Tuesday, November 25, 2008

SEWRPC Housing Study Chairman Supports Highway Expansion That Could Demolish Homes

When it comes to reporting on the Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission, a reader could easily assume that SEWRPC fact is surely planner fiction.

Remember the long-delayed, still-delayed (33 years and counting) regional housing plan that SEWRPC says it is just about to begin?

The study launch is so close that the planning agency has said it intends to name Bill Drew, a Milwaukee County SEWRPC commissioner, as the study's chairman.

Must mean that Drew, the former commissioner of development under former Milwaukee Mayor Henry Maier, is a housing advocate, right?

You'd never know it from this Journal Sentinel story, wherein Drew weighs in, as head of the Milwaukee County Research Park, favoring a major widening of the Zoo Interchange that could demolish 30 homes.

The interchange widening is one segment of a $6.5 billion regional freeway plan written by...yes...you guessed it...SEWRPC.

The sheer destruction to homes, businesses, tax base, and open space that state transportation engineers envision in this so-called 'improvement' is jaw-dropping.

But when SEWRPC and WisDOT tag team planning and spending, the result is more pavement, a few minutes of projected commuting time savings for Waukesha County residents, and a lump of coal in everyone else's perpetual stocking.

Any transit improvements in that Zoo Interchange transportation plan?

Stop it: you're killing me.

7 comments:

Pantograph Trolleypole said...

What is wrong with people? You would have thought they would have learned the first time they took houses out.

Anonymous said...

I'm lost, why is that a problem? The zoo is a mess, would seem like a nice solution.

James Rowen said...

Suppose you leave near there, Curt?

Anonymous said...

Jimbo, the J-S pointed out years ago that rush hour traffic is 50-50between Milwaukee residents and Waukesha residents.

germantown_kid

James Rowen said...

It may be close, but not 50-50.

And those estimates could be cooked to justify more 'improvements.'

Anonymous said...

Where will Milwaukee make up the lost property tax revenues?

James Rowen said...

To Anon: From the rest of the taxpayers.