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Thread: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

  1. #126

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Quote Originally Posted by HOT ROD View Post
    But look at Dallas, they aren't suffering and they aren't anywhere near 600 square miles and are LINED with suburbs in every direction. Chicago even more so.
    The situation may not correlate exactly, but if Dallas and Fort Worth had annexed all of the land between them instead of Arlington, Irving, etc. all of the main new tourist and sports attractions in that area wouldn't be taking tax dollars away from Dallas. They wouldn't have had to fight Arlington for the new football stadium and lost.

  2. Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    IMO, one thing that would help OKC's NE growth almost immediately isn't the lack of utilities (which can be extended if development warrants) but the school system. If there was a way OKC public schools could deannex a lof of that NE land in favor of Edmond Schools, you would see larger scale development almost immediately - economy being considered, of course.

  3. #128

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Quote Originally Posted by ljbab728 View Post
    The situation may not correlate exactly, but if Dallas and Fort Worth had annexed all of the land between them instead of Arlington, Irving, etc. all of the main new tourist and sports attractions in that area wouldn't be taking tax dollars away from Dallas. They wouldn't have had to fight Arlington for the new football stadium and lost.
    Then why doesn't OKC just annex the rest of the State of Oklahoma? Why settle for 650 sq miles? Let's go out and get the whole state that isn't already part of another city. Think of all the tax dollars OKC is missing out on.

  4. #129

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Quote Originally Posted by Kerry View Post
    Then why doesn't OKC just annex the rest of the State of Oklahoma? Why settle for 650 sq miles? Let's go out and get the whole state that isn't already part of another city. Think of all the tax dollars OKC is missing out on.
    And why shouldn't OKC just deannex everything except one square mile around downtown? Then we could have great density and tons of tax dollars from it.

  5. #130

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Quote Originally Posted by ljbab728 View Post
    And why shouldn't OKC just deannex everything except one square mile around downtown? Then we could have great density and tons of tax dollars from it.
    Any idea how flushed with cash a city of only 1 sq mile around downtown would be? That would be a bonanza. You could patrol the whole thing with a dozen police men, one (maybe 2) fire stations, minimal road maintenance (Project 180 alone would cover a good portion of road maintenance), a school district with hardly any schools, tons of property tax money that could be used to lure in retailers, infrastructure that is already 100% complete, and on and on. Stay away from social spending and it would be an urban utopia.

    I don't think you thought your rebuttal all the way through.

  6. #131

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Quote Originally Posted by Kerry View Post
    Any idea how flushed with cash a city of only 1 sq mile around downtown would be? That would be a bonanza. You could patrol the whole thing with a dozen police men, one (maybe 2) fire stations, minimal road maintenance (Project 180 alone would cover a good portion of road maintenance), a school district with hardly any schools, tons of property tax money that could be used to lure in retailers, infrastructure that is already 100% complete, and on and on. Stay away from social spending and it would be an urban utopia.

    I don't think you thought your rebuttal all the way through.
    Kerry, I thought it through entirely and my suggestion made just as much sense as your suggestion about annexing the entire state. If you want to live in a one square mile utopia, more power to you. That isn't the lifestyle that the vast majority of Oklahomans want and it never will be. As I've told you over and over, I'm not against density, just your method of achieving it.

  7. #132

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Quote Originally Posted by ljbab728 View Post
    As I've told you over and over, I'm not against density, just your method of achieving it.
    How would you do it?

  8. #133

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Quote Originally Posted by ljbab728 View Post
    Kerry, I thought it through entirely and my suggestion made just as much sense as your suggestion about annexing the entire state. If you want to live in a one square mile utopia, more power to you. That isn't the lifestyle that the vast majority of Oklahomans want and it never will be. As I've told you over and over, I'm not against density, just your method of achieving it.
    Kerry's idea sounds good to me. It is what most asian country's do. Small footprint cities with large populations.

  9. #134

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Quote Originally Posted by circuitboard View Post
    Kerry's idea sounds good to me. It is what most asian country's do. Small footprint cities with large populations.
    It is how it works here in the US as well. I used to live in Tampa. The City of Tampa is very small and has about 300,000. The rest of us lived in Hillsborough County, population 1,000,000. Somehow Tampa manages to have a every top retailer in the country. Now I understand that Tampa/St. Pete/Clearwater is pushing 3 million total but St. Pete has a small city limit with about 250,000 people and Clearwater is even smaller.

  10. #135

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    I don't disagree with smaller being better but, I don't think Okla. City is going to de-annex any of it's area.

