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Tag: Park Hill Golf Course

  • What should the new Park Hill look like? Residents have ideas.

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    DENVER — After years of debate over the land’s future, Denver’s Park Hill Golf Course is finally on its way to becoming a park.

    On Saturday morning, hundreds of neighbors weighed in on what their park and the surrounding area should look like during the Park Hill Open House.

    “Today is a really exciting day as we work towards what the old Park Hill Golf Course, Park Hill Park, is going to look like and feel like,” said Jolon Clark, Executive Director of Denver Parks and Recreation.

    “I’m so glad that we were able to preserve it, and now we can turn it into something amazing,” said Park Hill resident Jennifer Glitsos.

    The City of Denver acquired the 155-acre property earlier this year, following a years-long debate over development.

    In 2023, voters rejected a plan to allow housing and commercial development on the site. Then, earlier this year, the city acquired the land from Westside Investment Partners, marking Denver’s largest single purchase of private land for public use.

    In the months since the land acquisition, the community has had several chances to weigh in on ideas.

    Denver Parks and Recreation, along with the city’s Community Planning and Development team, is now presenting the draft framework so neighbors can continue to share their feedback.

    Some ideas on the table? Adventure parks, shuffleboard courts, zip lines – you name it.

    The last time Denver opened a park of this size was 1911, so city leaders say they want to do this right.

    “People are hearing each other – isn’t that the definition of community?” said Park Hill business owner Dawn Fay.

    Denver7 was there at the Park Hill Open House on Saturday morning, where we had the opportunity to hear some of your ideas.

    “Kids are my heart, so anything that’s used for youth and progresses their development is number one to me,” said Herman White, a longtime member of the Park Hill Pirates Youth Football Organization.

    “I have a little one who’s two years old, and so it’d be great to have a place to walk around and just enjoy [the space],” said Glitsos.

    The ideas go beyond the 155-acre park site.

    “I think there was so much debate around this property and what it should be, and there were so many members of the community who did want to see affordable housing and access to food,” said Clark, “we don’t want to just leave behind the rest of the community that still said there are other needs that need to be met, and just because we can’t deliver them here doesn’t mean we can’t find a way to deliver those things for the community.”

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    Park Hill Golf Course: Timeline of its history as the community looks to future

    When city leaders announced the land acquisition in January, councilmembers stressed the importance of keeping the area surrounding the park affordable and welcoming to all.

    “We must be intentional about how we develop this space and ensure that this park, while a beacon of progress, does not contribute to the displacement of those who have called this place home for generations,” said Councilwoman Shontel Lewis. “The transformation of this land should lift existing residents, not push them out.”

    Denver7 heard some of your concerns and needs on Saturday.

    “There’s a lot of gentrification happening in this community, but the essence of this community, and what makes everyone proud about this community, is the diversity and the opportunities of inclusiveness,” said White.

    “If there’s any way to have access to healthy food, I think that would be really important for the neighborhood,” said Fay.

    While that transformation won’t happen on the park site itself, city leaders say they’re looking at ways to incorporate those on surrounding streets.

    “I think we need to have opportunities for entrepreneurship. We need to have a lot more businesses,” said White, “all I really want to do is ensure that this space is equitable.”

    Oh, and remember Park Hill Dave?

    He’s the runaway dog that evaded capture on the old Park Hill Golf Course for months on end.

    He’s since found a new home with Clark.

    Fay told Denver7 she’d love to see Park Hill Dave on bark ranger duty at the new park someday.

    “I think that’d be the coolest thing,” she said.

    What should the new Park Hill look like? Residents have ideas.

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  • Hundreds of affordable apartments approved for Colorado Boulevard colorado-boulevard-affordable-apartments-park-hill

    Hundreds of affordable apartments approved for Colorado Boulevard colorado-boulevard-affordable-apartments-park-hill

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    The last vacant parcel at 4050 N. Colorado Blvd. May 31, 2023.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    A developer has a key approval for building more than 300 apartments on vacant land near the Park Hill Golf Course on Colorado Boulevard.

