Feature What You Can Do

Stop the bulldozers!

Push your town or county to plan its growth more carefully. Urban and suburban sprawl eats up more than 3 million acres of farmland and wildland each year. And new developments often cost more in services (schools, sewer lines, fire protection) than they add in tax revenues. 

When you move, choose a house or an apartment in a city or a "traditional neighborhood development," where houses are close enough to each other and to stores and parks that you can walk, bike, or take mass
transportation to most of your destinations. Many zoning codes actually work against compact development, separating stores from residential areas and requiring houses to be set on large lots–which eat up wildlife habitat. 

If you own a farm or other undeveloped property, donate or sell a conservation easement on it. You’ll give up rights to develop the land in perpetuity, often in return for a lower tax rate and/or tax deduction. For more information, call the Land Trust
Alliance (below) or visit its web site. 

Vote for open-space protection, since buying land is often the only way to guarantee that it won’t become a subdivision. And press your congressmembers to fully fund the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund, which was set up to use revenues from oil and gas leases to purchase important land.
 
 

Sprawl Busters

Environmental Protection Agency
312-353-2000; www.epa.gov/region5/sprawl

Land Trust Alliance
202-638-4725; www.lta.org

National Audubon Society
518-766-0167; http://ny.audubon.org/smart.html

Planning Commissioners Journal
888-475-3328; www.plannersweb.com

Preservation Institute 
510-848-7827; www.preservenet.com

Sierra Club, Challenge to Sprawl Campaign
415-977-5500; www.sierra-club.org/sprawl

Smart Growth Network
202-962-3591; www.smartgrowth.org

Sprawl Watch Clearinghouse
202-974-5133; www.sprawlwatch.org

Sustainable Communities Network
828-681-1955 or 202-328-8160; 
www.sustainable.org

Trust for Public Land
800-714-5263; www.tpl.org

© 2000  NASI

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