• AUTONOMOBILITY

    I will admit it: Warren Brown is my favorite WaPo columnist.

    In both his “On Wheels” and “Car Culture” columns, Brown makes a lot of sense concerning private vehicles and their impact on human settlement patterns. His observations illuminate issues related to mobility and access far better than the pontificators found on the Editorial and Op Ed pages or in the Outlook Section. It is a shame that Warrenโ€™s columns often appear on the first or second page of the Sunday autonomobile classified section.

    For proof of Brownโ€™s ability to summarize reality, check out todayโ€™s “Car Culture” column “There Ought to Be a Law” on Page G 2. We will not try to summarize the column, doing it justice would require reprinting. Warren scores point after point about the stupidity of the current congressional pursuit of less pollution and more fuel efficience as well as the role of contemporary Mass Over-Consumption.

    Having praised Warren Brown, let me also say he sometimes misses a point.

    In stories filed from (and following) the Geneva International Autonomobile Show that were printed on 7 and 11 March in WaPo, Warren swallows far too much of the line from Robert Lutz, Vice Chairman for Global Product Development at General Motors. Lutz told Brown, and Brown repeats the view, that the reason small, efficient cars are not sold in the United States is that no one would buy them here. We view this issue differently:

    The basic reason that small, efficient private vehicles are not sold in the United States is that all autonomobile manufactures would make less money per unit than they would if they continued to design, promote, build advertise and sell only big, inefficient vehicles.

    Yes, there are federal, state and municipal regulations that make it hard to import or drive small vehicles… did someone say “lobbyist?”

    If small, efficient private vehicle were sold in the United States, the Big Three (and the Big Importers) would face competition from small, regional firms. (Full disclosure: my Grandfather made a lot of money selling his company to General Motors in the 20s. Further disclosure: My parents and I never say a dime of that money.)

    Small, efficient cars could be made by regional manufactures. In fact small builders, egged on by X Prize Foundation are way ahead in the race to build 100 mpg cars according to Billy Baker in Popular Science (9 March 2007.)

    GMโ€™s Lutz says what will sell in Europa and not in North American reflects the fact that they are “two different worlds.” He is right; One controlled by big manufacturers one controlled by market forces reflecting a rational price for gasoline and more intelligent agency action. After all, Euroโ€™s love their cars too.

    As to the market for tiny vehicles, we admit we would not buy (or ride in) three and four wheeled mini-vans and pickups we have seen on expressways in Europe. These vehicles were built to reflect gas prices after Oct 1973. We also would not ride in or drive one of the Second-World / Soviet Era stink bombs we saw in Praha, Dresden or Berlin in 1989. For starters at 6 foot 4, we would not fit.

    However, when we first recall seeing a Mercedes Smart Car in Kobenhavn in 1991 we had the money and the interest. That was 16 years ago come May. To this day a lot of alternative vehicles are not available here that are deemed safe in the “over-regulated” European Union.

    Warren Brownโ€™s column focused on the hearings last Wednesday before the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on energy and air quality. In todayโ€™s Business Section of WaPo, Lutzโ€™s boss G. Richard Wagoner Jr. is quoted as saying:

    “Many of the recent legislative proposals to increase [mileage standards] … would be extraordinarily expensive and technically challenging to implement โ€“ all with little to show for actually reducing oil consumption or emissions.”

    Rep John D. Dingell responded: “Inaction and telling us what doesnโ€™t work is … no longer sufficient.”

    What did Warren Brown say again?

    He said a core problem is that consumers do not want efficiency as individual drivers and consumers. They would desperately want efficiency in Autonomobiles if they understood the consequences of Business-As-Usual. Now, if those politicians were honest with those who they were elected to represent…

    What did Wagoner say again?

    “Many of the recent legislative proposals to increase [mileage standards] … would be extraordinarily expensive and technically challenging to implement โ€“ all with little to show for actually reducing oil consumption or emissions.”

    In fact, Wagoner, Lutz, GM and the rest of the Autonomobile crowd are correct: The legislative proposals will not work.

