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Published by Roy Beck
Anti-growth is a 90-to-10 voter issue in Colorado that almost no elected, corporate or civic leaders in the state are talking about in this election season.
A new poll of 1,024 likely voters by Rasmussen Reports found that:
Voters feel their beloved state is losing many of the attributes that they have most treasured.
The poll was sponsored by the non-profit NumbersUSA Education & Research Foundation, which advocates for establishing annual immigration numbers that allow for the stabilizing of the U.S. population. Pew Research indicates that nearly all of the yearly growth in the U.S. population – about 2 million people per year in the last decade – is driven by the federal government’s immigration policies. [link url=”https://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/public_surveys/toplines_colorado_june_12_16_2022” title=”(See wording and answers to the entire poll.)
“](See wording and answers to the entire poll.)
The survey asked voters what they thought about urban and suburban development:
The U.S. Department of Agriculture calculates that Colorado, over the last four decades, has a single mega-city.’ Do you find this prospect to be more positive or more negative?”
“More negative,” said 76% of voters. (13% said “more positive.”)
Traffic was clearly on their minds. Long a contentious issue in Colorado, traffic snarls along the Front Range and into the mountains on Int. 70 have gotten far worse over the last decade.
“If Colorado adds another 1.8 million residents, do you expect traffic to become much worse or would the government be able to build enough extra transportation capacity to accommodate the extra residents without more congestion?”
Voters could not imagine government handling all those extra residents, with 81% saying “traffic will become much worse.”
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Most Colorado voters wanted to make it harder for out-of-staters to move into the state.
A major source of Colorado’s population growth is people moving in from other states, especially California. Should local and state governments in Colorado make it more difficult for people to move to Colorado from other states by restricting development?”
By a 63%-to-17% margin, voters said YES.
Another major source of Colorado’s population growth is federal immigration policies that provide new foreign-born residents and their children to Colorado but also add to population problems in other states such as California that drive U.S.-born residents to move to less-congested mountain states .
very important” to “preserve Colorado’s mountains, native grasslands, rivers, forests, and canyons.” (Only 3% said it is not important.)
The bitter fruits of decades of rapid population growth – clogged highways, insufficient rural parking spaces, often-overcrowded trails and parks, urban encroachment on nearby nature areas – have made it more and more annoying and difficult to enjoy the environment that Coloradans treasure.
Because the political apparatus of Colorado – on both sides of the aisle – is so entrenched with the growth industry, polling in the state rarely asks questions about attitudes toward growth. With the results of this poll, NumbersUSA hopes to educate the media, public and decision-makers in Colorado by drawing attention to the profound distance between public policy and voters’ interests about growth. (Read the Rasmussen story about its poll.)
ROY BECK is Founder of NumbersUSA
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