Month: November 2009

  • Going Vertical

    Being a “pro-business” state, Virginia typically follows trends in business. So, it will be interesting indeed if the Old Dominion follows this new trend. This morning’s Wall Street Journal has an intriguing front page story about how big businesses are retreating from the decentralized, outsourcing model that had been in vogue for a few decades.…

  • The Science is Now Un-Settled

    Back in early 2008, Gov. Timothy M. Kaine launched a commission to study the impact of Global Warming on Virginia. “Gone are the days of debating whether man-made effects exist,” he said. “Those days are gone.” Well, it turns out those days are back. And one of the central figures in reopening the debate is…

  • COMMENTS ON GREEN METROPOLIS

    The โ€œREAD IT NOWโ€ post is long so here is a place to comment on David Owenโ€™s book Green Metropolis: Why living Smaller, Living Closer, and Driving Less Are the Keys to Sustainability. It would be most constructive if comments here were focused on what you learned from actually reading the book. EMR

  • READ IT NOW — THREE PART ANALYSIS

    David Owenโ€™s book Green Metropolis: Why Living Smaller, Living Closer, and Driving Less Are the Keys to Sustainability is a very important book. Owenโ€™s book kicks open the portals to information and understandings that citizens must embrace if they are to evolve a sustainable trajectory for civilization. Not since 1961 when Jane Jacobs published The…

  • America: Land of the Layoff

    When you think about the “jobless recovery,” think about just how U.S. labor laws favor management and hurt workers. I couldn’t ask for a more clear example than that of my old employer, Business Week. I worked there about 15 years and for a total of 18 at its owner, McGraw-Hill. The venerable, New York-based…

  • Here’s the Future of Health Care — and It’s Not in the United States

    The typical American hospital charges between $20,000 and $100,000 to perform open-heart surgery. The 1,000-bed Narayana Hrudayalaya Hospital in Bangalore, India, charges $2,000 on average — and, arguably, provides better quality outcomes. The factory model of medical care, in which hospitals, physicians, nurses and other staff focus with unremitting attention to efficiency and quality on…

  • Pork You Can Believe In

    Conservative sources are suddenly abuzz with the story of “phantom” congressional districts in the Recovery.gov website that tracks where the 2009 stimulus money (more properly known as the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act) goes. Embarrassingly, the website lists way too many congressional districts. Virginia, for instance, supposedly has a 36th, 26th and 79th districts. Those…

  • SUNDAY READING

    Peter G. wonders how EMR can stand to read WaPo, the flagship of Enterprise-owned MainStream Media in the Washington-Baltimore NUR. Well, todayโ€™s edition provides plenty of reasons. Start with the front page: โ€œFederal oversight of subways proposed, Federal safety oversight of subways, light-rial systems proposed, METRO CRASH HELPED SPUR SAFETY PLAN, Obama administration to push…

  • Warner “Gets It” on Health Care Reform

    As Congress lurches forward in its campaign to “reform” a deeply flawed health care system by making it a grievously flawed system, moderate “blue dog” Democrats are emerging as a key swing constituency that can make or break any deal. In the Senate, that puts the spotlight on Mark Warner and Jim Webb. While Virginia’s…

  • Whatever Happened to Smart Growth in Chesterfield?

    For years, Marleen Durfee, a peppy Pennsylvanian who talks a mile a minute, has been the point woman in Chesterfield County when it comes to Smart Growth. For years, she was the lone voice in the desert crying for a stop to the wild, thoughtless development that Chesterfield’s Good Ole Boys and Girls Board of…

  • NOW MARYLAND IS PLANNING SOMETHING NEW

    MARYLAND IS PLANNING A NEW SETTLEMENT PATTERN STRATEGY — OR NOT The AntiSmart Growthers (those who have consistently supported Business-As-Usual / dumb growth) are turning hand-springs of joy over the โ€˜newsโ€™ that, in spite of best intentions, the much ballyhooed Maryland โ€˜Smart Growthโ€™ program has not panned out. As noted in an earlier post, this…

  • Marking the Falling of the Berlin Wall

    The Fall of the Berlin Wall on Nov. 9, 1989 is an enormous happening worthy of celebration. Last night, I marked the event in New York by attending a special discussion by four U.S. foreign correspondents and a photographer who recorded the historic day in person. The reporters, including those from The New York Times,…

  • FRINGE ISSUES

    In comments on Jim Baconโ€™s 7 November post โ€œ Stupid Growth in Marylandโ€ a frequent commentor makes a common error concerning the fundamental causes of human settlement pattern dysfunction. In the US of A, states are constrained by the federal constitution, however, within that framework states are free to โ€˜centrally planโ€™ or โ€˜delegateโ€™ most powers…

  • T.J. Becomes Governor

    In his victory speech, Virginia’s new governor-elect Bob McDonnell spoke of his pride at holding the same post as so many awe-inspiring political figures and symbols of American Freedom and Rights of Man such as Thomas Jefferson. As a non-Virginian who happens to live here, I am constantly amused by the mythology that white and…

  • Stupid Growth in Maryland

    I had the pleasure of visiting Annapolis, Md., a couple of weekends ago, a city I had not seen in maybe 20 years. After watching Navy trounce Wake Forest in football, my family and I spent the night at the Governor Calvert House across the street from the state capitol (see pic) and spent several…