    Denver City Council members voted on Monday to approve a rezoning plan for 4050 North Colorado Boulevard that paves the way for the project. Councilmembers voted 10-2 in favor of the rezoning, with Kevin Flynn and Amanda Sawyer in opposition.

    The rezoning applies to a block along Colorado Boulevard just south of Interstate 70 and near the 40th and Colorado A Line stop.

    While the primary goal of the plan was to rezone the empty 7-acre tract of land owned by the Urban Land Conservancy, the vote also rezoned an area currently occupied by a strip of restaurants and another affordable apartment complex, even though it is not part of the development project. 

    Both city officials and the Urban Land Conservancy described the plan’s details as “complicated.” The parcels occupied by the empty tract, the restaurants, and the existing apartment complex are all under a planned building group, which sets rules about what can be developed and how. 

    Urban Land Conservancy wanted to amend that plan in order to build hundreds of affordable housing units on the empty parcel of land. However, in order to do that, they needed to rezone the occupied southern parcel of land, which they were able to petition for due to owning over 51 percent of the land within the planned building group. 

    The petition to rezone the land received widespread support from the neighborhood, including that of the Northeast Park Hill Coalition, the local neighborhood group. The council also received some opposition to the plan, with critics citing increased traffic, lack of grocery stores, and other concerns. 

    DelWest, which owns the apartment complex in the southern tract, wrote to city council that they did not plan to formally object to the rezoning, but the company asked Urban Land Conservancy and the city to consider several concerns DelWest had about the future vision of the area. Their concerns included changes being made to the agreements outlined in the planned building group.

    This grass has been rezoned. May 31, 2023.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    OK, that’s interesting and all, but what are they going to do with the rezoned land?

    Urban Land Conservancy is now free to develop the northern tract of land, pending the mayor’s signature. As detailed in a proposal sent to the city, Urban Land Conservancy plans to build three apartment buildings for permanently affordable, multifamily housing. They’ll be between five and twelve stories tall. The first phase of construction would bring 300 affordable units to the area, with room for further expansion. 

    A park, accessible paths, urban plazas and playgrounds are also included in the proposal. Urban Land Conservancy said plans for those features are not finalized, as conversations with stakeholders continue. 

    There are no plans in the works to redevelop the southern parcel of land,occupied by the strip of restaurants and the existing affordable housing complex. That means residents there, as well as the Popeye’s, Starbucks, Carl’s Jr., and Neko Ramen & Rice, aren’t going away anytime soon. (Ed. note: Unless they want to…) 

    The upcoming development isn’t the only complicated rezoning issue to impact the area.

    In 2023, voters rejected a ballot initiative that would have turned the nearby Park Hill Golf Course, which at the time stood empty, into a massive mixed-use development. The ballot question was highly contentious, and after Denverites voted against it, city council voted to rezone the area to bring tee time back to the former golf course. However, the developer that currently owns the golf course hasn’t put a timeline on when the putting green will reopen.  

    Editor’s note: This article was updated on 10/2/24 at 5:36 p.m. to include information from a more recent version of the Urban Land Conservancy’s plan for the land.

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  • Park Hill Golf Course fire burns five acres

    Park Hill Golf Course fire burns five acres

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    The Park Hill Golf Course is closed, fenced off and yellowing. Aug. 6, 2024.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    The Denver Fire Department responded to a grass fire at the Park Hill Golf Course on Sunday night just before 11 p.m.

    “Our best guess is about five acres burned,” wrote Denver Fire Department spokesperson J.D. Chism.

    The department sent six engine companies, a rescue company and a brush truck to douse the fire.

    Denver Fire doesn’t know the cause of the blaze.

    “With the hot dry weather, there is always potential for larger grassy areas to burn,” Chism wrote. “The incident commander said the cart paths helped to keep the fire from spreading further, additionally the roads that surround the course generally provide a good natural barrier in these types of situations.”

