| Contact: John Keeley
(202) 466-8185
jmk@cis.org
Outsmarting Smart Growth
Study Finds Population Growth Key Reason for Sprawl
WASHINGTON (August 2003) — In recent years, a host of local governments,
states, and non-profit organizations have adopted initiatives designed to save
rural land from sprawl. Most anti-sprawl efforts have focused on “Smart
Growth” strategies, which emphasize better planning to create more efficient
land use.
A new study from the Center for Immigration Studies indicates that this
approach will have only limited success in saving rural land because it fails
to address a key reason for sprawl — immigration-driven population growth.
Based on data from the Census Bureau and from the U.S. Department of
Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service, the study finds that
about half the loss of rural land in recent decades is attributable to
increases in the U.S. population, while changes in land use account for the
other half.
The 122-page report, entitled
Outsmarting Smart Growth: Population Growth,
Immigration, and the Problem of Sprawl, contains detailed
information for every state and will be available on line at
www.cis.org.
On Tuesday, August 26, the Center will host a panel discussion to
release this report. The event will take place at 9:30 a.m. in the
First Amendment Room of the National Press Club, 14th & F streets,
N.W. The panelists will include:
• Roy Beck, study co-author and director of the NumbersUSA Education
and Research Foundation
• Ben Zuckerman, professor of physics and astronomy at UCLA and a
member of the UCLA Institute of the Environment; Board Member of both the
Sierra Club and the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society
• Steven Camarota, study co-author and Director of Research at the
Center for Immigration Studies.
The
discussion is free and open to the public. For more information, contact
John Keeley at (202) 466-8185 or
jmk@cis.org
# # #
The Center for Immigration Studies is a non-profit, non-partisan research
organization which examines and critiques the impact of immigration on the
United States. It is not affiliated with any other group.
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