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by com2kid
681 days ago
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> but only one city would have to break ranks. A very large % of voters object to dense housing. I see a lot of "too many people keep moving here, we need to stop building more houses!" comments on neighborhood forums. That is likely the other factor. An election cycle or two ago, a candidate in Seattle who was proposing density increases lost big time. Since then, proposals have been... less than earthshattering. IMHO a citizens referendum is needed to really change things, but it'd need one hell of an ad campaign behind it. People in nice neighborhoods like their neighborhoods, and they tend to have enough $ to back those feelings up when it comes to political donations. Asking them to take a gamble on completely changing the area they live at, and hoping it becomes better, is a hard sell. |
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