    There are two choices to make private vehicles more fuel efficient and less polluting:

    Make private vehicles much more costly

    Make private vehicles much lighter and much slower

    The first option widens The Wealth Gap so that access and mobility in large New Urban Regions leads to the Sao Paulo Condition outlined in “The Whale on the Beach” 28 August 2006 at db4.dev.baconsrebellion.com Oh yes, as Wagoner et. al. know, this option would destroy the North American Autonomobile industry as we know it.

    The second option does not meet the current consumer “demand.” It would also tank the North American autonomobile industry. Most important, it would not provide mobility and access for most citizens.

    Small, light, inexpensive, fuel efficient private vehicles are unsafe a high speeds and at low speeds they do not serve the disaggregated human settlement pattern which has evolved in the US of A.

    Light, small vehicles require half the space to park and provide significant savings in the paved area devoted to driving. They could be part of a comprehensive solution for small urban agglomerations but are not much help in large New Urban Regions where most citizens live and work. It is a matter of physics, not policy:

    The disaggregation of human habitation required to accommodate Autonomobiles is a dead end just as “urban horses” were a dead end. When it come to space required to drive and park, smaller is better but not solution. The cost of energy and the impact of internal combustion engines can be used as a catalyst to move to more functional human settlement patterns. Free, non-polluting energy for private vehicles given dysfunctional human settlement patterns is not a solution.

    What to do?

    Rep. Dingell and the rest of those who have relied on Politics-As-Usual need to read Warren Brownโ€™s column and then go to the microphone and announce:

    “In the long term, Autonomobility is not sustainable.”

    The only way to reduce oil consumption at all and carbon emissions significantly is to change human settlement patterns.

    However, even if the cost of energy and the carbon emissions were not an economic, social and physical drag on civilization, Autonomobility doe not provide access and mobility for most citizens in large New Urban Regions. It is physics, no philosophy.

    EMR


  • All Rise

    Anyone who has followed Virginia’s political blogs for the last few of months is aware of former Commonwealth Conservative publisher Chad Dotson’s appointment to the bench for Virginia’s 30th judicial district.

    His swearing-in ceremony was yesterday, and both Steve Minor and Brian Patton were on hand.

    And I know I’ve said it before, but congratulations, Big Guy. I’ll still keep that “Dotson for AG” yard sign handy though…just in case.


  • Bring on the Night

    Larry Sabato cuts loose on the New and Improved! Daylight Saving Time:

    Now comes again the dreaded Daylight Saving Time–except for Vietnam, it’s the worst legacy of LBJ’s Great Society from the 1960s. The length of DST was expanded in 1974 and again in 1985, more evidence of the insidious but effective “Day Lobby.” This year, thanks to an outrageous proviso tucked away in an act of Congress—passed with virtually no public debate in 2005–DST has been extended a full month (three weeks on the front end and one week on the back end). With DST starting in early March and not ending until early November, the morning people have selfishly grabbed eight of the twelve months for their lifestyle choice.

    The exaggerated claim of the law’s backers–that this move will save umpteen barrels of oil by pushing activities into evening daylight when less electricity is supposedly required–is hotly disputed by other experts, who insist the gain is minimal at best. Moreover, hardworking farmers are rightly unhappy about getting up deep in darkness to begin their day, and miserable schoolchildren will have to wait for the school bus in the dark in most places. (Have our legislators never read the many studies showing that children do not function well early in the morning and need later, not earlier, school start times?) Perhaps even more important, the productivity of night people will plummet. If Alan Greenspan is right and there is a recession at the end of this year, just remember one of the factors that caused it.

    Congressman Ed Markey (D-MA) is the mastermind of this legislative malarkey, along with his “cosponsor in crime,” Congressman Fred Upton (R-MI). Markey and Upton actually tried to swallow up two additional months for DST before some affected businesses complained.

    Markey had the unmitigated gall to assert that, “The beauty of DST is that it just makes everyone feel sunnier.” Everyone feels sunnier?! Well, Congressman Markey, I have news for you. I will bet that a majority of your own constituents in the Bay State disagree. I hope they let you know their true position. You’ve earned a permanent place of dishonor in the Nighttime Hall of Shame for this classic, Massachusetts-liberal, Big Government overreach. Get your doggone hands off our clocks–and VCRs, and all the other electronic gear we had to waste time resetting last Sunday!

