MrEddieKing
MrEddieKing t1_j85pbds wrote
Reply to comment by baxterstate in Maintain the integrity of our town! Preserve Freeport’s charming and historic parking lots! by bitesandcats
Low income people can't live in nice looking places?
MrEddieKing t1_j6y3xxg wrote
Reply to comment by freeski919 in So, naive question but, how do we go about politically motivating housing costs? by [deleted]
Currently advocating for these very things in Rockland, along with eliminating parking minimums and setback reqs. There's a very big code rewrite currently underway, hopefully should see some of this stuff start to come into effect this fall [fingers crossed].
MrEddieKing OP t1_j5elw2f wrote
Reply to comment by Bridgertrailrunner in Anyone use Google Fi? How is the coverage in midcoast/Rockland area? by MrEddieKing
Nice, this is great news! Thanks
MrEddieKing OP t1_j5byuny wrote
Reply to comment by Doggin in Anyone use Google Fi? How is the coverage in midcoast/Rockland area? by MrEddieKing
Nice, that's great to know
Submitted by MrEddieKing t3_10i0vh0 in Maine
MrEddieKing t1_j3gp057 wrote
Reply to So, what do we do? by seeyoubythesea
Politically one huge thing you can do is support investments in pedestrian and bike infrastructure, public transit, and passenger rail, in Maine and across the country. Cars and the infrastructure required to support them are incredibly inefficient and wasteful from both an environmental and financial point of view. I'm not talking about "banning cars" here, but getting to a place where most people don't need a car most of the time because their needs are met by other options. MaineDOT just released a draft of their new Long Range Transportation Plan which I'd encourage you to take a look at, it's pretty cool.
On a similar note, advocate for better land use; ending single family zoning and building denser, mixed use development in your city or town. The closer buildings are together, the less space is required, the less wild land gets destroyed. These days most places have minimum parking requirements and minimum lot sizes for new construction, which adds lots of expense and also results in almost all new buildings taking up a lot more space then they need to, which spreads things out, which makes it hard to walk, which means people have to drive from place to place. Here's a great video going into more detail on that: https://youtu.be/SfsCniN7Nsc
MrEddieKing t1_j9f7eme wrote
Reply to Historical question: commuting and town layouts pre-automobile? by LockedOutOfElfland
Pre-car every town or city of almost any size was basically a dense core surrounded by farmland-not just in Maine but literally everywhere on earth. There are different subtleties and variations depending on the exact place but that's the basic formula humans have used for 10,000 years. The core is where most of the services and social stuff happened and also where most people lived. To get around you either walked or used a horse, so things were built close together and at a scale meant for humans moving at walking speed. After the industrial revolution town centers were connected by rail so all of a sudden you easily go to the next town or even further, but human-sized design was still the standard.
The current way things are built-spread out and designed for cars, rather than people-is very new, historically speaking; we've only been doing it since about 1950. It's hard for any of us to imagine because we've grown up in it (in the US anyway), but the way things are today is a choice, not an inevitability. The US once had the most extensive rail system in the world and it was literally dismantled to reduce people's choices so they'd have to buy cars, and the auto industry has heavily influenced government policy to incentivize building spread out, car-dependent towns and suburbs, and highways to go between them.
Again, this is the whole US, not just Maine. For example I live in Rockland, and 70 years ago I could have walked downtown and hopped on a streetcar to Thomaston, Warren, Camden, Rockport or Belfast. Now that streetcar line is Rt 1. Personally I'd rather have the train and a grocery store I can walk to.
If you're interested in learning more about this stuff I highly recommend this YouTube channel, and this playlist in particular: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJp5q-R0lZ0_FCUbeVWK6OGLN69ehUTVa