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Population


December 2, 2002
$1 Can Make a Difference

The Thirty-four Million Friends Campaign encourages Americans to send $1 each to the United Nations Population Fund to make up for the fact that President Bush canceled the entire $34 million U.S. contribution to UNFPA, the funding which had been approved by both houses of Congress. The $34 million is 12.5% of the UNFPA budget and without it, there will be cutbacks in family planning, reduction in the number of safe-birth kits distributed in rural areas of poor countries, and generally more misery the world's most vulnerable women and children. Without it, the resulting population growth will cause even more conflicts over resources, particularly water, and more environmental stress. The total received is now above $100,000, and at least $2,000 is arriving every day in hundreds of envelopes. The grass-roots effort to raise money was independently conceived by Jane Roberts and Lois Abraham. Ms. Roberts said: "Population stabilization is the most effective way to leave a peaceful world to our grandchildren." Send $1 to the United Nations Population Fund, in care of the U.S. Committee for UNFPA, 220 E. 42nd St., Suite 2800, New York, NY, 10017.


Article:

Do we Need Growth?

No matter how smart the growth or how good the planning, a rapid increase in population can overwhelm a community's best efforts.. Smart Growth strategies - redevelopment, in-fill, public transit, mixed use development, and green space - are not sufficient. Oregon, for example, is forced to grow urban growth boundaries to accomodate population growth.

Vanished Open Space = Population X per capita Developed Land. 63% of the 47% increase of the greater Washington (D.C.) area between 1982 and 1997 was due to population growth. Reducing per capita land use alone will not accomodate the increase of the 1.6 million people expected in the Washington area in the next 25 years.

Traffic Congestion = Population X per capita VMT (Vehicle Miles Traveled). The Washington area Metrorail sees 650,000 Metrorail trips per day while the number of vehicle trips per day is 15.6 million - which will grow by 5.5 million over the next twenty years. Congested lane miles are projected to increase from 7.1% in 1998 to 10-12% in 2025.

Water Demand = Population X per capita Water Consumption. South Florida's Everglades is buckling under pressure from pollution and water diversions to meet the demands of a rapidly growing population. According to a spokesperson for Everglades National Park, the stressed out system "could ecologically fail within the next 20 years."

Sewage = Plant and animal-killing nitrogen discharged from municipal sewage treatment plants has declined with nitrogen reduction techonology (NRT), but population growth will soon reverse the NRT gains. In the Chesapeake Bay, "If no further actions are taken, we anticipate increased [nitrogen] discharges after 2010 due to population growth."

While the national population grows rapidly, curbing sprawl in one region pushes sprawl into other regions. The Census Bureau says we may reach 571 million by 2100. A stable U.S. population can be achieved through a modest reduction in U.S. fertility - by attaining fertility rates of other industrialized countries. (I.e. Norway-1.85 Spain-1.15). Even keeping current immigration levels!

Economic Growth Comparing 13 faster growing areas to 13 slower growing areas showed a big difference in the rate of job growth, but a negligible difference in the unemployment rate. The more jobs lured into an urban area, the more people will move in to fill them, increasing congestion, and decreasing quality of life for those that live there. Population growth increases total economic growth but not per capita economic growth. In a study of 15 western European countries with relatively low population growth, compared to the U.S., with high population growth, the per capita Gross Domestic Product was not shown to significantly correlate to population growth.

Restraining the Growth Machine. Metropolitan area population growth can be slowed by ending subsidies that promote local population growth. Unfortunately the land speculators, developers, and real estate brokers profit from local growth are rich and powerful.

  • Restrain new business recruitment
  • Make development pay its way
  • Elect public officials whose campaign funding is not dominated by Growth Machine money
  • Slowing National Population Growth

  • Decrease the number of dropouts
  • Reduce poverty
  • Family planning services for low-income women
  • Educating and influencing attitudes of teens and young women
  • Providing family planning and development in countries where migration orginates
  • · .Excerpted from 'In Growth We Trust: Sprawl, Smart Growth, and Rapid Population Growth', by Edwin Stennett. I have copies of this 136-page book available.


    Sierra Club Global Population and Environment Program
    www.sierraclub.org/population/


    Ask me about a Population slide show presentation to your group. I do a show on Nepal and Bangladesh and another show on Ethiopia



    Volunteers wanted!
    Join the Population Committee. Help the environment. But we can't do it alone. Please sign up for:
    legislative watch dog/lobbying organizer
    contact and activist database, phone tree, and postcard mailing
    meeting program director
    fund raiser
    web page maintenance
    media liason
    vice chair
    newsletter editor and distributor
    letter writing organize
    Earth Day organizer
    World Population Awareness Week organizer
    brainstormer
    activist recruiter/builder

    Contact
    Karen Pitts, Motherlode Population Chair
    (916) 599-4329 or email karen@gnatseye.net

    Karen's population website:
    www.population-awareness.net
    (Not a Sierra Club website)



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