    There is just one ray of real sunshine in this story. The new law acknowledges the obvious: that people won’t like it, and it won’t accomplish a blessed thing that it has promised. Under the legislation Congress has the option to quickly move back to the old system–a relatively even, fair split of the year between Day and Night people.

    Rise up! Bombard your members of Congress with calls and emails and stopwatches, demanding time equity and fairness for nocturnal citizens.

    Night People of America, unite! You have nothing to lose but the sickeningly early buzzing of your alarm clocks.

    Amen, Professor. As wise man once said:

    Bring on the night
    Couldn’t stand another hour of daylight

    Well, okay, Sting isn’t exactly wise. But this rising like zombies in the darkness without the promise of some good dove hunting when the sun does creep over the horizon has got to stop. Make those calls!


  • Why, It’s All Just Politcs

    Via Badrose comes a link to an op-ed from one-time Bacon’s contributor (and all-around good man) Barnie Day on the transportation bill.

    If Jim weren’t sunning himself, he might get a kick out of it. Here’s are a few gems. On raiding the general fund to purchase pavement:

    And sure, this clever bill — and it is clever (more on that in a moment, too) — does raid the general fund. Sorta. In a small-potatoes way. But there is precedent for raids like this. The late, great A. L. Philpott did exactly the same thing years ago when he carved out set-aside money for an upgrade of U.S. 58 across Southside Virginia.

    The RTD’s Bart Hinkle wrote on this same topic yesterday. Seems one man’s raid is another man’s S.O.P.

    But back to Barnie. On the regional taxing authorities:

    Regional taxing authorities? This is my favorite. This one makes local governments dance and chirp like crickets on a hot rock.

    These Northern Virginia poobahs get elected by running against the state, giving away the store recruiting all the growth and congestion they can lay hands on, and by approving subdivisions helter-skelter and around the clock. Then they say to Richmond, “We’ve got a problem. You’ve got to fix it. Pave us out of congestion.”

    The reality is they’ve got all the tools they need to straighten out their own messes — all they need except the courage to use them.

    Courage and long-term incumbency are (almost always) mutually exclusive. But it is very entertaining to read the squawking coming from local pols who might — just might — be forced to put forth an ounce of additional thought before approving that new subdivision.

    Barnie concludes that the governor should sign the bill. I think Kaine might, but he’ll tweak it as much as he can before then. Will this bill make a whit of difference to anyone stuck in traffic? Probably not. It will kick the problem down the (metaphorical) road for a time and in a few years, a new governor will be touring the state looking for support to end gridlock as we know it.
    But maybe by then, we’ll all have hover cars, and none of it will matter. Except for the traffic clogged skies. I wonder if those could be paved, too?


  • LANDCASTERATED MEDIA

    Nearly three decades ago The Washington Post assigned their first “local” reporter to a beat focused on “transportation.” A number of us worked with John Lancaster to help him learn the territory, understand the land-use / transportation connection and the role of transport in evolving what we now call functional human settlement patterns made up of Balanced Communities in sustainable New Urban Regions.

    John did a fine job and was just rounding into becoming a knowledgeable player in a reasoned approach to mobility and access when he called to report he had been “promoted” to Anapolis.

    “No, no, John transportation is a regional issue.”

    “I know but my new assignment is Maryland politics, it is the only way I can get a promotion.”

    So ended a promising start. John now reports from the far corners of the globe. Those who have followed him with the transportation portfolio have stayed for longer or shorter times. Our files indicate there have been at least 21 reporters who have called to say they were covering transportation. Some are still with WaPo covering other topics, some are not.

    If one includes the broader field of “development” there are more than 50 WaPo folders in our current and dead files. Only a few ever stayed long enough to ask intelligent questions about human settlement patterns before they moved on, or out.

    Now it has happened again. Alec MacGillis who, as readers of this Blog know, had gained an understanding of current transportation and land use issues has been “promoted” to “national politics.”

    In other words, Mr. MacGillis has been “Lancastered.” The more important, the largest media outlet in the National Capital Subregion and the general public have been Landcastrated.

    The practice of Landcasterazation leaves editors who know just what the publisher likes to see covered in full charge of what and how land-use / transportation issues are reported. Human settlement pattern issues are not rocket science, they are far more complex. Throwing a promising young journalist into the pot is bad, sending them on just when they begin to learn some of the complexity undermines the ability of the Fourth Estate to fulfill its obligation to society.