    The fire did not damage the homes backed up against the southeast side of the golf course.

    Westside Investment Partners purchased the Park Hill Golf Course property for $24 million in 2019, hoping to build a massive development along Colorado Boulevard.

    The development would have brought more than 3,000 homes, room for a grocery store and Denver’s fourth largest park to the site.

    A conservation easement mandates the land must be an 18-hole, regulation length golf course for as long as that’s feasible. The purpose: Preserve open space.

    To overturn that conservation easement required a vote of the people. The public voted on three separate measures — two indirectly and one directly tied to the possible golf course development. In all three, voters said no to Westside.

    An out-of-focus fence in the foreground patterns the image of a green and yellow field with homes rising on the horizon.
    The Park Hill Golf Course is closed, fenced off and yellowing. Aug. 6, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Nobody’s played golf on the golf course for several years. But during the pandemic, the company pushed for good will from the community and allowed residents access to wander the greens.

    After the voters shot down the development, Westside fenced off the land.

    “Because the Park Hill easement is unambiguous, the land will return to a privately-owned, regulation-length 18-hole golf course,” said Bill Rigler, a spokesperson for the developers and the Yes on 2O campaign, after the election. “The site will immediately be closed to public use or access, with no housing, community grocery store, or public parks allowed on this site, in accordance with the will of the voters.”

    Over more than a year, the greens browned as grass grew tall and weeds went to seed.

    Complaints about the state of the golf course date back to July 2023.

    A year later, Denverite readers are still asking what’s going on with the land.

    Buildings have deteriorated. Parts of the property are graffitied. And the land looks like a tinder box.

    So what’s going on — other than fires?

    Mayor Mike Johnston says he’s in negotiations with the company about the future of the defunct golf course. He pledged a deal by the end of the year.

    During his campaign for mayor, he said he would acquire the land and turn it into a public amenity.

    Westside has not responded to Denverite’s requests for comment about either the land’s future or this latest fire.

    Will Westside face repercussions for the 155 acres of dry, flammable grass?

    “At this point, I don’t anticipate any action against the property owners,” Chism wrote.

    An out-of-focus fence in the foreground patterns the image of a dead tree and a vibrant blue sky.
    The Park Hill Golf Course is closed, fenced off and yellowing. Aug. 6, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

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  • What’s happening with the Park Hill Golf Course?

    What’s happening with the Park Hill Golf Course?

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    The Park Hill Golf Course is closed, fenced off and yellowing. Aug. 6, 2024.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    If you’ve driven by the Park Hill Golf Course lately, you’ve seen fencing and No Trespassing signs blocking off 155 acres of sprawling brown grass and seemingly dying trees.

    Weeds fill the parking lots. The buildings are deteriorating.

    Westside Investment Partners spent years promising assets to the community. In spring of 2023, the developer lost a fight at the ballot box to lift the conservation easement. Voters blocked Westside’s development.

    Now, more than a year after losing at the ballot, the company is sitting on a 155-acre eyesore.

    “Because the Park Hill easement is unambiguous, the land will return to a privately-owned, regulation-length 18-hole golf course,” said Bill Rigler, a former spokesperson for the developers, shortly after voters shot down development. “The site will immediately be closed to public use or access, with no housing, community grocery store, or public parks allowed on this site, in accordance with the will of the voters.”

    An out-of-focus fence in the foreground patterns the image of a dead tree and a vibrant blue sky.
    The Park Hill Golf Course is closed, fenced off and yellowing. Aug. 6, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Yet the only promise about the land’s future that Westside has kept, so far, is that they have shut down the land to the public.

    There’s no golf. No park. No housing or grocery store.

    Denverite readers want to know: What’s happening with the old Park Hill Golf Course?

