Not Wisconn. Sprawlville
[Update: Foxconn tells WISN-TV's Sunday morning host Mike Gousha it is "surprised" it is not being welcomed with open arms.
Walker had said the same thing not long ago, and I suggested at the time he bears the blame for poorly prepping Foxconn about the multiple political, fiscal and environmental norms the Foxconn project is bulldozing for Walker's career benefit.]
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For years on this blog I posted stories about destructive 'planning' in Wisconsin under the title "The Road to Sprawlville."
Chapter 4 was about the proposed re-purposing of "Cow Corner" in the Village of Wales for a Walgreen's and some retail stores; posts often focused on Waukesha County projects and paving, sometimes with photographs.
(I wish I had organized them into a single, continuing post, as I have done with Foxconn, but if you enter "The Road to Sprawlville" into the blog index at the upper left they will all come up.)
Chapter 55 had something of a summary to that point in 2013:
But given what we now know about Foxconn - - an extensive archive about the project since July, 2017, is here - - its 3,000 rural acres headed for bulldozing, piping in daily of millions of diverted Great Lakes water, generation of massive amounts of polluted wastewater and dirty air emissions, exemptions from environmental impact reviews, clean air standards, wetlands-filling protections, and inducement of heavy traffic in and out of the project on vastly-expanded roads, it's time for me to remove the title "Sprawlville's Capital City" from Pabst Farms to the west and award it to the Foxconn site in Mount Pleasant.
Where the official ground-breaking, and a rally in protest, are scheduled for June 28th.
Walker wants the area designed "Wisconn Valley," thinking that his inventing a brand with tortured language somehow makes real a link with Silicon Valley.
But what he's doing, rather paradoxically, is firming up the notion of a con and calling attention to what he and his public-policy renegades deleting from both "conservation" and "conservatism:"
Abandoning any pretense to supporting clean air and water. And violating what fiscally-conservative GOP politicians used to stand for: local control, private property rights, restrained borrowing and avoiding the use of government to pick marketplace winners and losers.
So the 69th chapter of "The Road to Sprawlville" now runs from State Capitol to rural Racine County and right through to Mount Pleasant by bulldozing the land, diverting the water, polluting the air and evading or breaking traditional Wisconsin practices and values.
Walker had said the same thing not long ago, and I suggested at the time he bears the blame for poorly prepping Foxconn about the multiple political, fiscal and environmental norms the Foxconn project is bulldozing for Walker's career benefit.]
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For years on this blog I posted stories about destructive 'planning' in Wisconsin under the title "The Road to Sprawlville."
Chapter 4 was about the proposed re-purposing of "Cow Corner" in the Village of Wales for a Walgreen's and some retail stores; posts often focused on Waukesha County projects and paving, sometimes with photographs.
(I wish I had organized them into a single, continuing post, as I have done with Foxconn, but if you enter "The Road to Sprawlville" into the blog index at the upper left they will all come up.)
Chapter 55 had something of a summary to that point in 2013:
Wherein we renew our long-running series "The Road To Sprawlville" and revisit frequent stop Pabst Farms - - the planned 'community' on Western Waukesha County cornfields where stalled development and dead dreams of a Bayshore-style mall have lapsed into litigation with the city that lavished millions of dollars in subsidies on the site.
Pabst Farms and other Waukesha sites date to the early days (2007) of The Road to Sprawlville:
For the record, earlier posts in my occasional series about Sprawlville, are here, (on the road to Ft. Atkinson), here (in Dousman), and here (somewhat of a detour - - on the $25 million "diamond-design" I-94 interchange planned to service the planned upscale shopping mall at Pabst Farms, Sprawlville's Capital City).And the State Legislature is doing its best to bring Sprawlville to Dane County, showcasing how Team Walker continues to serve the 'pave-it-over' crowd.
But given what we now know about Foxconn - - an extensive archive about the project since July, 2017, is here - - its 3,000 rural acres headed for bulldozing, piping in daily of millions of diverted Great Lakes water, generation of massive amounts of polluted wastewater and dirty air emissions, exemptions from environmental impact reviews, clean air standards, wetlands-filling protections, and inducement of heavy traffic in and out of the project on vastly-expanded roads, it's time for me to remove the title "Sprawlville's Capital City" from Pabst Farms to the west and award it to the Foxconn site in Mount Pleasant.
Where the official ground-breaking, and a rally in protest, are scheduled for June 28th.
Walker wants the area designed "Wisconn Valley," thinking that his inventing a brand with tortured language somehow makes real a link with Silicon Valley.
But what he's doing, rather paradoxically, is firming up the notion of a con and calling attention to what he and his public-policy renegades deleting from both "conservation" and "conservatism:"
Abandoning any pretense to supporting clean air and water. And violating what fiscally-conservative GOP politicians used to stand for: local control, private property rights, restrained borrowing and avoiding the use of government to pick marketplace winners and losers.
So the 69th chapter of "The Road to Sprawlville" now runs from State Capitol to rural Racine County and right through to Mount Pleasant by bulldozing the land, diverting the water, polluting the air and evading or breaking traditional Wisconsin practices and values.
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