Bozoulian | Guest Column by Pete Talbot

Boom to Bust in Bozeman, Big Sky and Missoula?


By Pete Talbot, 7-10-06

 
 

The blush is off the rose. Twenty minutes to get across town on Main Street. Disappearing open space. Crowded fishing, floating and hiking venues. Bozeman is starting to lose its draw. Anyone visiting Bozeman and willing to plunk down a quarter-of-a-million dollars (minimum) for a home, is thinking twice about trading the traffic jam where they came from for the bumper-to-bumper of Bozeman.

Could Big Sky be next?

That’s hard to imagine with all the multimillion-dollar homes on the market, and the flood of heavy equipment and worker bees traversing the canyon. But there’s the rub: ski areas, golf courses, condos, roads. … How much can Big Sky boom before it losses its allure?

Rampant growth isn’t quite as apparent in Missoula, yet. It’s a larger town so it absorbs development better and the changes are less noticeable. But with a city growth policy that’s going backward, not forward, and no zoning in the county, Missoula’s day of reckoning is coming.

Bozeman, Missoula, Big Sky – these are the Montana towns I know best. But what about Whitefish, Livingston, the Bitterroot? Has the quality of life declined enough to make those locations less desirable? Enquiring readers want to know.

I suppose that’s how free marketeers and libertarians like to manage growth. No planning or regulation, just market forces at work. When a town’s infrastructure and amenities can’t keep up with its growth, people just won’t want to move there anymore.

A more sustainable approach to growth that includes infill, inclusionary zoning and alternative modes of transportation – to name just some of the options available – has been advanced by smart growth advocates. With a few exceptions, these forward-thinking ideas have fallen on deaf ears, at least with the current crop of elected officials.

So let’s hear from the candidates in the upcoming local, legislative and federal races. An intelligent platform that deals with Montana’s growing pains will resonate with voters in these fastest growing cities and valleys. This is not an issue that is going to go away on its own. So ask the candidates the tough questions about development and growth.

Continuing status quo growth policies is akin to killing the proverbial golden-egg laying goose. The relative prosperity that Montana is enjoying now will go bust if we trash that which makes us unique.



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Comments

By Craig Moore, 7-10-06
By kyle jacobsen, 7-10-06
By martin b, 7-11-06
By Craig Moore, 7-11-06
By Marcia Rundle, 7-12-06
By planatlaw, 7-12-06
By Dave Skinner, 7-12-06
By Craig Moore, 7-12-06
By Pete Talbot, 7-12-06
By Craig Moore, 7-12-06
By Paul Bonneau, 7-13-06
By McGregor O'Looney, 7-14-06
By Dave Skinner, 7-14-06
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By McGregor O'Looney, 7-15-06
By jeff, 7-16-06
By jeff, 7-16-06
By Craig Moore, 7-16-06
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By Carl B, 7-17-06
By Dave Skinner, 7-17-06
By kyle jacobsen, 7-25-06

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