Quote:
Originally Posted by McBane
The zoning code should not be subject to politics i.e., the short term wants of NIMBYs and the shortsighted legislators who acquiesce to every demand. The zoning code should be strictly safeguarded and managed by urban planning professionals.
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Sounds like your second sentence is
exactly what happened here:
Quote:
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Last month, City Council unanimously passed legislation aimed at slowing the pace of that change. At the recommendation of the City Planning Commission, the ordinance introduced by Council President Darrell Clarke decreases the density of certain areas bounded by North Broad Street and Girard, Ridge and Cecil B. Moore Avenues in an effort to preserve more single-family housing here.
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http://www.philly.com/philly/business/re...nd-to-promote-single-family-housing.html
First, this was approved by City Council
unanimously, meaning including folks like Allan Domb. In other words, it doesn't get any
less political than this at City Council. Second, the idea for this legislation didn't originate with Clarke--it was introduced "at the recommendation of the City Planning Commission." In other words, this is precisely an example of the zoning code being "strictly safeguarded and managed by urban planning professionals."
Also, as the article makes abundantly clear, this is about stabilizing the neighborhood and ensuring that it doesn't get completely taken over by transitory student housing. Similar efforts have been made in University City and West Philly by Penn and Drexel, consolidating student housing on and nearer to their campuses, and encouraging more single-family development and stability further away. Penn famously had--and may still have--a program to subsidize loans for employees, including faculty and professional employees, to buy, fix up, and move into single-family houses a few blocks west of campus. And of course, Penn Alexander School is a BIG part of that.
So I think it's hard to read the entire article and conclude anything other than that this legislation was instigated by the urban planning professionals in the City Planning Commission, and not by Clarke, NIMBYs, or anyone else.