The
City of Columbus must have the leadership and a workable mechanism
involving all surrounding communities to manage growth for the benefit of
the entire metropolitan area. Leadership means bringing people together to
work collaboratively, selflessly and productively toward the good of the
greater community. Nationally, many communities are experimenting with new
forms of metropolitan governance to address issues of infrastructure,
transportation and land use planning. The Columbus metropolitan area must
join that trend.
According to speaker Bruce Katz, "If we want
to celebrate a true urban revival sometime in the next century we need to
break out of the city-only strategies that we have pursued for the past 30
years and develop and embrace a larger metropolitan agenda. Therein lies
the promise and the challenge."
Richard Moe took that idea further: "Local
governments must cooperate in developing strong regional strategies for
using already developed land more efficiently, making thoughtful choices
about where new development should go and not go, and setting up
regulatory mechanisms that are fair, clear, consistent, rational and
far-sighted. The answer to sprawl is sound land-use planning and
revitalization of older communities."
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