Different types of cities are created due to individual choices, private political actors, and government policies due to metropolitan sprawl and polarization. The Cleveland region map shows the difference in community classification terms. The Cleveland region map helps develop ways to understand tax base sharing. Cities together lack social tensions that move from the center. Regions develop communities based on “income, race, and fascial conditions” (Ameregis 3). A community has problems, including weak tax bases, poverty, and lack of resources. Another fully developed community might have a low poverty rate, weak tax bases, and suffering from social needs. Only a select percentage according to the Revenue Study have strong tax bases, expensive housing and large investment growth. The map of the Cleveland region shows how two in six people live in a suburb that is stressed or at risk from polarization and sprawl. The map shows six types of communities where most, except two, are not doing well. The fact is that a metropolitan region as a whole, in relation to the different communities within the region, faces consequences because of the patterns by which the region is
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