Accomplishments
The Institute's list of accomplishments in 2000 shows
how the combined power of the pen and the people works to shine a spotlight
on insider politics and put citizen-baked solutions on the policy-making
table.
Smart Growth
A prime example of the Institutes investigative and organizing role
is an exposé it produced last spring when real estate interests in
Lansing turned a package of farmland protection legislation into a major
taxpayer subsidy to land speculators.
We used actual real estate examples to demonstrate the giveaway risk and
then broadcast this information to key decision makers and the general public
through editorials, direct mailings, email alerts, and our Web site.
The exposé was a critical information tool that hundreds of organizations
and individuals used to stop the taxpayer subsidy to speculators.
Additional highlights of the Institutes Smart Growth work in 2000
include:
Winning legislation in December that strengthened the states
soil erosion law. Developers now face larger fines for reckless earth moving
and greater local authority to protect hillsides and riverbanks. Institute
articles and commentary on the issue were instrumental in raising public
awareness statewide, which prompted the legislative action and ensured its
success.
Launching the Institutes national Elm Street Writers Group,
which provides opinion pieces on Smart Growth issues to major newspapers,
magazines, Web sites, and radio networks. Elm Street columns appeared in
at least 20 major publications in 2000, including the Chicago Tribune. Writers
include Utne Reader editor Jay Walljasper and James Howard Kunstler, author
of The Geography of Nowhere, as well as Institute staff.
Publishing a 12-Step Program for breaking the sprawl
addiction in the spring 2000 issue of the Institutes magazine, the
Great Lakes Bulletin. The articles lay bare the myth that sprawl is a natural
result of the free market and demonstrate how traditional zoning plans actually
promote the kind of development that clogs roads and overruns local economies
with chain stores.
Adding key communications pieces to the efforts of a broad network
of farmers, environmentalists, and tax reformers to defeat state legislation
that would have increased the power of developers, under a law called the
Michigan Drain Code, to shift stormwater management costs onto local property
owners. Institute journalism cut through the complexities of the legislation
to focus lawmaker attention on the proposals fundamental flaws.
Helping citizens across the state develop successful strategies for
protecting their communities, including a notable victory in southeast Michigans
Milan Township. The Institute helped Milan Area Concerned Citizens prevail
in its efforts to protect 1,000 acres of farmland from a General Motors
plan to rezone the land and build a massive auto shipping facility. Township
voters soundly rejected the rezoning proposal and, in November, joined at
least a dozen other communities in Michigan that replaced local officials
with candidates who pledged to protect farmland and the environment.
|
|