• $120-Per-Barrel Oil and the Abject Failure of Virginia’s Political Class

    Only seven months ago, I posted on the topic, “Quality of Life, Human Settlement Patterns and $100 Oil.” Oil was then selling for $83 a barrel, but analysts feared that the price could hit $100. That was then. This is now, and oil is flirting with $120 per barrel. That price, which includes a lot of speculative froth, will settle back down. But it will settle at a new, higher plateau that is far higher than even I dreamed of some two ago when I was blogging about the impact of $50-per-barrel oil.

    Higher oil prices affects transportation policy in two ways. Most directly, it boosts the cost of gasoline, which now runs above $3.50 a gallon in Virginia. When retail gasoline prices increase $1.00 a gallon, the giant sucking sound you hear is the whoosh of some $5 billion annually being vacuumed from the pockets of Virginia consumers. But there’s an indirect impact, too: Higher oil prices translate into higher asphalt prices, a critical material for road maintenance, which, along with China-driven inflation in the broader construction sector, explains why maintenance costs are gobbling up an ever-larger share of Virginia’s Transportation Trust Fund.

    One would think that a tripling of oil prices over the past few years would prompt Virginia’s decision makers to re-think transportation policy in a fundamental way. But the only re-thinking that has taken place is a growing conviction that we must raise taxes, pay whatever it takes, so we can continue to do things exactly the same way we have for the past 50 years.

    Gov. Timothy M. Kaine, whom I once thought knew better, now declares that he will call the General Assembly back into session this year to deal with transportation. He doesn’t expect anyone to reach a solution, he told the Associated Press. Rather, “We’re either going to solve this problem or Virginians are going to know who stood in the way of a solution.”

    And what solution would that be? Reports the AP:

    The governor wants a statewide levy to cover the overruns that the Virginia Department of Transportation estimates will approach $400 million next year and $600 million by 2014.

    Among the ideas offered to cover the gap are boosts in the sales tax, the state’s 17 1/2-cents-per-gallon gasoline tax or the “titling tax” on car sales. Kaine prefers raising the titling tax from 3.5 percent to the rate applied to all other retail purchases, 5.5 percent, but won’t say what he will propose in the bill he sends to lawmakers within the next two weeks.

    The final calculation, I can assure you, will be driven by politics, not economic reason. Any rational system for funding roads and highways in Virginia would be based on a user pays principle that would (a) make people feel the consequences of their transportation choices, (b) induce some people, on the economic margin, to shift to more energy-efficient transportation modes, and (c) encourage the marketplace to provide more transportation-efficient settlement patterns such as walkable, mixed-use neighborhoods in closer proximity to jobs.

    If Gov. Kaine is entertaining the option of a statewide sales tax — which would load the burden of road funding indiscriminately not only upon those who moved 50 miles from their job so they could afford to buy a bigger house with a bigger yard, damn the consequences, but those who walk, bike or bus to work, ride the train to work, telecommute to work, or don’t work at all — he clearly does not embrace the principle of “user pays.” He’s also given up on land use reform, much to the dismay of the environmentalists who voted for him. The only change he still embraces is more funding for mass transit, even though the economics of that option are abysmal in the absence of land use reform — and his plan for funding the Rail-to-Dulles heavy rail project is teetering on the brink of collapse.

    Kaine talks about decreasing CO2 emissions in Virginia’s part to combat Global Warming, but instead of encouraging Virginians to drive less, he’s strategizing about putting Republicans on the spot for their unwillingness to subsidize more driving. If GOP lawmakers had any brains, they would be hurling Kaine’s Global Warming rhetoric back at him, but they are too dull-witted to do so. While the GOP does deserve credit for cooking up unappreciated but meaningful land-use reform in the infamous HB 3202 passed last year, legislators remain clueless on how to handle the funding piece of the equation. One might think that Republicans, who putatively believe in free market principles, might embrace “user pays” as a way of breaking the legislative logjam — more mobility for those who are willing to pay for it. But, for the most part, they can’t evolve past their “no tax increase” rhetoric which, in its own way, is as devoid of principle as Kaine’s grab-money-wherever-you-can-find-it approach.

