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Symphony of the boroughs
by Albert Paschall
Sunday mornings this time of
year in my neighborhood can be noisy. In our small town the houses are close together. The
steady rhythm of power drills, the hum of buzz saws and the drumbeat of hammers is the
music that starts the day. Its the Sunday symphony of Pennsylvanias finest
small towns the states 966 boroughs.
Personally its not music I play
well. Those who drive typewriters rather than nails should stay away from the heavier
instruments of home repair. Even though Ive read the books: "Hammers Made
Easy" "Screwdrivers For Dummies" and "House Painting For The
Challenged Left Handed" the family flees whenever my toolbox comes out. Having struck
too many sour plumbing chords, the plumber is the grand maestro of all the trades, his
astounding performances always welcome, his wrench a baton to relieve leaking misery. Like
my neighbors in nearly 1,000 villages across the state we gratefully pay the pipers: the
roofers, carpenters and other craftspeople who maintain our aging homes.
Historically Pennsylvanias boroughs are the by-products of
the industrial age. Where there was a railroad or river came the factories. Employee
housing was down by the mills, while the executives lived in the big houses on the edge of
town. In between one can see the rows of homes rise in style, like stepladders to success.
From Honesdale, nestled in the Poconos, to Hanover, down near the Maryland border, this
pattern rolls across the Commonwealth. Affordable housing close to businesses, downtowns
you can walk to with neighborhood schools. Tree-lined streets near street corner parks,
read just like the text that the Department of Environmental Protections land
planners have just discovered. Its their formula for combating what they call sprawl in
Pennsylvania.
However the bureaucratic version of
sprawl lacks cyclical definition. Do businesses move to farmland first, or does an
affluent work force seeking bucolic views force business to move closer to where, and how,
workers want to live? The answer is irrelevant now that the Pennsylvania 21st Century
Environmental Commission has declared war on development. The Ridge Administration is
backing the commissions findings with $1.3 billion in its
"Growing-Greener" program.
The risk of "Growing-Greener"
is that with each passing sound-byte its beginning to sound more like a give-a-way to the
landed gentry of Southeastern and Central Pennsylvania while pushing zoning strategies
that already exist by natural and historic precedent in virtually every borough in the
state. Pumping taxpayers money into preserving sunset vistas in Chester, Lancaster
and York Counties is unlikely to end the drive to develop in country settings. Its intent
is at cross purposes calling for new towns with what the boroughs already have: cluster
housing close to business centers and downtown districts within walking distance of
neighborhoods.
There are few boroughs in Pennsylvania
that arent strapped for money. Sadly enough most of the factories and stores are
gone. With unfair labels like aging, rusting and down in the heels attached, private
investment isnt pouring into these little towns. Governed by City Councils, debate
is endless, yet they manage to stretch every buck, begging for the development of the
commercial tax base that their suburban neighbors, backed by the government of the state
are now eager to fight.
Give a few rich suburban counties in
this state $1.3 billion and youll get plenty of academic plans to preserve open
space that wont be off the drawing boards before the bulldozers roll. Give every
budget pressed borough manager in the state just $1 million and these towns will get new
streets, sidewalks and sewers. Federal Highways built suburbs, hard honed industrialists
built boroughs. In the age of electronic commerce they are ripe for rebirth. With an
aggressive chorus of state tax breaks and infrastructure improvements, business will
naturally flow back into them. Accomplishing what "Growing-Greener" wont:
less suburban development. Some day if that symphony of saws, hammers and drills started
to play in all the states boroughs, development pressure on the suburbs could
subside and all of Pennsylvania could grow together.
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Albert Paschall is senior commentator for the Lincoln Institute Of Public Opinion Research a non-profit educational foundation in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
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