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American
Living
Boomburbs reveals that America’s fastest growing
cities are overgrown suburbs
by
Doug French
by Doug French
DIGG THIS
Michael Barone
wrote recently, Demography is destiny. In his article
for Opinion Journal, he pointed out that Americas population
has doubled since 1950, from 150 to 301 million people. But population
isnt growing evenly. Detroit now has less than half the population
it had in 1950, and people are fleeing the large urban coastal cities.
Left behind are the very affluent who can afford to pay the outrageous
taxes and cost of living, along with low-wage immigrants to serve
them. The economic divide in New York and Los Angeles is starting
to look like the economic divide in Mexico City and São Paulo,
observed Barone.
So
where are the middle class working stiffs and ambitious entrepreneurs
moving? That question is answered in Boomburbs:
The Rise of Americas Accidental Cities. Authors Robert
E. Lang and Jennifer B. LeFurgy reveal that Americas fastest
growing cities are overgrown suburbs.
Lang and LeFurgy
list 54 boomburbs located in 25 major metro areas. To qualify as
a boomburb, a city must be: incorporated, suburban, have a population
of at least 100,000, not be the core city of their region, and have
had at least double-digit population growth in each census since
1970.
Cities in California
dominate the list, but the biggest boomburb is Mesa, Ariz. with
a 2000 population of just short of 400,000, making it larger than
Minneapolis, Miami and St. Louis. Even relatively small boomburbs,
Chandler, Ariz. and Henderson, Nev. are larger than older established
mid-sized cities like Providence, R.I. and Worcester, Mass.
The City of
North Las Vegas is featured prominently in the book, being the second
fastest growing U.S. city since 2000. In 2003, NLV had just more
than 144,000 residents, but expects to grow to more than 450,000
by the year 2020. However, the cumbersome and political Bureau of
Land Management (BLM) land-auction process could derail this expected
growth.
Its clear
the authors spent considerable time with NLV mayor Mike Montandon.
But one thing does seem likely, Lang and LeFurgy write,
that the city [NLV] will use whatever land it gets to build
upscale, master-planned communities. Montandon has always
let it be known that he wants more upscale housing in NLV, because
the citys older areas already have plenty of poverty.
Montandon,
along with other boomburb mayors, has a Rodney Dangerfield complex,
say the authors, who related a story that Montandon told them about
the Mayor of Salt Lake City who didnt believe Montandons
city and SLC had anything in common, despite the fact that
North Las Vegas is both bigger and more ethnically diverse than
Salt Lake City.
Local political
structure is one likely reason for the fast growth of these boomburbs.
Although these are now big cities, boomburbs have small-town governance.
Municipal government is smaller than comparable-sized old-style
big cities, with mayors working part time under professional city
manager-council systems. As these cities become bigger, private
solutions lessen the burden of urban management, according
to LeFurgy and Lang. What fills the gap is what the authors describe
as private governments, like homeowners associations
and shadow governments such as special improvement districts.
The ward system under a full-time mayor that most eastern cities
have, are plagued with corruption and the high costs associated
with council members swapping pork projects.
Another reason
for the growth of boomburbs is the freeways. Freeway exits create
locations for jobs, retail uses and, of course, housing. The number
of exits that are located in a city drives the exit-ramp economy.
Lang and LeFurgy
refer to Clark County Nevada as perhaps the most complicated
county governance structure in the United States. State law
enables Clark County to form unincorporated towns like Enterprise
and Paradise. Most of the Las Vegas Strip is located in Paradise
and with its 200,000 residents it would qualify as a boomburb if
it were incorporated. Sunrise Manor and Spring Valley are also what
the authors refer to as lost boomburbs.
Boomburb growth
will likely slow as well over half expect to be completely built
out by 2020. As build-out approaches, many of the boomburbs plan
to grow denser, while a number support light rail measures, not
necessarily for mobility purposes, but for its economic development
potential.
There
are those who are betting on the demise of suburbia, but as Lang
and LeFurgy point out, Americas population will likely grow
to 400 million by 204050. People like the smaller governments
and open spaces that suburbia in the Southwest and West provide.
This
article originally appeared in Liberty
Watch Magazine.
October
20, 2007
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and associate editor
for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies.
Copyright
© 2007 Doug French
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French Archives
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