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Old Posted Aug 17, 2015, 4:02 PM
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Lesson from Seattle: Don't Demonize Single-Family Home Owners

Why The Housing Affordability and Livability Agenda (HALA) Single-Family Upzones Died


AUGUST 3, 2015

By ROBERT CRUICKSHANK

Read More: http://www.theurbanist.org/2015/08/0...-upzones-died/

Quote:
For many urbanists, it's been a journey of elation to despair. Just two weeks after the Housing Affordability and Livability Agenda (HALA) proposals were announced, several of its core recommendations have already been abandoned. Facing a growing backlash, Mayor Ed Murray announced he will no longer seek zoning changes in single-family neighborhoods.

- Despite early enthusiasm, the HALA single-family upzone proposals were doomed from the start. The recommendations were reached as a result of a series of private meetings that did not include significant public participation. The public first learned about the proposals in a leak to Danny Westneat, a Seattle Times columnist, making the proposals seem conspiratorial or secretive. The HALA committee finally made the plans public before there had been any meaningful effort to organize grassroots activism to support them—or to explain to Seattle residents why the zoning changes mattered.

- The proposals were accompanied by a controversial claim that single family zoning was racist in origin. The HALA committee was right to raise the issue, and we need to continue the discussion about the ways housing markets, past and present, whether multifamily or single-family, are shaped by racism. Opponents of upzoning used the committee's comments on racism to intentionally derail the discussion about the HALA proposals.

- Many Seattle urbanists quickly took to social media to celebrate the HALA upzones. Rather than consolidate support and begin persuading Seattle residents to embrace the proposals, some upzone backers instead spent their time online attacking fellow urbanists and alienated important allies. In retrospect, this was a poor substitute for genuine organizing to build majority support for the upzones.

- Rather than treat this as a policy discussion, it's time to treat zoning changes as what they truly are: a political debate. When viewed through that lens, the reasons for the failure of the HALA single family upzone proposals become clear. Anat Shenker-Osorio is a researcher and political communications expert who has taken a close look at how to persuade people to back an idea. She has persuasively demonstrated that winning messages follow the same pattern: engage the base, persuade the middle, and alienate the opposition.

- When the base is engaged, they become authentic evangelists for a point of view that becomes compelling to the persuadable middle, the very people who are key to deciding whether a proposal lives or dies. Alienating the opposition is equally important. Doing so usually causes the opposition to react with extreme language that turns off the persuadable middle and drives them into the waiting arms of the base.

- This is exactly what happened in the debate of the HALA upzones—with the urbanists playing the unwanted role of the "opposition." When upzone opponents spoke of "neighborhood character" or pushed back against the zoning changes, they did so using moderate and accessible language. --- This is difficult for many urbanists to accept, as our conversations tend to be rooted in policy analysis and data that shows upzones make sense and that NIMBYism doesn’t. Perhaps unable to understand why any reasonable person would oppose upzones, urbanists generally reacted to opponents’ claims with extreme language and attacks. This merely pushed the persuadables toward the upzone opponents.

- Upzone supporters should accept that their tactics were fundamentally flawed and self-defeating. It's time to develop new methods that are designed to win friends and influence people, rather than simply try to win an argument. --- First, stop viewing single-family homeowners as a monolithic bloc inherently opposed to zoning changes. Many residents who backed the zoning changes, myself included, live in single family homes. Recognizing that single family homeowners have diverse opinions makes it easier to start finding common ground and building alliances to pass zoning changes.

- Second, listen to the objections that are being raised. It's true that some residents will never accept any zoning changes and believe that new density and growth are inherently bad. But many more are open to additional density, even in their own neighborhood. They worry about parking, transit availability, and the impact of growth on schools and other public services. Take those concerns at face value, even if you doubt their sincerity, and work with residents to solve them. Doing so can help persuade the middle that zoning changes are worthwhile. If some residents still resist, they'll look extreme for opposing reasonable and good faith efforts to find common ground.

- Third, make sure arguments for zoning changes are rooted in values, not in facts and figures. The goal shouldn't be "density" or "upzones" but "making Seattle more affordable" and "making Seattle sustainable." Emphasize, as Sara Maxana has, that "growth" isn't about buildings but is about giving people an opportunity to share the city. Point out that adding new housing units is also essential to ensuring that our own children are able to live in Seattle in the future, rather than get priced out and pushed to the suburbs.

