- POPULATION
GROWTH
- Wake County’s population is due to double
to 1.4 million by 2030.
- OPEN
SPACE - 27 acres of natural land are
developed every day in Wake County.
- EDUCATION
- WCPSS student enrollment is due to more than double
to 282,000 by 2030.
- WATER
NEEDS
- The Neuse River Basin is one of the fastest growing
river basins in the country, meaning significantly
more demand for drinking water from Falls Lake and
the Neuse River.
- WATER
QUALITY
- Increased discharges from sewage treatment plants
and storm-water pollution carried into the river and
local drinking water supplies will result in the addition
of Jordan Lake and parts of Falls Lake to the state’s
list of impaired waters in the next few years.
-
AIR QUALITY
– Wake County consistently ranks among the top
North Carolina counties in the number of unhealthy
air quality days per year. Nationally, in 2005 the
Triangle was in the 20 top metropolitan areas experiencing
the most days of unhealthy air (Air Quality Index
ratings above 100).
- TRAFFIC
- Demand upon the region’s road system (vehicle
miles traveled) will rise by 300% over the next 25
years, while all of the planned road improvements
will add only about 50% to road capacity.
-
COMMUTES
- The Triangle region had the nation’s second
largest increase in commute times, according to the
2000 census.
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Our property taxes alone
can’t support this much growth.
The 2006 Blue Ribbon Committee on the Future of Wake
County concluded that the county faces a shortfall
of over $18 billion by 2030 to pay for the infrastructure
needs of schools, open space, roads, water and sewer,
community college and jails in Wake County.
- Taxpayers
are footing the bill for sprawl.
Impact fees don’t come close to covering the
costs of growth, including new roads, schools, parks
and the cost of new water plant and sewer plant capacity.
Instead, these costs are subsidized with taxpayer
dollars that would otherwise be spent improving existing
neighborhood property values and services.
- Our
economic competitiveness suffers when
our schools become overcrowded, our roads become congested,
and our air and water quality are threatened. Our
ability to attract the best companies and their jobs
depends on maintaining a high quality of life.
- The
homebuilding industry has profited handsomely
from growth in Wake County, but as the cost of living
and of building continues to rise, taxpayers can no
longer afford to subsidize sprawl at the expense of
our property values, our quality of life, and the
long term health and competitiveness of our community.
Growth must pay its fair share.
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