    “It’s been more than a year since the vote that refused to vacate the city’s conservation easement in the Park Hill Golf Course,” Eric Banner wrote to Denverite in May. “As near as I can tell driving by, there has been no effort by the developer to come into compliance with the terms of the easement, and I haven’t seen anything in the news about the city taking action to enforce the easement. Is anything happening to the property? And if there isn’t, is there a reason the city isn’t enforcing the terms of the contract?”

    Another reader, Kylee B., is holding out hope for a grocery store, businesses and housing.

    “I thought it was to be returned to an 18-hole course,” asked reader Nate Hays. “What’s up?”

    We wondered the same thing. But we can’t get an answer.

    A fence is out of focus in the foreground, adorned with a sign that reads, "NO TRESPASSING." Behind it is a mostly yellow field with some trees on the horizon.
    The Park Hill Golf Course is closed, fenced off and yellowing. Aug. 6, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Kenneth Ho, the Westside developer who tried to shepherd the embattled development, has not answered Denverite’s calls and emails for months.

    A spokesperson for Community Planning and Development, the city’s planning department, says the agency is not aware of conversations between the agency and the owners.

    And Mayor Mike Johnston, who said he’d strike a deal to acquire the land and turn it into a public amenity, says he’s been in talks with the developers. They’re working on a solution.

    What could the future look like? He’s not ready to say.

    “We’re optimistic that we’re making progress,” Johnston said. “We’ll get to a solution that the community will be excited about.”

    Here’s what we do know.

    A conservation easement — the one voters upheld in multiple ways, both directly and indirectly, over three separate ballot measures — still says the land must be an 18-hole regulation-length golf course for as long as that’s feasible.

    Other golf courses are open citywide, even a few nearby, suggesting running a golf course is feasible.

    Yet there’s no golf.

    A mostly yellow field with mostly living trees on it, and one prominent dead one. A fence is visible in the bottom of the frame, blocking entrance.
    The Park Hill Golf Course is closed, fenced off and yellowing. Aug. 6, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    To open space advocates’ chagrin, there is also no park.

    So when can we expect some news from the city about the future of the land?

    “We’ve been at this for several months, and it’s complicated negotiations, but we’re pushing aggressively, and I’m optimistic about where we’re heading,” Johnston said. “That is something we certainly plan to get resolved in this year.”

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  • Colorado’s Ingenious Idea for Solving the Housing Crisis

    Colorado’s Ingenious Idea for Solving the Housing Crisis

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    On a Wednesday afternoon in March, the Montview Boulevard Presbyterian Church, in Denver’s South Park Hill neighborhood, was packed. The local chapter of the progressive group Indivisible was sponsoring a mayoral-candidate forum. Five candidates had been invited to attend. The moderator asked the usual questions about crime and public safety, homelessness and guns. Then came a question comprehensible only to a close observer of Denver politics: “Do you support releasing the city-owned conservation easement on the Park Hill Golf Course to allow the currently proposed redevelopment of this site?”

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    Four candidates raised their hands, a couple only halfway, as if that sign of reluctance might lessen the coming disapproval. It didn’t. The crowd booed.

    In 1997, Denver paid the owners of the Park Hill Golf Course $2 million to place a conservation easement on the property, limiting how it could be used. More than 20 years later, Westside Investment Partners bought the by-then-defunct golf course for $24 million. After a contentious community-input process, lawsuits, and allegations of stolen lawn signs, the company settled on a proposal to build 2,500 homes (including a significant number of affordable, family, and senior units) as well as some commercial space. It also promised to reserve two-thirds of the 155-acre property as open space. In 2021, Denver voters approved a ballot measure giving themselves the power to decide the easement’s fate.

