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Culture War Roundup for the week of February 6, 2023

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"Seattle" is in the title of the article. This is about a city, not the suburbs.

The article is vague about suggestions but they include

In some neighborhoods, including Loyal Heights, Mid-Beacon Hill, and South Park, walkability is one well-placed library or grocery store away.

and

Blocks with 15-minute walking access to basic amenities extend far beyond the boundaries of the “Urban Villages” targeted in Seattle’s previous Comprehensive Plans. These pockets of walkability could be the starting point for targeting more inclusive growth across the city.

The former seems to be suggesting some targeted commercial zoning (or perhaps just encouraging commercial use on land where it's already allowed) while the latter is suggesting allowing more housing to be built within 15-minutes walk of a grocery store.

If you want to live by a grocery store, then do it.

Only works if there's places where it's legal to build housing near grocery stores / grocery stores near housing.