.jpg” I just finished reading Great lakes Water Wars by Peter Annis, a fascinating book that I would recommend to anyone wanting to educate themselves on what is fast becoming a highly volitile issue. Much of McHenry County gets it’s water from aquifers, not Lake Michigan. McHenry County, according to WRMA, cannot get it’s water from the Great Lakes because we are outside of the Great Lakes drainage basin. In other words, our water does not drain into the Great Lakes.  In order to use water from Lake Michigan we would have to put back what we take out. There are a number of Lake County communities that are spending huge amounts of money to see what it would take to tap into Lake Michigan water. I would suggest they read Mr. Annis’s book. Illinois politics being what it is, they may have a shot at it. But they will have to convince 6 States and 2 Canadian Provinces to let them tap in. Personally, they’re better off developing ways to conserve water. They likely would end up spending just as money as they are trying to tap in to Lake Michigan.

Growth

architecture-0122.jpg” Growth seems to me to be a double edge sword. On one side of that blade growth is good because it shows prosperity. Rooftops attract businesses which bring jobs. Jobs create income and people have a tendency to spend that income. As that income is spent it creates the need for more goods, aka; demand. In order to meet that demand businesses are created or move into the area thus the circle is completed and the cycle, hopefully, continues.

The other side of that blade is that growth causes decline in other areas. In our case we see a decline in the amount of land used to grow crops which causes a decline in the amount of food available for consumption. Houses cover over once fertile farm land. That covered up land now causes a decline in the amount of rainfall that replenishes the aquifers we depend on to supply our water. We have a tendency to worry more about water drainage than we do about water retention. As we build more houses more water is sucked out of the ground. We create systems to drain the water down gutters into sewers into the river and it ends up very far away from here. Thus we create our own water shortages. Here in McHenry County we cannot depend upon the fresh water of Lake Michigan because we’re outside of the Great Lakes drainage system.

But yet we continue to build. Slowing this growth is near impossible because the property laws are such that we cannot stop someone from building on their property. We can, however, make it so that people have to build within established guidelines created and enforced by the community.

These guidelines are commonly known as  Zoning Ordinances which dictate the rules on just about anything. Through these laws a community can govern the types of materials, the size of a lot, what types of landscaping a person is allowed to have on their property.

So, since we cannot stop the growth we can at least create laws which call for using only eco-friendly materials and the recycling of construction materials. We can call for eco-friendly design of the landscaping to ensure that the majority of the property is left uncovered thus allowing for rainwater to replenish the aquifer.

Prairie Crossing in Grayslake, IL is an example of the type of development design that combines housing while protecting it’s surrounding environment, http://www.terrain.org/unsprawl/9/.  

The Sierra Club provides interesting articles worthy of discussion on the causes of urban sprawl http://www.sierraclub.org/sprawl/whitepaper.asp.

I invite you to share your thoughts on this highly charged issue. I will continue to add to this article in the near future.

Rich Garling