    So, with that being said, how should Okla. City better itself being that it is and likely will remain 620 square miles?

  11. Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Quote Originally Posted by okclee View Post
    I don't disagree with smaller being better but, I don't think Okla. City is going to de-annex any of it's area.

    So, with that being said, how should Okla. City better itself being that it is and likely will remain 620 square miles?
    Beg your pardon, 608 square miles. The rest is under water.
    Continue the Renaissance!!!

  12. #137

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Quote Originally Posted by okcpulse View Post
    Beg your pardon, 608 square miles. The rest is under water.
    Well there you go. We just need more water.

    okclee - you are right, I don't think OKC will ever de-annex any land so you have to yourself this question, do the people of Oklahoma City want a denser city. My guess is that a lot of them don't, even if it meant a lower tax bill. I think they take a lot of pride in being the largest non-consolidate government city in the US even if they pay more in taxes than they should to do it.

  13. #138

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    What are some ideas / suggestions to add density in Okla. City, without the de-annex?

  14. Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Redo the zoning laws ensuring large amounts of the outlying city are maintaned for agricultural uses.

    Make it more difficult for developers to build huge housing developments outside present areas. This can be done by requiring they expand any major section line road at their own expense. Require they widen any bridges. Require they expand utilities at their own expenses and require electric services to be under ground. Hookup fees should be raised significanty. I am not knowledgeable about this so some of these things may already be required.

    Real estate is based on location. One factor of location are schools which, within the OKC limits are a major hiderance to redevelopment of the inner city. OKC schools should become open enrollment meaning that you can send your child to whatever school you want as long as they have room. Schools that don't compete are free to become charter schools. Maybe someone else out there has more ideas on how you can legally increase the quality of OKC public schools without running afoul of constitutional issues of equal funding and such.

    OKC public schools could look to deannex some of the outlying areas to other public school districts that might be willing to take them.

    Lower property taxes for inner city areas that need to be redeveloped while raising them for the outlying area. Perhaps some sort of formula that determines the additional costs of city services for outlying areas lower costs for older areas can be developed.

    What other ideas are out there?

  15. #140

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Quote Originally Posted by mugofbeer View Post
    OKC public schools could look to deannex some of the outlying areas to other public school districts that might be willing to take them.

    I like all of your ideas except this one. I don't see what it would accomplish for adding density to the city. The conventional wisdom seems to be that consolidating school districts would be better for financial reasons.

  16. #141

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Quote Originally Posted by Kerry View Post
    How would you do it?
    Kerry, now you're being practical. It's much better to have a realistic discussion about achieving goals instead of just hoping that something that will never happen does happen. As others have mentioned, deannextion isn't going to happen. Better planning, zoning, and incentives are the only thing that make density happen.

  17. #142

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    OK - here is the plan then. If we can't deannex the land then OKC could treat it like it was deannexed.

    The city shouldn't pay for any infrastructure outside the current urbanized area. As mug said, any infrastructure improvements will need to be built by the developer at their own cost. This includes schools, fire stations, police, utilities, etc. I wouldn't even do zoning. Let it be a free for all.

  18. #143

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Quote Originally Posted by Kerry View Post
    OK - here is the plan then. If we can't deannex the land then OKC could treat it like it was deannexed.

    The city shouldn't pay for any infrastructure outside the current urbanized area. As mug said, any infrastructure improvements will need to be built by the developer at their own cost. This includes schools, fire stations, police, utilities, etc. I wouldn't even do zoning. Let it be a free for all.
    More or less what is done now.

  19. #144

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    ^^ Flintysooner.....Are you stating a fact or is that a question?

  20. #145

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Quote Originally Posted by okclee View Post
    ^^ Flintysooner.....Are you stating a fact or is that a question?
    Experience.

  21. #146

    Default Re: Again, Tulsa gets the first store

    Quote Originally Posted by Kerry View Post
    OK - here is the plan then. If we can't deannex the land then OKC could treat it like it was deannexed.

    The city shouldn't pay for any infrastructure outside the current urbanized area. As mug said, any infrastructure improvements will need to be built by the developer at their own cost. This includes schools, fire stations, police, utilities, etc. I wouldn't even do zoning. Let it be a free for all.
    Now we're starting to agree. Moving to a rural area and expecting full city services should have a price tag. Those who were already living in those areas when they were annexed have a better argument but there aren't many of them left. Schools are a different matter. School districts and city limits have nothing to do with each other and funding doesn't depend on what city you're in or even if you're in a city at all. I don't agree about the lack of zoning, however.

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