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Presented on April 30, 1999 Richard Benner, director, Oregon Department of Land Conservation and Development "Oregonians have deep convictions about their landscape. Dick Benner, director of Oregon's Department of Land Conservation and Development calls this the ""Oregon ethos."" It comes from the reverence that native peoples felt for Oregon and from the pioneering spirit of the settlers who tamed it. In our own time, we Oregonians take great pride in our land use and planning history. Oregonians know that home is an irreplaceable environment that we must sustain. 'Why, then,"" Benner writes in a recent issue of Open Spaces Magazine, ""is there currently such angst about growth in Oregon?"" When we Oregonians took hold of our destinies with acts like the 1973 statewide land use planning law, the creation of urban growth boundaries, and many other battles against sprawl, new problems came into focus. Growth, affordable housing, preserving wildlife and the environment, transportation, and many other issues that we face today make us question whether we made the right choices in the past. But new problems are not necessarily signs of past failures. Perhaps it is because Oregonians are seeing the benefits of twenty-five years of innovative planning and policy that all of the related problems we face today are more obvious. We are learning that every choice we make, everything we do, affects the whole delicate balance of livability. Angst, Dick Benner will suggest, can be good. It makes us re-examine our past decisions, while building consensus for our future plans."