    Virginians have been grappling with the transportation funding issue for several years now and appear as deadlocked as ever. The failure of leadership across the board is utterly dispiriting. The truckling to narrow business interests (the real estate and construction lobby) and demographic constituencies (middle class households living in scattered, disconnected, low density settlement patterns) is shameful. Among Virginia’s elected officials, no one is willing to tell voters the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. But, then, voters are no better. We all want more roads — just as long as someone else pays for them. In the final analysis, we collectively get what we deserve.


  • The Property Tax Rebellion — It’s Coming, I Tell Ya, It’s Coming!

    Sooner or later there’s going to be a tax revolt in Virginia. That’s my story, and I’m sticking to it. Indulge me for a moment while I recapitulate the argument that I’ve been making for a couple of years now:

    Housing values shot through the roof, particularly in Northern Virginia and Hampton Roads; property tax assessments — and taxes — shot up along with them. Higher taxes were palatable to homeowners as long as the value of their houses were climbing in sync. It was relatively painless to finance the higher tax load by dipping into the magically increasing homeowner equity through a refinancing or a second mortgage. Once real estate prices started declining and homeowner equity started evaporating, however, that practice could no longer continue. Local governments, addicted to the revenue, would raise tax rates to offset declining assessments. Unable to pull equity out of their houses, homeowners would feel the pain of higher taxes more acutely than ever before.

    That’s the scenario I laid out, and I expected a tax revolt here in Virginia. So far that revolt has failed to materialize. But in other states, the scenario is unfolding more or less as I predicted. For evidence, I present this editorial in the Wall Street Journal.

    Arizona is one of a growing list of states and big cities looking to raise taxes on homes to close budget gaps in 2008 and 2009. Housing values are expected to decline by $1.2 trillion this year, according to Global Insight Inc., an economic consulting firm, and that means tens of billions of dollars in lost taxes.

    In recent weeks, Fairfax County in northern Virginia, Washington state, Chicago and Memphis have announced proposals to increase residential property tax rates to offset declining revenues. So at the very time that states and cities are begging for money from Washington to help distressed homeowners pay their mortgages, property tax hikes could push hundreds of thousands of homeowners under water.

    Here’s a contributing factor that I hadn’t considered: Higher property taxes have a double whammy: Not only do higher tax rates increase the homeowner’s tax liability, they simultaneously reduce the homeowner’s ability to dip into equity to pay those taxes by aggravating the decline in housing values.

    The Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Kentucky reviewed dozens of studies on real-estate prices and concluded that “the evidence from the most reliable estimates” is that between 60% and 90% of property taxes are capitalized into a reduced value of the home. So a permanent $200 a year increase in the property tax could reduce the sales value of the home by between $1,200 and $1,800.

    The explosive growth in local government spending is not sustainable. Between 2000 and 2007, personal incomes increased 27 percent, median home values 48 percent, and property tax collections 62 percent. Something has to give. The Journal sees tax revolts brewing in Arizona, Florida, Georgia and Nevada, and expects property tax relief to be the sleeper issue of 2008.

    While the WSJ is spot on regarding the impact of rising property taxes, I have seen no indication that its editorial writers understand the driving force behind local government spending. Outside the usual cesspools of corruption and incompetence, the problem isn’t extravagant spending in the traditional sense of waste, fraud and abuse (WFA). WFA is a constant, part of the background noise. Increasing spending has two sources, neither of which are easily remedied: (a) increasingly dysfunctional human settlement patterns, which drive up the cost of providing infrastructure and public services, and (b) the institutional rot of public education, which absorbs massive funding increases to little effect.

    The tax revolt is coming, I’m tellin’ ya. It’s coming. Sooner or later, I’m going to be right!