    The checks and balances of traditional journalism require both knowledgeable reporters and bottom-line focused publishers with editors striking a balance. When reporters have to rely on he said / she regurgitation of vested interests, the region loses.

    The loss of MacGillis is especially critical right now. An informed decision on a tunnel or an elevated METRO extension to Reston / Dulles / Eastern Loudoun is critical. All citizens of the Subregion will hear about are the views of those who have a dog in the fight:

    The governor and politicians who want to be able to say they “solved the problem,” and

    Land owners, their agents and proxies who would not profit as much from what may be the best long term solution.

    We will be exploring this issue further in an upcoming column.

    EMR


  • Chichester Retires from Senate

    Ben posts the Senator’s retirement announcement here.
    Say what you will of the man, and Lord knows, I’ve said plenty, but Chichester’s decision marks the end of an era in Virginia politics.

    My understanding from discussions with people who know the Senator is that he had a strong set of values and an even better sense of how to achieve them. While not everyone agreed with his vision for the Commonwealth, he had one (unlike so many others in political life…whose vision seems to extend no further than the next election).

    Some of my friends on the right will (and no doubt are) cheering the fact that he is leaving the scene. They ought to — because he had proven himself nearly invincible at the polls, and their chances of ever defeating him were somewhere between slim and none. That said, the race to replace him will be very interesting to watch. And even more, the Senate without him will be a far different place than it is today.


  • Sun, Sandals and Tequila

    I’ll be taking a break from blogging during spring vacation. The Bacon family embarks tomorrow upon a cruise through the western Caribbean. The locale is almost incidental: Once you’ve seen one palm tree you’ve seen them all. (That’s just a joke, for the humorless among you. In point of fact, palm trees are endlessly fascinating if studied in their ecological context.)

    I’m looking forward to a week dedicated to getting in shape — yoga, pilates, treadmills and elipticals — reading, and perhaps gathering a little insight for the blog. I hope to return with a jolly good read for all those interested in human settlement patterns.

    While I’m gone, I have no doubt that Ed, Phil, JAB and Norm (and, who knows, maybe Claire will make a reappearance) will keep the pot boiling. I just hope the Bacon’s Rebellion server doesn’t melt down in my absence!


  • Government Head Count: Back to Where We Started

    Gov. Mark R. Warner succeeded in getting his 2004 tax increase passed largely on the basis of the promise to taxpayers that he had done everything humanly possible to streamline state government, cut the state workforce and make the state administration run leaner and more efficiently than ever. As evidence for his claims, he could point to the fact that the number of state employees, which stood at 111,993 on Jan. 31, 2001, was down to 105,748 by Jan. 31, 2004.

    A five or six percent reduction in head count wasn’t an especially formidable accomplishment by private sector standards, but it was pretty impressive by state government standards. It was certainly enough to give luster to Warner’s reputation as a tight-fisted governor at a time that he was insisting that higher taxes were needed.

    Then, along came Timothy M. Kaine, who ran for governor as part of the “Warner/Kaine team,” proclaiming that a Kaine administration would maintain the Warner legacy. Shaking off Jerry Kilgore’s campaign charge that he was just another tax-and-spend liberal, Kaine won the election.

    With more than a year in office and two sessions of the General Assembly under his belt, Kaine is looking less and less like Mark Warner. Well, to be more accurate, he looks less like the agressive cost-cutting Mark Warner of popular renown.

    According to Department of Human Resource Management figures, the number of employees in state government on Jan. 31, 2007, had climbed to within 97 of what it had been before Warner started hacking down the size of state government. Here are the numbers:

    1/31/2001 …… 111,994
    1/31/2002 …… 108,039
    1/31/2003 …… 104,291
    1/31/2004 …… 105,749
    1/31/2005 …… 108,796
    1/31/2006 …… 110,642
    1/31/2007 …… 111,897

    (To dig deeper into the numbers by government agency, click here.)

    I can’t think of any major programs created since 2004 that could account for such an increase. Apparently, there was less than meets the eye to the Warner-era cost cutting — please note the run-up in employment during the last two years of the Warner administration after the tax increases went into effect. Furthermore, there is no sign in these numbers that the Kaine administration ever adopted the parsimonious attitude that prevailed in the Warner administration at least during the recession years.

