The contentiousness of land use decisions in Austin, Texas

Austin is alleged to be more contentious than its peer cities with regard to land use decisions. Local blogs and media are critical of the city’s land development code and public processes and there is a perception of unfairness when it comes to changing the city’s zoning ordinance. This research ex...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bojo, Leah Michel
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/19961
id ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-19961
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-199612015-09-20T17:14:32ZThe contentiousness of land use decisions in Austin, TexasBojo, Leah MichelConflictLand useDecision-makingAustin is alleged to be more contentious than its peer cities with regard to land use decisions. Local blogs and media are critical of the city’s land development code and public processes and there is a perception of unfairness when it comes to changing the city’s zoning ordinance. This research explores land use decisions in Austin, El Paso, and Denver. I look at the level of conflict and the public processes in each city to understand the factors that may make Austin feel more contentious than other cities or if that heightened contentiousness is only the perception of an inherently controversial issue. Through the data collection I found that Austin does have many more changes proposed and granted to its zoning ordinance than its peer cities, likely because of how complicated and out-of-date the land development code is. The approval ratings are similarly high across all cities. This high number of changes, combined with an even higher number of zoning items posted to council agendas but then postponed, may be perpetuating a perception that the land use covenant between the citizens and the city is being amended more often than it should be. I also look at innovative ways that cities across the country are reducing conflict, or the perception of it, with regard to public input, code structures, and public education. With its approval of a new comprehensive plan, Austin is poised to rewrite its land development regulations. The city would likely benefit from exploring some of these, and other, creative solutions to these common municipal conflicts.text2013-04-19T14:59:48Z2012-122013-01-25December 20122013-04-19T14:59:49Zapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/19961en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Conflict
Land use
Decision-making
spellingShingle Conflict
Land use
Decision-making
Bojo, Leah Michel
The contentiousness of land use decisions in Austin, Texas
description Austin is alleged to be more contentious than its peer cities with regard to land use decisions. Local blogs and media are critical of the city’s land development code and public processes and there is a perception of unfairness when it comes to changing the city’s zoning ordinance. This research explores land use decisions in Austin, El Paso, and Denver. I look at the level of conflict and the public processes in each city to understand the factors that may make Austin feel more contentious than other cities or if that heightened contentiousness is only the perception of an inherently controversial issue. Through the data collection I found that Austin does have many more changes proposed and granted to its zoning ordinance than its peer cities, likely because of how complicated and out-of-date the land development code is. The approval ratings are similarly high across all cities. This high number of changes, combined with an even higher number of zoning items posted to council agendas but then postponed, may be perpetuating a perception that the land use covenant between the citizens and the city is being amended more often than it should be. I also look at innovative ways that cities across the country are reducing conflict, or the perception of it, with regard to public input, code structures, and public education. With its approval of a new comprehensive plan, Austin is poised to rewrite its land development regulations. The city would likely benefit from exploring some of these, and other, creative solutions to these common municipal conflicts. === text
author Bojo, Leah Michel
author_facet Bojo, Leah Michel
author_sort Bojo, Leah Michel
title The contentiousness of land use decisions in Austin, Texas
title_short The contentiousness of land use decisions in Austin, Texas
title_full The contentiousness of land use decisions in Austin, Texas
title_fullStr The contentiousness of land use decisions in Austin, Texas
title_full_unstemmed The contentiousness of land use decisions in Austin, Texas
title_sort contentiousness of land use decisions in austin, texas
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/19961
work_keys_str_mv AT bojoleahmichel thecontentiousnessoflandusedecisionsinaustintexas
AT bojoleahmichel contentiousnessoflandusedecisionsinaustintexas
_version_ 1716823077840486400