  • A Streetcar Named…TBD

    Three years ago, the District of Columbia spent $10 million to purchase streetcars for a line that… well… doesn’t yet exist. And may not for quite some time:

    They have not been put down, and there is no current timetable for when those tracks will go down.

    “The next step is the construction of the rail line and selection of an operator,” says Moneme. “We will be focusing on that this summer.”

    The initial route for the streetcars took them from Bolling Air Force Base in Southeast, along South Capitol Street, and ended at the Anacostia Metro Station.

    But there is no timetable for when rail lines will go down in that section of the city.

    Of course the cars do run… in the Czech Republic (they need to be run now and then to keep them in good working order). And the District has “worked out a deal” to extend the warranties on the cars. No word as to how much, if anything, that cost.


  • From Mean Streets to Sweet Streets

    Every year, more than 75 pedestrians are killed and 1,000 injured in the Washington metropolitan area, according to the Coalition for Smarter Growth in its report, “Washington’s Mean Streets.” There is a close correlation between land use patterns and the incidence of pedestrian accidents, especially fatal ones.

    Calculating a “pedestrian danger index” based upon pedestrian fatalities per 100,000 people and adjusted for the percentage of the population that walks to work, the Coalition for Smarter Growth compiled the following rankings (from most dangerous to safest) of the region’s largest jurisdictions:

    1. Fairfax County: 44.1
    2. Prince Georgeโ€™s County, Md.: 42.6
    3. Prince William County: 33.1
    4. Montgomery County, Md.: 24.4
    5. Loudoun County: 20.6
    6. District of Columbia: 10.0
    7. Arlington County: 9.6
    8. Alexandria: 7.8

    For remedies, the Coalition recommends:

    • Fix the worst places. Indentify and fix high-crash/high-risk intersections and roadways.
    • Complete the streets: Ensure that all streets and intersections are built and operated for the safety and convenience of all users, not just automobiles.
    • Institutionalize changes: Update standards in all relevant planning, design,and maintenance manuals. Invest in training all transportation and development reviewprofessionals on new complete streets policies. Replace vehicle โ€œlevel of serviceโ€ measures with multi-modal performance measures.
    • Build mixed-use walkable places: Local governments should guide new development and retrofit existing development to create mixed-use, walkable environments that make walking, bicycling, and access to transit safe and convenient choices. The long-term solution to pedestrian safety problems lies in creating places that offer a comfortable and walkable environment in which homes, businesses, services, and community facilities are linked by a highly connected street grid of short blocks, lined with street-oriented buildings and pedestrian-scaled civic spaces.

  • OK, Maybe Tim Kaine Deserves More Credit Than He Gets on the Environment

    In an earlier post, I questioned Gov. Timothy M. Kaine’s environmental credentials, so it’s only fair to take note of important environmental initiatives that he has supported — even if he couldn’t get them through the legislature.

    As Kaine noted in a statement yesterday after the adjournment of the 2008 General Assembly session: โ€œUnfortunately, the General Assembly was not supportive of all of our efforts to clean and protect the environment, including measures to create a voluntary reporting system for greenhouse gas emissions, to set a higher standard for energy-efficient green buildings, and to codify a goal of increasing energy conservation. Taken together, these items would have gone a long way toward protecting and cleaning our environment.”

    I haven’t seen much coverage of these issues, so I can’t explain to readers who opposed these measures or why. Herewith, my observations.

    Voluntary reporting system for greenhouse gas emissions. What could possibly be wrong with this? As I have noted repeatedly, I am skeptical of chicken-little, sky-is-falling claims about Global Warming. But the responsible position is not to take head-in-the-sand approach and insist that there is no risk. Public policy must be based on sound science and accurate data. I can not see how collecting data on greenhouse emissions can do any harm, especially if the reporting is voluntary. Good data will inform intelligent debate.