    Bottom line: When Kaine attacks the GOP transportation compromise on the grounds that it would divert precious General Fund revenues from school children, old people in nursing homes and first responders (ritual disclaimer: I don’t support the GOP bill but I hate seeing it criticized for unjustifiable reasons), he can’t claim the same moral high ground that Warner enjoyed in 2004 when he was campaigning for a tax increase. Today, state spending is soaring and head count is surging.

    Not only is the state running a chronic surplus — a point that the low-tax wing of the General Assembly has made frequently — Kaine can make no plausible claim that he’s trying to hold state spending in check. If the Governor wants to convince taxpayers that another tax hike is necessary, he’s going to have to do better.


  • The Bacon Stump Speech

    Charlottesville Tomorrow has posted a podcast of a speech I delivered Tuesday to the Free Enterprise Forum in Charlottesville. It’s a variant of the stump speech I’ve delivered on several occasions in the past two months, laying out in concise form my view of (a) what’s wrong with transportation in Virgina today, (b) why the current proposals being considered by lawmakers in Richmond won’t cure it, and (c) the deep-rooted institutional changes we need to make.

    It’s old-hat material for long-time Rebellion readers, but newcomers to the blog might find it useful — if you’ve got nothing better to do with a half hour of your time — to hear the conceptual framework I use when approaching transportation issues. Yes, believe it or not, the comments I make on this blog are not random, disconnected observations. They all tie together and, ultimately, support one another.

    A side note: I really must commend the Charlottesville region for the sophistication of its civic organizations. The Free Enterprise Forum, which hosted my speech, is putting on a year-long series of speeches exploring different facets of the transportation issue from free-market perspectives. The organization has emerged as an important player in the dissemination of information and ideas related to community improvement.

    Additionally, Charlottesville Tomorrow does a fantastic job of compiling information related to transportation, land use and community design in the region, making information from obscure and dusty corners of the governmental process readily available to the public, and taking full advantage of digital technology to incorporate photos, graphics, audio and video into the website.

    As newspapers continue to suffer erosion of readership and resources to keep tabs on the local governance process, organizations like these two may well represent the future.


  • Stop the Presses: Chichester Rumored to Step Down

    The grassroots email network is buzzing tonight with rumors that Sen. John Chichester, the Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, will not be running for re-election. Chichester will reportedly make the official announcement on Monday.

    I affectionately referred to Chichester in my columns and postings as “Sir John ‘tax them until they’re dead and then hit them with the death tax’ Chichester. There is little doubt that if it weren’t for Commissar Chichester and his Senate gang of five, Mark Warner would have never been able to enact the 2004 tax increase.

    If Chichester does indeed step down, there is little doubt that another chapter to the era of the good ole boys running our Commonwealth has come to an end.


  • Merck: Doing Business the American Way

    The uproar caused by Texas Governor Rick Perryโ€™s Executive Order mandating the HPV vaccine (Gardasil) for 6th grade girls caused the drug manufacturer Merck to announce it will no longer lobby states to make the vaccine mandatory for school attendance.

    In Virginia, the bill to order the mandatory vaccination of young girls passed the State Senate unanimously. One must wonder whether the members of the General assembly who voted for the HPV Vaccine legislation should be willing to have their wives and daughters take this untested drug, first.

    Merck has made modest donations to Virginia politicians over the years. In 2006, Merck directly donated only about $13,150. Their donations were split 2:1 in favor of Republicans; for an itemized list of Merck’s 2006 donations, click here. In the last 10 years Merck has made 323 donations totaling $196,859 (click here).

    What’s more interesting, however, are the registered lobbyists that represent Merck in Virginia. Merck lists the following registered lobbyists:

    Nolen, Christopher R
    Finnegan, Kevin M
    Pratt, Mark C
    Jones, Reginald N
    Lombard, Joy M
    Bowen, Sandra D

    Each one of these individuals, with the exception of Kevin M Finnegan who shows a Bethesda, MD address and may be a direct Merck employee as his email address is given as [email protected], is affiliated with Williams Mullen Strategies, PO Box 1320, Richmond VA 23218.