    On April 4 of this year, voters declined to lift the easement. The split was 59–41, not exactly close. Some observers have taken this outcome as a signal that the people of Denver (or, at least, the fewer than 100,000 who voted down the proposal) reject new development. But in that same election, voters sent two candidates who supported the proposal to a mayoral runoff. Back in the 2022 statewide election, almost a quarter million Denver voters supported Democratic Governor Jared Polis, who campaigned on increasing housing supply and dismantling local roadblocks to construction in order to get a handle on Colorado’s housing-affordability crisis. Also that year, nearly 1.3 million Coloradans voted to dedicate hundreds of millions of dollars to increasing affordable housing. In Denver, the measure won 70–30. Deciding “what the people believe” is not so easy.

    Colorado is short an estimated 127,000 homes. The Denver metro area alone is short nearly 70,000 homes. The housing shortage is the main driver of the region’s affordability crisis, and housing-policy experts—though they remain divided on many questions—are nearly unanimous in their belief that resolving it will require bringing many more homes to market. From 2012 to 2017, the region permitted only one new home for every 5.4 new jobs; over the same period, home prices in Denver jumped by 50 percent.

    When someone who favors new development in theory opposes a specific project near where they live, we call them a NIMBY. NIMBYism is regularly characterized as a case of revealed preferences: Talk is cheap, and support for policies in the abstract is worthless. Voting for a candidate who champions pro-housing policies is one thing; agreeing to new development in your neighborhood is another.

    Conflicting desires do not by themselves prove hypocrisy, however. Some people really do want to see more housing in general, even if they don’t want construction next door. The problem is that the local institutions charged with land-use decisions are attuned to parochial complaints, not large-scale needs.

    The level of government at which we choose to resolve a conflict shapes public opinion and the eventual outcome. The same question posed at a town hall, at a county-council meeting, in the governor’s office, or by Congress will not be answered the same way in each venue. The tools available, the norms of debate, and the architecture of accountability change drastically from place to place. Americans believe that housing is a local issue. And it is a local issue. But it is also a regional issue, a state issue, and a national issue. By restricting the debate to the hyperlocal level, we’ve blocked out our big-picture values.

    Across metro areas, in states led by Democrats and Republicans alike, the same pattern emerges: Local governments decide what gets built and where, and they use that power to ban multifamily housing, entrench economic segregation, and perpetuate a national affordability crisis.

    It’s tough to admit, but sometimes NIMBYs have a point. In Denver, I spoke with dozens of community leaders, elected officials, and voters who live near the Park Hill Golf Course. Opponents of the project raised concerns about preserving open spaces, about gentrification, about the democratic process itself.

    Former Mayor Wellington Webb told me he opposes developing the Park Hill site because it’s “the last piece of open space, land, in Denver.”

    Leslie Herod, a Colorado state representative and an unsuccessful candidate in this year’s mayoral race, also opposes the proposal. She told me she had identified more than 80 underutilized city-owned lots already zoned for residential development where she would rather see housing built.

    The Denver city-council member Candi CdeBaca made a version of the “other places” argument too, questioning why development efforts are never focused on wealthy neighborhoods. “We’re not talking about development in places where people have privilege,” she told me. “Those places are protected with their zoning, those places are protected with their level of engagement, those places are protected by the people they have elected to represent them.”

    Some voters told me they simply distrusted the process. “There’s no guarantee that if the conservation easement is lifted that the [developer] will honor what they’ve said with creating a park, creating affordable housing,” a landscape architect with an antidevelopment yard sign said.

    Of course, no project can solve every problem or skirt every concern. Comparison shopping for umbrellas is fine on a sunny day. When you’re caught in a torrential downpour, it’s wise to take what’s available and run for cover.

    For their part, proponents of the Park Hill project, in their eagerness to win votes, tended to oversell what it could accomplish. Some described it as a blow against racism or climate change, or a way to help the working class. In my conversations with the plan’s backers, I sometimes had to remind myself that we were talking about a 155-acre lot, not the fate of the republic.

    Land-use regulations and development patterns are a key driver of inequality, pollution, and financial strain. But whether or not the Park Hill plan was approved would have a negligible impact on these larger crises, which will require collective action beyond the scope of any one project. Asking a neighborhood or municipality to bear the responsibility for a housing crisis and its knock-on effects is asking for failure. Local government simply wasn’t built to do this.