    In his Index of Leading Environmental Indicators 2008, Steven F. Hayward shows the steady progress we’re making toward energy efficiency and reduced CO2 emissions. In 2006 the United States economy experienced a 1.5 percent drop in greenhouse gas emissions — the first such decline in a non-recessionary year. (Somehow, that story didn’t make the front page of the New York Times, I can’t imagine why.) Here’s another interesting finding: The intensity of greenhouse gas emissions per unit of Gross National Product declined 23.4 percent between 1991 and 2005, outperforming the European Union and other signers of the Kyoto protocol. Why wouldn’t we want to be able to document comparable trends in Virginia?

    Weakened LEED standards for public buildings. There are two sets of standards: One is LEED, Leadership in Energy and Design, and the other is Green Globes, which environmentalists perceive to be weaker. The governor’s amendment to adopt the LEED standard was defeated in the House. Frankly, I don’t know enough to make an informed judgment on the relative merits of the two standards.

    Codified goal for energy conservation. I have consistently preached the virtues of conservation. I believe the commonwealth should practice conservation, preach conservation and create the conditions for others to conserve. The commonwealth should even measure CO2 emissions to track conservation. Setting goals is fine — as long as they are non-binding and not used to browbeat manufacturers or utilities into making uneconomic investments.


  • Wise Coal Plant Controversy Goes National

    The controversy over Dominion’s proposed coal-fired power plant in Wise show signs of morphing into a national story. First, as Peter Galuszka noted in an earlier blog post, the left-wing blogosphere has jumped on the issue. Now James Hansen, recently departed director of NASAโ€™s Goddard Institute for Space Studies and world-renowned climatologist, has written a letter to Gov. Timothy M. Kaine, urging him to oppose the coal plant.

    The Chesapeake Climate Action Network quotes Hansen as follows:

    I have become involved in several coal-fired power plant cases, including ones in my home state of Iowa, because it has become clear that emissions from coal-fired power plants will be the single most dominant factor in determining the nature of our future climate and our planetary legacy for our children and grandchildren,โ€ said Dr. Hansen. โ€œThis Virginia case is important because it is near-term. We need a moratorium on coal-fired power plants now, until technology is ready to capture all emissions, including carbon dioxide.

    โ€œConcern about global warming is rising. Coal is on its way out,โ€ Hansen concluded. โ€œA governor who acts on both of these truths will go down in history as a true visionary.โ€

    Hansen garnered considerable attention in 2005 and 2006 when he asserted that the Bush administration was trying to censor his views on global warming. Those charges inspired some sarcastic commentary by skeptics who noted his long-standing status as one of the nation’s most outspoken prophets of global warming. If he was censored, he certainly found a way to make his opinions known.

    Even if you dismiss Hansen as an ideologue with a penchant for controversy, as some undoubtedly will, there is no denying that he has a strong media following. Don’t be surprised if the Wise coal plant becomes the cause celebre that catalyzes a national movement calling for a total moratorium on new coal plants.


  • House Prices and Killer Commutes

    Others have made this point on the blog, but it bears repeating and emphasizing: While home prices are getting hammered everywhere, they are falling fastest in neighborhoods located the farthest jobs. Long commutes are a killer. This comes from National Public Radio:

    Economists say home prices are nowhere near hitting bottom. But even in regions that have taken a beating, some neighborhoods remain practically unscathed. And a pattern is emerging as to which neighborhoods those are.

    The ones with short commutes are faring better than places with long drives into the city. Some analysts see a pause in what has long been inexorable โ€” urban sprawl.

    The Washington, D.C., metropolitan area has been hit hard. Prices tumbled an average of 11 percent in the past year. That’s the big picture. But a look at Ashburn, Va., about 40 miles from the center of town, finds a steeper fall.

    In parts of the county, housing prices have dropped 18 percent over that same period. New construction has ground to a halt.