    And this is where it gets interesting, because Williams Mullen is listed in VPAP.org as representing numerous clients before the General Assembly. He is shown having donated $95,186 in 2006 and $781,412 over the last ten years. Unfortunately, there is no itemization of the donations by client, but presumably a significant amount came from Merck. (The individual lobbyists registered as representing Merck have made minor contributions over the years, by comparison.)

    In a nutshell one could surmise that Merck created a demand for an unproven–and in all likelihood unneeded–vaccine, lobbied the legislators, and after making some significant contributions to the war-chests of several state politicians, got a bill that pretty much guarantees a market for their drug. Now that’s doing business the American way!

    One must also wonder how pro-life legislators will explain this vote to their constituents back home.


  • School Children in Trailers: Let Them Eat Cake… Er, Moon Pies

    Ever inquisitive, Bacon’s Rebellion has been busy investigating the concerns of Del. Brian Moran, D-Alexandria, that the Republican transportation plan would fund road building at the expense of “holding more classes in trailers, having fewer nursing-home beds for our elderly and failing to provide equipment to our first-responders.”

    (Ritual disclaimer: I am not defending the financing elements of the GOP plan, which I regard with loathing. I am addressing the flawed logic of those who oppose it for the wrong reasons.)

    In particular, I am interested in Del. Moran’s insinuation that increasing K-12 spending by a mere 19 percent during the current biennial budget is insufficient to hold down the number of children schooled in pre-fabricated dwellings, and that only the continued break-neck expansion of state aid to education can prevent Virginia’s schools from evolving into trailer parks, albeit trailer parks with books. (On this last point, actually, one cannot be entirely confident that Republicans don’t have it in mind to deprive the children of books as well.)

    One of the legitimate factors driving increased K-12 spending is the increase in number of school children. More children translates into more school buildings (trailers, whatever), more teachers, more local education bureaucrats and more state education bureaucrats. One could hardly begrudge an increase in state aid that kept pace with the increase in the number of loveable little tykes thirsty for knowledge.

    It so happens that the Weldon Cooper Center for Public Services projects the number of school children that Virginia will have to educate in the years ahead. Here are the numbers:

    School year Enrollment
    2006-20007…… 1,202,686
    2007-2008……… 1,207,360
    2008-2009……… 1,211,140
    2010-2011………. 1,217,478
    201102012……… 1,224,028

    That represents an enrollment growth rate of less than one half of one percent annually. I can’t find any projections for population increase during those same years, but the population of Virginia grew approximately eight percent between 2000 and 2006, or more than one percent a year.

    In other words, the increase in school enrollment is slowing to a crawl, and it is greated outpaced by the increase in the general population. (Even if the rate of population increase slows from the torrid pace of the early decade, a significant gap is likely to persist.) More inhabitants means more taxpayers, which means more tax revenue. It would be fully within the state’s means, even if one percent of the General Fund were diverted to transportation, to continue dumping money into Virginia’s public education system at a rate that greatly exceeds the incremental increase in the number of students.

    If exercising modest restraint in the metastazing growth in education spending results in relegating more school children to trailers, then Virginia’s education system is even more dysfunctional than it is acknowledged to be. Such a development would signal that priorities are seriously skewed, and that someone needs to ask where the money is going.


  • Lies, Damn Lies and Bigger Damn Lies

    Bacon’s Rebellion slammed the Republican Party of Virginia for a recent video ad that twisted the facts in the transportation debate. (See “RPV Propaganda.”) Not to be outdone, Del. Brian Moran, D-Alexandria, has launched a website that treats the truth with even more contempt.

    “Protecting Virginia’s Future Starts With You!” proclaims noraid.net. “Stop the Raid on Our Future!” Reports Michael Hardy with the Times-Dispatch:

    “We can’t solve our transportation problem by holding more classes in trailers, having fewer nursing-home beds for our elderly and failing to provide equipment to our first-responders,” Moran said in a statement unveiling his Web site yesterday.

    The Republicans, you see, “want to pull $200 million away from … important programs [in order] to build roads.” The Republican raid on the General Assembly would “turn investments into debts,” including: “Cuts as much as the entire budget for Norfolk State, Longwood University, JMU, Mary Washington, UVA-Wise and the Roanoke Higher Education Center & new College Institute – combined!”

