Quote:
Originally Posted by OldDartmouthMark
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Is this a novel new way for NIMBYs to block proposals?
We're developing the Centre Plan but then all the development certainty benefits we've seen from HRMxD is lost, because now we're going to let the neighbors decide what to do with a property before developers get a chance to propose anything.
Isn't it possible that developer, using a professional architectural firm, might propose some outside-the-box design that no NIMBY or HRM staffer thought about initially, but then would rally support?
We may never see that design or proposal because the neighbors change the zoning before based on NIMBY principles and limits.
Seems like this process is bad urban planning and NIMBY dominance parading as "public input".