Questions - Chesapeake Watershed October 2025
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Survey of 1,030 US
Likely Voters in the Chesapeake Watershed
Conducted October 17-24, 2025, by Rasmussen Reports and NumbersUSA
1.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture calculates
that over the last four decades nearly 5,200 square miles of farmland and
wildlife habitat in the Chesapeake Bay watershed have been permanently
converted into housing, shopping malls, roads, and other urban and suburban
development. How do you feel about this trend?
2.
Most of the new development in the Chesapeake
Bay watershed has been driven by the addition of more than six million
residents in the area. How do you feel about this level of population growth?
3.
Generally speaking,
how
has the additional development and population growth affected the quality of
life in your region?
4.
In terms of such environmental issues as air
quality, open space and traffic congestion, what do you think the impact of
this recent development of 5,200 square miles has been in your region?
5.
In terms of water quality, fish and shellfish
stocks, what do you think the environmental impact of this development has been
on the Chesapeake Bay itself?
6.
How important is it to protect the remaining
farmland, forests, wetlands, and open spaces within the Chesapeake Bay
watershed from development?
7.
In terms of access to outdoor recreation like
fishing, hunting, hiking, biking, and boating, what do you think the
environmental impact of this recent development of 5,200 square miles has been
in your region?
8.
How important is it to you personally to be
able to access natural areas fairly quickly from where
you live?
9.
Would you prefer that your region’s towns and
cities remain separate and distinct from each other and keep their own
identities, or does it not matter much if they merge into larger, continuous
urban areas?
10. If the
population in your area were to increase significantly over the next decade,
would the government be able to build enough extra transportation capacity to
accommodate the extra traffic, or would driving times likely become worse?
11. What would
you prefer to happen to the Chesapeake Bay watershed’s population in the
future?
12. The
United States is growing by around two million people each year. Immigration
accounts for most of the growth in the whole country, as well as in the
Chesapeake Bay watershed. Going forward, what should the government do?
13. Rezoning
for increased density is an attempt to accommodate continued population growth
while reducing development on farmland and natural habitat. Do you favor
increasing density as means of limiting sprawl in your community?
14. Do
you favor paying higher property taxes if needed to accommodate new residents
and residential development in your community?
15. The U.S.
Department of Agriculture calculates that in recent decades urban sprawl has
destroyed 43 million acres of farmland and natural habitat in the U.S., an area
about equal in size to New England. If this trend were to continue, would it be
....
16. A recent
study of government data found that most development in the last decade was
driven by the country’s population growing by 22 million people. The Census
Bureau projects at current rates the U.S. population could grow by more than
one hundred million over the rest of this century. How would this amount of
population growth affect your community and region?
17. Do you feel
an emotional or spiritual uplift from time spent in natural areas such as
forests, wetlands, meadows, mountains, and water bodies?
18. Which do
you agree with more: that it is unethical to pave over and build on good
cropland and wildlife habitat, or that the need for more housing is a
legitimate reason to eliminate cropland and wildlife habitat?
NOTE: Margin of Sampling Error, +/-
3%
percentage points with a 95% level of confidence