NIMBY and YIMBY related terms: Difference between revisions

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*'''NIABY''': Not In Anyone's Back&nbsp;Yard: &nbsp;term to describe opposition to land-uses which should not be allowed anywhere - for example, unregulated industrial polluters.&nbsp; Note, this is meaning mainly expressed by 'NIMBY' in Jane Anne Morris, ''Not In My Back Yard: The Handbook''&nbsp;(1994), pictured at right.&nbsp;<br/> &nbsp;
*'''NIMBY''': a person who objects to the siting of something perceived as unpleasant or potentially dangerous in their own neighborhood, such as a landfill or hazardous waste facility, especially while raising no such objections to similar developments elsewhere.<br/> &nbsp;
*'''NIMPLE''': '''N'''ot '''I'''n '''M'''y '''P'''ersonal '''L'''if'''e'''. A culture common among physicians, clinicians, LCSW, CADC and QMHP who work with houseless drug addicts. The characteristic of this line of thinking: Having professional opinions that maybe in the best interest for the health of their clients that may come at the expense of community safety. Not surprisingly, these people seek to have completely isolatedstringent professional and personal boundaries andwith not just the clients they work with, but many don't want to be on the receiving end of the things they are advocating for and often live in a community where suchgeneral demographics that describe their clients and their activities are not invited. Instead, they try to implement their professional ideas away from where they live and away from their own children/grand children. People who participate in this ideology often don't want anything to do with ideas they pitch or clients they advocate for in their own personal life. As an example, City of Portland's OMF-HUCIRP program coordinator Katie Lindsay advocates for restrooms and safe drug injection sites<ref>https://oregonrecyclers.org/sites/oregonrecyclers.org//files/aor_2018_fall_forum_presentations.pdf</ref>(page 26), and suggested to homeless people to RV camp in Walmart parking lots.<ref name="HUCIRPLindsay"/> When there was an impending threat that such destination was about to establish near her own personal house in Sherwood, she became a vocal opponent and voiced oppositions on the account of speculated "transient activities" "public intoxications" and "heavy crime"<ref name="HUCIRPLindsay"/>, which are essentially the same thing she is encouraging by promoting safe injection sites in some other people's backyard. Another example is Director, Communicable Disease for Multnomah County who professionally advocates for "need based" syringe give-out service. She is professionally making over $100,000/year in salary and lives in a community that is not welcoming to the demographic she advocates for professionally. People who work in other professions often embrace what they do professionally in their personal life. ForEssentially, example"yes to toilets for the houseless, harm reduction approach, safe injection sites, people who use drugs in other people's neighborhood", but "no to dealing with transients, heavy crime, public intoxication, IN MY COMMUNITY where I'm raising my children." On the other hand, Outdooroutdoor store workers and animal care takers generally love outdoor activities and animals in their personal lives and have lesser boundaries about intersection between personal life and clients.
*'''NIYBY''':&nbsp;Not In Your Back Yard. Objecting to what others do in their back yards. Described in [https://t.co/4A11L0vkvN?amp=1 NY Times, 2000 article].<br/> &nbsp;
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