Growth creates opportunity, but it also creates pressure on roads, traffic, emergency access, utilities, stormwater, and everyday city services. Responsible Growth sets the standards that make sure new development strengthens Ranson instead of overloading it.
The problem
When growth moves faster than infrastructure, existing residents are the ones who pay for the mismatch. They experience the traffic, service strain, maintenance confusion, and budget pressure first. That is why development decisions have to be grounded in verified capacity and enforceable obligations.
My principles
- Neighbor-first: no cost-shifting onto current residents
- Practical progress: growth must match infrastructure and safety
- Measurable standards: conditions must be clear and enforceable
- Transparency: residents should be able to see what is approved and why
Non-negotiable checklist
- Verified infrastructure capacity or a funded upgrade plan before approval
- A traffic and access plan that does not overload neighborhoods or schools
- An emergency access and safety review
- Clear written maintenance responsibilities for the city, HOA, and developer
- Alignment with Plan 2034 and objective city standards
How I vote
Vote YES when
- Infrastructure is ready or fully funded
- Traffic and safety impacts are addressed
- Taxpayers are protected from new costs
- The project strengthens Ranson's long-term future
Vote NO when
- Infrastructure needs are unfunded or unclear
- Traffic or maintenance burdens are pushed onto neighborhoods
- Standards are ignored or waivers replace accountability
- Promises cannot be enforced after approval
Growth should strengthen neighborhoods, not ask neighborhoods to absorb the cost of weak planning.