Property: Opportunity or Burden?

  • Erstellt am 2017-10-21 09:30:57

11ant

2017-10-22 14:26:05
  • #1
[P.S. / Timeout Edit]

Without the introductory remark

however, I would have a somewhat different attitude toward it, because purely for speculative purposes, in my opinion, it only makes noticeably more sense on a larger scale.
 

miho

2017-10-23 13:05:50
  • #2

But that's a good thing. Especially if the village still has a good infrastructure, you have to try to use it and thereby preserve it. And for that you need young people who want to stay there. In the long run, this will certainly benefit the community.
 

11ant

2017-10-23 13:27:46
  • #3
If the plots are also followed by the preservation of primary schools on site, yes. Because in the long run, the community primarily benefits if the young people have even younger people.
 

miho

2017-10-23 13:29:40
  • #4


I completely agree with you. And unfortunately, this is generally a problem in that region. I hope it looks better at the specific location.
 

11ant

2017-10-23 13:46:28
  • #5
Where "there"? – in Saxon Siberia or in the surroundings of Mainhattan? I am currently perceiving it more in the spatial planning "middle areas" (so neither metropolitan areas nor diaspora), that the district towns weaken the "commuter belt communities" above them by closing their primary schools.
 

Nordlys

2017-10-23 14:07:42
  • #6
Successful new development areas in villages can save primary schools and daycare centers. Often, however, quite a few best agers also settle there, seeking peace and idyll. In SH, this is accompanied by another measure. Abolition of school districts. Everyone may send their child to the primary school they want. You just have to arrange transportation yourself. The free school bus only runs within the district. As a result, primary schools in villages that have given themselves a profile survive. In contrast, profile-less city schools with a high proportion of migrants struggle for children. Market instead of plan. Under Peter Harry Carstensen, we once had the FDP in the Ministry of Education. Karsten
 
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