My Friend, Richard Grosso Sounds Off on Growth's Insanity in Florida. By Geniusofdespair

As our UDB faces assault by developers...And an expanded highway is proposed along the UDB and supported by our zany Mayor Gimenez, NSU Law Professor Richard Grosso sounds off. Richard Grosso has always been the voice of reason in my view. He is one of my heroes, along with Gimleteye (Alan Farago), on the environment:


OpEd in the Miami Herald Today:

Local governments don�t have the luxury of pretending sea-level rise and climate change aren�t real. Cities and counties must deal with the daily realities of the effects on homes, businesses, roads, water supplies, sewer lines, insurance costs, safety hazards, property-tax revenue, bond ratings and more that we are experiencing now � with even worse to come.

Southeast Florida has a Regional Climate Compact to coordinate climate-change efforts in four counties and many cities, an Everglades restoration project with the potential to restore freshwater flow to fight saltwater encroachment, strong legal and policy tools and lots of superior professional talent.

But, the massive scale of the challenge we face requires more willingness to change business as usual than we�ve seen to date. If we can�t show residents, businesses and investors (current and future) that South Florida is prepared to confront climate change and sea-level rise and prepare for the future, we are in big trouble � economically, socially and ecologically.
Richard Grosso

It starts with building and infrastructure practices. We can and must stop approving more development in coastal and inland low-lying areas, enact stricter limits on what can be built, and impose standards on how things are built.

But with years of experience about the implications of certain development, we still make many of the same mistakes we�ve made for decades.

We still capitulate to inaccurate claims that private property rights are violated if we don�t say yes. We still debate the science and economics that make clear that government must reduce how much we build and how we build.

We must stop paving over undeveloped land and erecting buildings that increase our carbon footprint and cause flooding. We still approve too many new development requests even though Florida land use and environmental permitting law strongly support local and state agencies that say No.

Nope, no climate change here. We have to look at the signs...all around the world.
We still plan roads to support new westward sprawl instead of promoting real redevelopment. We need to enact stronger building standards that ensure structures are stronger and safer, even where that increases up-front costs.

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