    Realtor Danilo Bogdanovic surveyed two rows of neat, new, brick townhouses on Falkner’s Lane. “These were selling for about $550,000 at the peak, which was about August ’05, and they’re selling right now for about $350,000,” Bogdanovic said. “Fifty percent of this community has been ether foreclosed on or is facing foreclosure.”

    For residents who work in the city, their commute is around an hour on trouble-free days. But that can extend upward toward two hours.


  • Big Bucks Flowing into Virginia Wind Power

    Dominion has joined with BP Alternative Energy North America Inc. to jointly develop, own and operate wind energy projects in Virginia. In a prepared statement, Dominion CEO Thomas F. Farrell II said:

    Todayโ€™s announcement is another important step in continuing to grow Dominionโ€™s portfolio of renewable energy projects โ€“ which include more than 750 megawatts of wind in operation or under development โ€“ to help provide for our customersโ€™ growing electricity needs. We are committed to meeting Virginiaโ€™s goal of 12 percent of base-year electricity sales from renewable energy sources by 2022. We also plan to achieve North Carolinaโ€™s goal of 12.5 percent from renewable energy sources and energy efficiency by 2021.

    I’m all in favor of wind power and other alternate energy sources. But I also think it’s important to know how the cost of these fuel sources compare to the alternatives, such as “clean” coal (assuming it’s possible to make coal a “clean” fuel), nuclear, natural gas or…. conservation. Notably missing in Dominion’s press release is any estimate of how much the wind power is expected to cost per kilowatt hour. The public can’t make intelligent trade-offs without such knowledge.

    I think we’ll find that Dominion is perfectly happy to develop wind power and other alternate energy sources. As long as the State Corporation Commission allows the company to charge electricity rates that generate a competitive return on investment, why should the utility care how much it costs? Even better, if the electricity comes from an energy source favored by environmentalists, the company is less likely to encounter the kinds of protests and resistance that it has experienced with its proposed coal plant in Wise.


  • Kaine’s Environmental Credentials Wearing Very Thin, Very Fast

    In a recent column, “The Kaine Mutiny,” Peter Galuszka argued that Gov. Timothy M. Kaine is losing friends in the environmental movement. And that was before the latest news regarding amendments Kaine tried to tack on to important energy legislation. As The Winchester Star tells the story, the governor comes across as a wholly owned subsidiary of Dominion Virginia Power:

    The state Senate has quashed Gov. Timothy M. Kaineโ€™s legislative amendments that would have virtually assured the approval of a proposed 500-kilovolt power line through Frederick County and into Loudoun County.

    The 39-0 vote in Richmond on Wednesday stymies an effort essentially to force Virginiaโ€™s State Corporation Commission to approve the power line, a joint project from Allegheny Energyโ€™s Trans-Allegheny Interstate Line Co. and Dominion Virginia Power. [Kaine later requested to pull the amendments when it became clear they would not pass.]

    The proposed amendments would have changed a bill submitted by Sen. Thomas K. Norment Jr., R-Williamsburg. Among the proposed changes was the removal of a line noting that Virginia would have a state goal of reducing retail customersโ€™ consumption of electrical energy through the implementation of cost-efficiency programs by an amount equal to 10 percent of the amount of electricity used by retail customers in 2006.

    Update: There’s more to this story, and it puts Gov. Kaine in a better light as a defender of the environment. This comes from the Virginia League of Conservation Voters:

    While the Governor’s effort to incorporate goals for reducing the growth rate of energy demand by 40% consistent with the State Energy Plan may have been his primary objective, other language in the amendment to SB 596 could have interfered with the Northern Virginia Transmission Line case currently pending before the State Corporation Commission (SCC). The SCC would have been limited to reviewing only conservation or energy efficiency evidence provided by the utility company, regardless of the other efficiency programs implemented in the Commonwealth. This change could have prejudiced pending and future applications in favor of the utilities. After sharing our concerns with legislators and the Administration, the Governor removed support for the amendment and it was defeated in the Senate.


