My
friend Ron Beitler recently announced
on his FaceBook page that he has become a contributor to the website, www.smartgrowthforconservatives.com. Some of the other contributors are heavyweight Smart
Growth advocates like Charles Marohn (www.strongtowns.org),
Jim Bacon (Bacon's Rebellion) and
Joe Minicozzi (Planetizen). In Ron’s
words, Smart Growth for Conservatives provides center-right perspectives on
transportation and land use issues in the United States as well as analysis of
these issues from a center-right perspective with an
emphasis on fiscal conservatism and market-based solutions.
I'm more center-left, but I fully embrace Smart Growth principles. So I
commented on his post, kiddingly asking him whether there aren’t any liberal
Smart Growth websites. Ron’s reply nailed an important distinction about Smart
Growth that would probably make the concept more tangible if more people viewed
it from this perspective.
Ron
said, “No party owns the message! Problem is we (Republicans) have to work
harder to get our base to understand that, at its core, Smart Growth is about
fiscal sustainability, and that's a message conservatives of all people should
flock to. Liberals don't own environmental issues either.”
Then
one of Ron’s FB friends commented on Ron’s statement that liberals don't own
environmental issues. Ron’s friend said, “The free market left undistorted will
value clean water, air, healthy forests, proper developments, etc., and an
asset that is valued, is an asset that is well taken care of.” A free-market
solution to the world’s problems is certainly a traditional conservative plank.
I
don’t buy the argument for a free-market solution to environmental problems. Thirty
years ago I would have completely agreed that the free market could take care
of the environment, but I was a naïve college student then. While many small
businesses in the 21st century have been built on a model of public
responsibility, some of the biggest players pull every string available, legal
or otherwise, to maximize their profits at the expense of public health. Don’t
even get me started on Monsanto and their GMOs.
Freedom Industries tank farm on Elk River in Charleston. This was the
source of the chemical spill into the Elk River on January 9,2014.
(photo: AP/Steve Helber)
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A
very recent example of the failure of the free market to protect the environment is the spill of 4-methylcyclohexane methanol (MCHM) in early
January into the Elk River in West Virginia. The storage tank that leaked had not been inspected by West Virginia
Department of Environmental Protection since 1991. West Virginia regulators are
claiming that there was insufficient toxicological data on MCHM to require
it to classified as a hazardous substance, which would required regular
inspections of its storage tanks. Unfortunately, this chemical leaked into the
Elk River just a mile upstream from the inlet for the public water supply for
300,000 West Virginians in nine counties. All of those who did not have a
private well were forced to rely on bottled water for two weeks. Restaurants
and hotels in Charleston reportedly were losing $1,000,000 in revenue per day
until the public water supply was declared safe to use again. All of this
disruption was the result of MCHM seemingly falling through the regulatory
cracks. The free market did not protect Charleston’s businesses or its
drinking water.
No
one party owns this message: Regardless
of whether people lean to the right or the left, we need to strive for clean
air and clean water now for the sake of our children and our children's
children. As a civilized society, we have to proactively make decisions based
on what is best for future generations rather than passively letting the free
market decide whether our wellbeing will be adequately protected. That should
be an imperative that transcends political party affiliations. Whether we are deciding
if a certain chemical should be classified as a hazardous substance, thereby
having tighter standards for bulk storage, or whether we are making land use
decisions that could make open spaces more or less attractive to develop, there
are some decisions that a properly functioning government must take the lead on
for the best interests of its constituency. After the ground rules have been
laid to ensure that we all have access to safe air, water and food, the free
market then should be free to function without backroom deals or sweetheart
regulatory intervention.
The environment and ecology know no ideology. Its going to be a very nuanced ability of man's ability to adapt himself within the operating constraints of a healthful environment that will determine our longevity. This is not liberal or conservative, its human nature. I think the question is whether we have the chops for self control. Also in the nature of individuality in large populations, that means, in my mind, that regulatory structure is vital. Maybe someday we won't but we're a long way away from not needing environmental regulation and enforcement. Amleto Pucci amletopucci@ptd.net
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