    Local government is about what you can do for me, right now. Because local officials have a narrow jurisdiction, engaged voters have a direct line to them and significant influence on their decisions. This tight relationship is good for handling issues like broken streetlights and potholes, but it doesn’t lend itself to managing society-wide problems, such as a housing crisis. This is why the political logic of building a lot more housing rarely carries the day at the local level.

    Who would have lived in the Park Hill housing development, had voters approved it? No one knows. It could have been a recent University of Colorado at Boulder graduate or empty-nesters from the suburbs looking to downsize. Many of the people who would most benefit from the new housing don’t yet live in Denver—so they don’t have a vote.

    Local housing-policy debates are thus asymmetrical. Construction projects have no readily identifiable beneficiaries, but they do levy clear harms, in the form of excessive noise and street closures and changing neighborhood aesthetics.

    Just a small fraction of people even engage in local housing fights. Many of those who do are extreme voices or otherwise unrepresentative of the broader community. Look at Fort Collins, Colorado. After more than five years of community engagement, and many months of work by city planners, a 5–2 majority on the city council voted to liberalize land-use policies to allow more housing. But a small group of opponents pressured the council to reverse itself, gathering 6,500 petition signatures—this in a city of more than 160,000. And they won. The council voted again, this time 7–0 to repeal the change.

    In interviews, both the head of the Colorado Municipal League, Kevin Bommer, and Denver’s current mayor, Michael B. Hancock, touted regional collaboration as a solution to the affordability crisis. But just as one town cannot ensure that the entire region maintains adequate green space while increasing density, it cannot force neighboring towns to work together to find the right balance. The incentive is too strong for an individual government to say to its neighbor, “You can have all the apartments—we’ll just keep our parks.”

    In addition to the Colorado Municipal League, Colorado has several influential regional associations, including the Metro Mayors Caucus and Colorado Counties Inc. Yet greater Denver is still tens of thousands of housing units short of its needs.

    The Denver metro area is particularly desperate for small multifamily dwellings (two to nine units) to meet the demand for affordable housing. According to Carrie Makarewicz, a professor at the University of Colorado at Denver, roughly 10 percent of homes in the region meet this criteria. By contrast, 85 percent of residentially zoned land is reserved for single-family homes. By this measure, too, the regional associations have come up short.

    Collective-action problems require a body that can hold everyone accountable. Regional associations—which rely on voluntary participation—aren’t going to cut it.

    The democratic process begins by defining the democratic body. And when it comes to housing, the body of concern does not end at a town’s boundary line. People moving to the Denver metro area look across the city and into the suburbs for a place to live. One suburb’s opposition to building more housing directly affects prices miles away, because it constrains the supply in a market that spans municipalities. Local governments, in seeking to satisfy local concerns, undermine statewide goals. At least, they do in the absence of state intervention.

    State government is also about what you can do for me, but on average: That’s the electoral reality of representing voters across geographic constituencies. Governors and other statewide officials are forced to see the bigger picture because they’re accountable not only to the people who live in a particular community, but also to past residents priced out of and displaced from that community, and to future residents as well. (Nor are newcomers overwhelmingly from out of state, as many seem to believe; census data reveal that about 82 percent of moves happen within states.) Denver’s city council represents the people of Denver, not Aurora, and vice versa. The state represents them all. And in recent polling, 60 percent of registered voters supported eliminating local restrictions to allow for multifamily housing.

    The Colorado state capitol is just a short drive from Park Hill and a brisk walk from city hall, but feels miles away from the thrum of local politics. I went there two days after the Indivisible forum to interview Governor Polis. From across a large round table in his office, Polis told me that “housing, transit, travel, roads: These are interjurisdictional issues because really, very few Coloradans live their whole lives in one jurisdiction.” Unencumbered by the need to defend any one project or developer, the governor reiterated a simple point: “Demand has exceeded supply for the last couple decades, and prices have gone up.” Colorado has to “create more housing now.”