    Cuts? What cuts? There are no cuts –only reductions in funds that might otherwise have gone to these institutions over and above existing budgets, which have increased 22 percent from the previous biennium to the current one.

    And what’s this about cuts “as much as the entire budgets” for the seven institutions? The “entire budgets” amount to 687.2 million in Fiscal 2oo7. (See higher ed budget.) Wow, that’s a lot of wampum. Only trouble is, the statement is totally inaccurate. State support for the seven institutions amounts to $198.6 million. Not quite the same thing. Somehow, Hardy didn’t seem to think the distortion worth noting or correcting in his brief article.

    This is scare-mongering of the most disgraceful sort. Moran has managed to do something quite remarkable: Make previous Republican distortions look mild If so, politics in Virginia is sliding downhill fast.


  • Wren Cross Compromise

    A compromise presumes one side has merit. I don’t find that to be the case in the the removal of the Christian cross from a historically Christian chapel because the Cross is offensive to some intolerant, anti-Christian bigots. Yet, in the spirit of comity, not compromise, I support this statement below.

    Here is the statement from Leaders of SaveTheWrenCross.org (Full disclosure: I am a member of this group even though my connection is W&M faculty – one term, not alumni)

    WILLIAMSBURG , VA โ€” The following is a statement of leaders of SaveTheWrenCross.org in response to yesterday’s press conference at William and Mary announcing the return of the Wren Cross to Wren Chapel:

    We are very thankful that the Wren Cross will be returned to permanent display in Wren Chapel.

    While there remain very important issues related to the nature of the display of the cross in Wren Chapel to be addressed by the Religion Committee, we express gratitude today to a number of people wh contributed to making yesterday’s return of the cross possible. First, the staffs of the two William and Mary student newspapers deserve a salute: The Flat Hat for first bringing to light the news of the cross’ removal; The Virginia Informer for providing an opportunity for a thoughtful debate of the issues involved; and both for their continued coverage. Second, we are thankful for the thousands of students, alumni, faculty, and friends of the College who signed and supported the SaveTheWrenCross.org petition that helped bring attention to this issue. Many of these signatories helped define the issues and explain the consequences of the cross’ removal in letters to the editors and op-eds across Virginia . Third, we thank the Governor and Attorney General of Virginia, who both made statements in support of returning the cross to Wren Chapel. Fourth, we thank the Religion Committee, which deserves great credit for its leadership and swift action, in particular its two co-chairs Professors Alan Meese and Jim Livingston. Lastly, we thank members of the media who understood the importance of this issue and responsibly covered it.

    We believe that the Religion Committee has acted in tremendously good faith and with the best interests of William and Mary uppermost in their minds. We applaud them for taking the initiative to expedite their deliberations with regard to the display of the cross.

    We are especially grateful that the unanimous judgment of William and Mary’s Religion Committee to return the cross is an unambiguous repudiation of the destructive idea that William and Mary should ever tolerate intolerance towards religious symbols.

    We urge the Committee to follow through on an implementation of a cross display practice that is consistent with those used by other Colonial Colleges with historic Christian chapels.

    We also urge the Committee to follow through on its original charge to examine broader questions involving the role of religion at public universities, and to solicit a wide spectrum of student, alumni, and community input. Following through on this mission is all the more important in wake of the Committee’s recommendation adopted yesterday by the Board of Visitors.

    Specifically, there is still a significant amount of clarity that the Religion Committee can provide to the issues involving the display of the cross. With the removal of the cross from Wren Chapel last October, there was a theory advanced over the last several months โ€“ as late as March 1 — about the inappropriateness of the ongoing display of a Christian cross in an historic Christian chapel. With the Committee’s unanimous recommendation, this theory has clearly been repudiated. Yet, in the 71 word recommendation by the Committee, no explanation has been advanced for why its new approach to the cross display policy has been adopted. We believe it is important to ground in sound reason and logic the rationale for departing from the previous cross display policy that had been in place for nearly 70 years.