  • 4th Installment on Supercapitalism

    The transformation from the Industrial Era to the Information Era changes everything. It doesnโ€™t eliminate everything, but it transforms everything. Because technology permeates every aspect of a society. Technology touches all.

    Starting in earnest in the 1980s the technology driven changes hit sector by sector of the economy. Increases in productivity โ€“ and the tax cuts (not the tax increases as Reich says in Supercapitalism) created new capital. So much that in the late 90s the Clinton administration crowed that the old business cycle of standard economics โ€“ expansion and contraction โ€“ was over. Then, came the dot com bubble burst. And 9-11. And first two U.S.-initiated campaigns in a long, long World War.

    In previous installments weโ€™ve discussed the impact in the changed job and income market for America and Virginia and some structural answers. At least two issues remain: How to deal with the fundamental changes in businesses or โ€œWhat to do about Walmart?โ€ and what about the concentration of wealth in businesses and persons in a representative democracy? Consider Robert Reichโ€™s findings.

    Big box businesses have wiped out main street small businesses. Family run stores have been eliminated by Walmart. Communities are lost when the Mom and Pop stores go away. Walmart doesnโ€™t provide health benefits and pushes wages to the lowest levels possible. And, across the board there is no economic security in a lifelong job โ€“ outside the U.S. Congress. Moving jobs overseas also leads to environmental degradation and violations of human rights.

    • Big boxes arenโ€™t the problem. Iโ€™ve read the analysis, but didnโ€™t keep the numbers, on small towns and Walmart. The number of people who lost income vs the number of people who have more money because they could buy cheaper products was astounding. It would make the utilitarian David Hume proud. The greater capital that stayed in the local economy creates jobs. It proliferates the big boxes from Walmart to the Lowes or HD, Bed Bath and Beyond (female equivalent of a hardware store), box book store, chain restaurants, etc. etc. The big boxes create jobs.

    One may not like the homogenized look of the nation โ€“ and I see it as I travel on business. The boxes arenโ€™t evil economic death stars. They will come and go and evolve. Like Target, etc..

    The Waltons of Arkansas and Bill Gates make good boogey-men, but they arenโ€™t the problem. If We, The People, do more to create and recycle capital in Virginia then we all will benefit. Capital, even capital kept in local economies by big boxes produces Mom and Pop businesses to provide services cut trees, do yards, clean houses, care for kids or pets, detail cars, build pools, clean pools, change gutters, etc.

    • Production matters. Virginiaโ€™s proximity to DC and a natural port provide the Federal funds that wonโ€™t stop until the U.S. surrenders as a Super Power or our economy collapses after a comet strike. The Feds will dump capital because for the time foreseeable DC is New Rome. Agribusiness, The Bay, forestry, and mining remain vital to our economy. Virginia needs to make sure we donโ€™t kill those golden geese.

    Cutting corporate taxes to zero (with the possible exception for corporate bad behavior as defined in earlier posts) and reducing personal taxes will help small businesses and large corporations make stuff in Virginia.

    Before we go to the last installment on what the transformation means politically, letโ€™s consider a basic paradigm of government and business in a mixed economy.

    Our governments have checks and balances at every level. They work imperfectly, but they are a constraint against the corruption that power brings. Our government is organized for imperfect humans.

    Business doesnโ€™t have a check or balance other than the market โ€“ and when government intervenes. Business is organized for efficiency. There is no brake on the abuse that power brings.

    Except unions and shareholders can provide a brake. Itโ€™s most effective to use market forces to change business behaviors.

    Next: Transformed and transformed politics in the new economy.


  • Living with Higher Sea Levels

    OK, folks, here’s the map you all wanted to see: What happens to Virginia’s Tidewater under a doomsday global warming scenario, a three-meter rise in sea levels? Answer: About 1/3 of of south Hampton Roads slips under the waves. (Click on map to view a larger, more legible image.)