- Finally, put this in a strong social justice frame. That will require urbanists to stop arguing that upzones are the most important priority for urban housing policy, and acknowledge that displacement, inequality, and racial disparities need to be addressed as well. Linking upzones to a social justice urbanism is an important step in building a broader coalition to support the changes required to facilitate a more affordable city.

.....



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  #2  
Old Posted Aug 17, 2015, 4:30 PM
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I think having such large swaths of land devoted to SFHs and off limits to intensification is one of the biggest flaws in urban NA. Too bad they weren't able to make more progress on this front.
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Old Posted Aug 17, 2015, 4:33 PM
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"Demonize" them? What BS. The whole problem is that single-family homeowners are treated like a sacrosanct species that's entitled to better treatment than anybody else.

Low density homeowner entitlements are not fair and not sustainable in the long term. It's not "demonizing" to level the playing field against a demographic that's always viewed itself as better than everyone else.
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Old Posted Aug 17, 2015, 4:47 PM
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In the US it might be too polarized to get find any meaningful common ground, especially if it's the hardcore activists who show up for meetings about this.
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Old Posted Aug 17, 2015, 5:41 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cirrus View Post
"Demonize" them? What BS. The whole problem is that single-family homeowners are treated like a sacrosanct species that's entitled to better treatment than anybody else.

Low density homeowner entitlements are not fair and not sustainable in the long term. It's not "demonizing" to level the playing field against a demographic that's always viewed itself as better than everyone else.
^What he said. I have noticed that at least here in South Florida you can upzone any commercial area or even a duplex zoned area to 80 stories and no one blinks and eye but if you try to upzone a single family block to just 2 story town homes its as if some one proposed the mass slaughter of first born children or something. Single family home areas are treated as sacred and they must not be impeded upon or changed in any way.
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Old Posted Aug 17, 2015, 6:38 PM
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The day after this article came out was our primary where the anti-density candidates did terribly. In my district the guy who sent our campaign mail showing bulldozers coming after single family houses came in 4th. In one of the citywide seats the "neighborhood" guy got 15% compared to the leading candidate - the Mayor's former legal counsel - who got 65%.
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Old Posted Aug 17, 2015, 8:02 PM
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It's exactly the same as the right wing religious argument. Not praying to single-family houses in schools? That's a war on single family housing!

PS, Seattle's city council primaries didn't advance the worst NIMBYs, and the mayor has suggested that the SFR-zone changes remain on the table.
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Old Posted Aug 19, 2015, 9:18 PM
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Change will come to Seattle's massive SFH areas. I would be interested if their intransigence to becoming more dense will somehow increase their property tax for building affordable housing elsewhere? I am also interested if the urban village idea will get upzoned from the lowrise versions they are now?
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Old Posted Aug 19, 2015, 10:20 PM
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This was just a case of the NIMBYs. It makes no sense not allowing land owners to add units to their property if the choose to do so. I get having restrictions and limitations to what one can do, but if someone wants to build a rentable ADU and convert their basement into an apartment, I say have at it.
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Old Posted Aug 20, 2015, 3:53 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cirrus View Post
"Demonize" them? What BS. The whole problem is that single-family homeowners are treated like a sacrosanct species that's entitled to better treatment than anybody else.
Yup.
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  #11  
Old Posted Aug 23, 2015, 9:32 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cirrus View Post
"Demonize" them? What BS. The whole problem is that single-family homeowners are treated like a sacrosanct species that's entitled to better treatment than anybody else.

Low density homeowner entitlements are not fair and not sustainable in the long term. It's not "demonizing" to level the playing field against a demographic that's always viewed itself as better than everyone else.
Did you miss the author's point about extreme language?

Even if you're correct about SFH, it's politically counter-productive to discuss the issue so sharply.
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  #12  
Old Posted Sep 1, 2017, 3:40 PM
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The city of Seattle provides the geography and market for a housing map that illustrates the differences between single-family and multi-family housing in terms of affordability:

https://sightline.carto.com/builder/...%22%3A12%7D%7D
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Old Posted Sep 1, 2017, 8:35 PM
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If they refuse to upzone, then they have no right to complain about how their housing is so unafordable.
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