    This is especially important since we are a university community, and since as the second oldest university in America โ€“ and one of her great liberal arts universities — the decisions made on this campus have great significance. They must be thoughtful, made with deliberate consultation, with accountability, and above all, with respect to the traditions and heritage that make William and Mary the Alma Mater of a Nation. G.K. Chesterton wrote, “It is obvious that tradition is only democracy extended through time. It is trusting to a consensus of common human voices rather than to some isolated or arbitrary recordโ€ฆ.Tradition refuses to submit to the small and arrogant oligarchy of those who merely happen to be walking about.” When we proceed to alter traditions, a decent respect for public and College community opinion would suggest that a thorough accounting and explanation for such a departure is warranted.

    The leaders of the SaveTheWrenCross.org are W&M students and alumni who had not known one another prior to the start of this effort. We resolve to remain fully engaged in the work of the Religion Committee’s ongoing deliberations about the display of the cross and the more general questions about the role of religion at a public university that it will address. We resolve further to remain engaged in the future life of the College, especially in matters relating to protecting and celebrating its heritage. We also resolve to engage in efforts to ensure that William and Mary continues to be a place that is welcoming to people of all faiths, in the American tradition of religious pluralism.


  • The Devolution Debate — Finally, People Are Asking the Right Questions

    Should local governments take on more responsibility for building and maintaining secondary roads? That’s the debate now emerging from the GOP transportation plan — and it’s precisely the debate we should be having, although it would be helpful to re-frame the controversy in more constructive terms than the blame mongering we hear now.

    Key Northern Virginia leaders don’t like the GOP plan. Reports the Washington Times:

    “Northern Virginia is getting [shortchanged] right now,” said Prince William Board of County Supervisors Chairman Corey A. Stewart, a Republican. “It produces 40 percent of revenue and receives only 17 percent of highway construction funds. We need the state to step up and take care of its responsibility.”

    Fairfax County Board of Supervisors Chairman Gerald E. Connolly, a Democrat, agreed. “Right now, this bill is not workable. It’s a wholesale transfer of responsibility from the state to the localities. That is how they get around not raising taxes.”

    Stewart and Connolly raise legitimate issues: If the state transfers responsibility for building and maintaining secondary roads, it also should transfer sufficient resources to do the job.

    But let’s step back and ask the bigger question: Which level of government is the most appropriate for administering the construction and maintenance of local roads — local government or state government? The answer is self-evident: Local government should take responsibility for local roads. That’s the way it works in the vast majority of states, that’s the way it works with Virginia cities, and that’s the way it works in two Virginia counties: Arlington and Henrico.

    It’s called aligning transportation and land use planning. The reason that urbanizing counties should take over local roads is that they are responsible already for land use decisions, zoning codes and subdivision approvals, all of which affect the location and intensity of traffic. Local officials also have a better feel for their county’s priorities than VDOT officials in a district office somewhere.

    The current separate of transportation and land use is dysfunctional. Local boards of supervisors approve “pod” subdivisions that funnel traffic onto collector roads — and expect VDOT to address the resulting congestion. They approve big-lot subdivisions that require more lane-miles of roadway to serve — and expect VDOT to pick up the tab for maintenance. They mandate low density development that makes bus service uneconomical. They forbid the development of mixed-used, pedestrian-friendly communities that reduce the length and frequency of car trips. They limit development around rail stations that could take rush-hour automobiles off the road. And then they criticize “the state” for failing to pony up the funds to rescue them from the consequences of their decisions. Such irresponsibility simply has to end.

    Once the fundamental decision has been made to align transportation and land use at the level of local government, a number of secondary decisions need to be made. What state resources should be transferred to local governments in compensation for taking over the job? If extra funds are needed, what revenue sources should be tapped?

    Those questions are not being asked yet. Right now, the debate has taken an unproductive tone. (It’s hard to tell whether the truculence of local government officials is to blame, or where drama-seeking reporters are cherry picking the most belligerent quotes and overlooking the more thoughtful statements.) From what I’ve read, the main concern of local government officials is not seeking the optimal governance structure but avoiding getting blamed for raising taxes to fund the road improvements they want. It’s so much easier blaming the state.

    Despite the deficiencies of the debate so far, it represents a departure from the Mainstream Media meta-narrative that defines the transportation debate as a purely state-level fiscal matter. Finally, the dysfunctional nature of Virginia’s governance system is coming to light.