I feel extremely weird linking to a Forbes piece by a Mercatus affiliate to confirm my priors, but this is one of the only clear explanations I've seen of how discretionary development allows entitled actors—big devs and homeowners—to get their way: forbes.com/sites/adammillsap…
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I'm a big fan of the "too much discretion is bad": for rule of law & predictability of government decisions, for reducing corruption, and for simplifying interaction with government. See also: making tons of things crimes so prosecutors can always charge you with something.
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Increased opportunity for corruption is also one of the reasons I'm likely to vote against split roll:
Replying to @davidbaron
Commercial or industrial property that's zoned for residential use seems to get an exception. This would give an edge to properties nonconformant to (later) zoning. I also worry it creates an opportunity for corruption by pushing to change zoning to residential.

Mar 20, 2019 · 4:41 AM UTC