Thrive
2055 is a 40-year tri-state regional planning scheme to create
public-private partnerships that will exchange the current representative
government for a regional government, with the ultimate goal of eliminating
the property and personal rights of residents.
The
people of Polk County Tennessee cherish their land. Farmers will tell you
the soil conditions on every square inch of their acreage and landowners reverently
discuss their properties’ history. These people would never knowingly submit
to strict zoning regulations or government control of their land. Yet
without their knowledge or their informed consent, that is exactly what is
about to happen.
Thrive
2055 is a planning scheme to roll 16 counties in Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia
into a single regional bundle effecting over 1 million residents. Drive
distances to work, bike paths, light rail, mixed-use construction, and greenbelts
will all converge into a unified scheme that is a carbon copy of plans
unfolding across America. By forming a region, zoning decisions now made
by local communities, will be under the authority of a powerful, regional
board.
Most
Polk County residents never heard of Thrive 2055. It is no wonder. Only a
handful of residents attended planners’ meetings. On a recent radio appearance,
a spokesperson stated that after 2 years of community outreach, planners
received just 1200 completed community surveys. Of the planned region’s 1
million residents, 998,800 did not participate.
According
to the planners, community members decide their plan’s makeup and the surveys
are critical for gathering their information. The anemic participation
suggests very few are interested. Nor have planners been forthcoming about
who took the surveys. Were they stacked with the families of venders who
stand to profit from Thrive 2055, or possibly groups of opponents and their
friends? Why are they continuing with a so-called ‘community plan’ with so
little interest on the part of the community? The planners have not
answered one of these questions.
Community
participation and full-disclosure about the good and bad of regional planning
is fundamental if residents are to make informed decisions. Thrive 2055
offers no plan details. They claim the community decides the plan. What community?
Are the 1200 who took the survey deciding the plan for the remaining
998,800?
The
few who have heard of the Thrive 2055 have scant idea of the outcomes beyond
the colorful brochures and trendy planner-speak. Feel good phrases like, “educated
people with good jobs living in a great place” do not inform people. Rather,
they disarm them from questioning the underlying flaws of the process.
Since
many people own their land and can produce a property deed, they feel their
rights are safe. Where regionalism is involved, this fatal misunderstanding
sets people up to lose their property rights, their home values and their
way of life.
The
government does not need to own land to govern what owners can do with it.
Instead, they need to control the zoning of the land. That is what regional
planning does. It turns zoning decisions over to un-elected boards who must
comply with the requirements of the federal grants that paid for the
regional plan’s implementation.
Already,
in Chattanooga, the economic epicenter for Thrive 2055, planners are entertaining
the idea of form-based codes. This is a programmable system for fast tracking
zoning ordinances while marginalizing or altogether bypassing
legislatures.
Nowhere
do planners discuss these important facts with community members.
The
community did not ask planners to sell them a regional plan that would swallow
their communities’ choices. It is incumbent on the planners to reach a representative
number of people with full disclosure. It is not incumbent on the people
to participate in a poorly defined and unsolicited scheme that endangers
their property rights.
Perhaps
it is time for Thrive 2055 to admit their failure to inform and engage the public,
and simply to move on.
Comments
UN Agenda 21 implementation planners are now
forming regions across state lines. This
violates the “home rule” provisions in most State Constitutions. Americans are used to having elected
officials in counties and cities manage the services they perform with local
tax dollars. Federal squander-grant
funding allows planners to create this fantasy land planning when elected
officials are too lazy to do their jobs and too reliant on consultants and
staff to make all the decisions.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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