FWTXAg said:
MemphisAg1 said:
FWTXAg said:
MemphisAg1 said:
I don't see it that way. Government that works best is government that's closest to the people. Cities should have the final say on minimum lot size in their city, not the state legislature -- which in reality -- is just a body dominated by people from bigger cities in the state trying to tell people in small cities and rural counties how to conduct their affairs.
I'm not really even a fan of cities telling landowners how big or small their lot can be... keep it even more local with the developer or HOA at a sub-city level. With the infrastructure considerations of city-supplied services like water, sewage, fire, and police, I can understand why the city wants some input into the process, but bureaucrats in the state capital need to stay out of it.
The only NIMBY here is the locals telling the out-of-towners to mind their own damn business.
Good for them.
They're being required to do this because every single up and coming suburban town in growing states have a rapidly growing percentage of NIMBYS. Most of them are people who moved out of the city to a more "rural" town within a 30 minute commute back to the big city for work. Those people get there and then try to immediately limit more people coming behind them, they do so by limiting current landowners private property rights at the city level by freaking out at rezoning council meetings every week.
This will be required in Texas in the near-future as well.
That is the power of the local government and it's a good thing. It's called quality of life.
Good luck with Austin trying to tell cities in Texas how to live life. That dog won't hunt in Texas.
No, it's not, at all.
Farmers paid for that land with blood, sweat, and tears. His right is to find a buyer that will pay the most for their property, not to protect the city or anybody that just moved there 3 years ago and don't want it to grow. If they personally want to sell it to a developer that will do larger lots, then great, but the city and NIMBYS won't be able to tell him how much his property is worth. At least soon it will be that way when Texas passes a law just like this.
Yes, it absolutely is. If local people thru their elected government want to set a minimum lot size and other requirements to promote a certain quality of life that protects property values and quality of life (low crime, etc.), that is their right to do so. The politicians in the state capital can pound sand. They need to focus on state-level issues and stay out of local government affairs.
If some areas want to be un-zoned and have trailers next to big homes, that is their business.
If other areas want to require a minimum lot and home size, that is their business.
Zoning for residential, commercial, and industrial is common across the US and best left to the local folks.
That's the issue here...local control vs state. And to be clear, "state" control is simply the big cities telling all the others how to live life by nature of their representation dominance in the legislature. People leave the big cities because they tire of their local politics. They don't need or want the state telling them what "freedom" means to them.