    Soon after providing that clean summary of what Colorado needs, Polis announced his best shot at providing it. Washington, Oregon, California, Utah, Montana, and Massachusetts have, to varying degrees, pulled authority for land-use decisions up to the state level. Following their lead, he proposed a bill compelling local governments to adjust their land-use policies to meet housing goals, a process that state officials would oversee. The bill addressed climate, infrastructure, and equity concerns; included provisions for increasing and preserving affordable and multifamily housing; encouraged development near transit; and removed onerous parking requirements.

    I asked the governor how he would deal with the political opposition to his bill. “People across the board—Republican, Democrat, independent—housing costs is one of the top items of concern,” he replied. I asked again. “People understand that housing needs to be built,” he told me.

    Polis’s original proposal was greeted by fierce opposition from local governments, though not because of objections to open space, affordability, or new parking rules. The fight was over where the power to make land-use decisions should lie.

    Kevin Bommer, of the Colorado Municipal League, offered a pithy synthesis of local governments’ position: “Respectfully, get off our lawn,” he told me.

    I asked Bommer about his policy disagreements with the governor, but he kept stressing the issue of local control. “My members statewide don’t necessarily disagree with a lot of [Polis’s] goals, but to start with saying that the state gets to set a model code and the state gets to regulate and the state will be in charge of land use going forward is a nonstarter,” he said.

    Bommer pointed me to an old amicus brief filed in defense of a local moratorium on fracking by then-Representative Polis. It defended local government’s authority over land-use decisions as both a state-constitution matter and a policy matter. Polis wrote that local democracy allows for “widespread citizen input and broad stakeholder involvement,” as well as “more opportunities for public participation.”

    The fact that Representative Polis disagrees with Governor Polis is exactly the point. A congressman represents his district; he has little reason to care that local control can harm the rest of the state. A governor has a wider remit. If Polis the representative was right, and localities really are the best transmitters of their residents’ housing preferences, then what explains clear, widespread discontent with the outcomes of those decisions? Colorado’s housing crisis is undeniable, and its land-use authority has rested with local government virtually unquestioned for decades.

    Colorado’s legislative session ended on May 8. The bill died in the Senate without a final vote.

    Afterward, the governor told me he intends to keep fighting. States that have passed land-use reforms, such as California and Washington, suffered multiple defeats before seeing a first victory. Polis told me he’s frustrated by communities that said, No, we should do it. “The thing is, they’re not doing it!” he said with a laugh. Polis returned again to his central argument: “It’s beyond the capabilities of [local government] even if there’s a city council or mayor with the best of intentions … We have to figure this out together.”

    Two citywide votes, multiple lawsuits, and accusations of racism, classism, and harassment that divided Denver. What was the point? The property owner is now promising that the former golf course will become … an active golf course. (This despite the fact that the company has never developed a golf course; its founder told me they’re “doing research on it now.”) Well-meaning objectors judge proposals against a hypothetical better option, but in reality, the alternative to a decent project is often no project at all.

    Kelly Brough, who supported the development project and was in the runoff to become Denver’s next mayor, is nevertheless hesitant to embrace state interference. “I can’t say Denver should not control its destiny … I’m just not ready to give it up yet.”

    This power struggle is playing out across the country. It’s ostensibly a struggle over housing affordability, but it is also a fight over how we see voters. In polls and interviews, voters express deep empathy for people experiencing homelessness and deep frustration with widespread housing unaffordability. But that’s not the part of us that local government can hear. Instead local politics magnifies our selfish concerns: How will this affect my parking availability? What will this do to my view?

    Everyone has a little NIMBY in them. It doesn’t have to be the part that wins.


    This article appears in the July/August 2023 print edition with the headline “Local Government Has Too Much Power.”

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