Against ‘Pandemic-Friendly’ Planning — Blogs

In one of my Face­book groups, some­one recent­ly sug­gest­ed that more zon­ing codes allow board­ing hous­es as a form of hous­ing. Tra­di­tion­al­ly, a board­ing house is a liv­ing where peo­ple econ­o­mized on expens­es by shar­ing a kitchen or maybe even meals. Some­one else respond­ed that this was a ter­ri­ble idea, because peo­ple obvi­ous­ly can avoid each oth­er (and thus avoid COVID-19 infec­tion) more effec­tive­ly when they live alone. The lat­ter view is on an assump­tion that might seem rea­son­able at first glance—that all deci­sions should facil­i­tate social dis­tanc­ing to pro­tect us from COVID-19. And if COVID-19 is going to last for­ev­er, this argu­ment makes per­fect sense. So what’s wrong with COVID- plan­ning and zon­ing?

For one thing, COVID-19 won’t last forever—and it might not even last all year. Oth­er world­wide epi­demics (such as the 14th cen­tu­ry Black Death, and the 1918–20 “Span­ish Flu”) even­tu­al­ly dis­ap­peared, despite the absence of mod­ern med­ical tech­nol­o­gy. COVID-19 is like­ly to ebb even­tu­al­ly as well, though per­haps less rapid­ly in the Unit­ed States than in nations that are aggres­sive­ly vac­ci­nat­ing their cit­i­zen­ry.

Admit­ted­ly, oth­er world­wide epi­demics happen–but there is no rea­son to believe that the strate­gies of social dis­tanc­ing and lock­downs will be the best way to stop them. The last major epi­dem­ic that affect­ed the Unit­ed States was AIDS, which was spread not by breath­ing but by sex­u­al con­tact, blood trans­fu­sions, and drug use. The next epi­dem­ic may be as dif­fer­ent from COVID-19 as COVID-19 was from AIDS. So what­ev­er poli­cies we adopt to restrict COVID-19 may be inef­fec­tive or even harm­ful when anoth­er major epi­dem­ic occurs.

More impor­tant­ly, the “do pol­i­cy X because pol­i­cy X is COVID-friend­ly” idea leads to absurd results if applied con­sis­tent­ly. For exam­ple, we know that senior cit­i­zens are more at from COVID-19 than oth­er peo­ple. And we know that face-to-face con­tact is espe­cial­ly like­ly to spread COVID-19. So if our first pri­or­i­ty was to pro­tect seniors from infec­tion for­ev­er, we would for­bid any­one from liv­ing with per­sons over 65. In fact, pro­hibit­ing seniors from see­ing their chil­dren and grand­chil­dren would be more effec­tive still, because even a casu­al vis­it can be dead­ly. So a tru­ly pan­dem­ic-friend­ly zon­ing code would require seniors to be in soli­tary con­fine­ment until they have passed away from some non-COVID-relat­ed cause—obviously an absurd result. (If I want­ed to write a 50-page schol­ar­ly arti­cle of a short blog post, I would pad my man­u­script with even more absurd hypotheticals—but I sus­pect peo­ple are no more inter­est­ed in read­ing such an arti­cle than I am in writ­ing it.)

In sum, I’m not real­ly sure what pan­dem­ic-friend­ly city plan­ning is—but if it means “let’s man­date social dis­tanc­ing for­ev­er,” I am pret­ty sure I am not for it.

Read More

Leave a Comment