Sprawl and Politics is a political history of the origin, enactment, and implementation of Maryland’s well-known Smart Growth and Neighborhood Conservation initiative. It is an insider’s look at the political pressures and decisions made by Parris N. Glendening, the former governor of Maryland, and his top staff as they worked to enact and implement a new program to manage growth and curtail sprawl. The book traces the evolution of the Smart Growth program from its substantive underpinnings to the political and public relations strategies needed to assure the program’s adoption.
Known around the country almost immediately after it was enacted, the program’s incentive-based approach served as a model for other states struggling with growth pressures but reluctant to regulate land use. With a perspective only a participant could provide, John W. Frece examines the incidents, issues, pressures, and personalities responsible for shaping the program as well as the challenges faced putting the ideas into practice.
Inhoudsopgave
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Foreword by Dr. Gerrit-Jan Knaap
1. Room 217
2. Brownfields, Chapman’s Landing, and the Chestertown Wal-Mart
3. “Tell Them, ‘The Governor Is Very Serious.’”
4. The Initiative Begins to Take Shape
5. The Inside/Outside Strategy
6. “The Most Important Thing in the Whole Administration”
7. Opposition Solidifies
8. The General Assembly Battle
9. Momentum, Implementation, and Resistance
10. Second Term Freedom
11. Clicking on All Cylinders
12. A Conservative’s Opportunity
13. Political Lessons from the Maryland
Experiment
Appendix
Milestones in Maryland Planning
Notes
Index
Over de auteur
At the University of Maryland,
John W. Frece is Associate Director of the National Center for Smart Growth Research and Education. He is the coeditor (with Gerrit-Jan Knaap, Huibert A. Haccou, and Kelly J. Clifton) of
Incentives, Regulations, and Plans: The Role of States and Nation-states in Smart Growth Planning.