    Not shown on the map: When Pat Robertson dies and there’s no one left to avert the hurricanes through prayer… Hurricane storm surges swallow up even more.

    The map is a stark reminder that, after New Orleans, Hampton Roads is the major metropolitan area in the United States most vulnerable to a direct hit by a hurricane.

    (The map appears on page 17 of a presentation, “Impacts of Climate Change on Coastal Virginia and the Chesapeake Bay,” by James E. Bauer, a professor at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, to the Governor’s Commission on Climate Change.)

    A couple of caveats: This graphic shows what will be covered at high tide under a full moon. And it assumes that sea levels rise three meters. The Governor’s Commission has stated previously that sea levels are expected to rise about three feet by the end of the century. On the other hand, combine a three-fee rise in sea levels with a six-foot hurricane storm surge (hurricane storm tides can raise water levels 15 feet or more), and you’ve got the scenario displayed in the map.

    This, it strikes me, is the No. 1 issue that the Climate Change Commission needs to grapple with. If sea levels rise, as many fear they will, the impact will be catastrophic for billions of dollars of development in Hampton Roads. As a believer in free markets, I think people should be free to build where they want, no matter how short-sighted and stupid their decision. But I will get up in arms if, after their stupidity is made manifest, they come whining to the government for relief.

    Three key points regarding public policy:

    First, Virginia needs to ensure that insurance companies are allowed to charge flood insurance rates commensurate with the risks of building in flood-prone coastal areas. Further, if a hurricane hits and homeowners are underinsured, legislators should not rescue them from their folly by forcing insurance companies to pay for flood damage homeowners never insured for, as some politicians tried to do in Mississippi after hurricane Katrina. Virginia needs to send a message of unmistakable clarity: If you choose to live in coastal areas vulnerable to rising sea levels and storm surges, you’re on your own!

    Question: Is anyone from the insurance industry scheduled to address the commission?

    Second, Virginia and Hampton Roads municipalities need to consider very carefully where they are willing to build public infrastructure. While citizens should be free to make stupid, short-sighted decisions on their own nickel, the saner segment of the electorate should insist that governments take a longer-term view.

    The Virginia Department of Transportation needs to review all of its plans for road and highway improvements in affected areas and ascertain the likelihood that they could be submerged by rising sea levels. If the roads are at risk, do not build them! Municipalities need to review plans for water/sewer lines, locally funded roads, and other public infrastructure. Developers need to be told: You can build there, but don’t expect us to pay for the infrastructure. You’re on your own.

    Third, we learned from hurricane Katrina the critical importance of wetlands in buffering populated areas from storm surges. As part of this study, the Climate Change Commission needs to explore the condition of Virginia wetlands and what, as a practical matter, can be done to preserve them.


  • How Global Warming Could Hit Home: The Virginia Impact

    The Governor’s Commission on Climate Change dug into some meaty material yesterday, exploring what would happen to Virginia if commonly accepted scenarios for rising temperatures and sea levels pan out. Bill Geroux with the Times-Dispatch hits the highlights of the meeting, held in Williamsburg, but lacked either the time or news hole to recount much of the rich detail in the presentations. (Incredibly, it appears that neither the Daily Press nor the Virginian-Pilot covered the meeting in their own back yard — if they did, I can’t find their stories online.)

    I will try to explore a couple of topics in more depth in later posts, based on the presentations found on the Governor’s Commission on Climate Change website. But don’t just accept my spin on the story. Peruse the documents yourself.

    • Ecosystems and Living Resources (PDF), J. Emmett Duffy, Ph.D., Loretta and Lewis Glucksman Professor of Marine Science, Virginia Institute of Marine Science

    For those interested in the impact of climate change on Virginia, I would particularly recommend the first three presentations (with highlighted links).

    Reader alert: I reiterate my skepticism regarding the more hysterical, worst-case scenarios of global warming. The science of climate change still has many unknowns, and there is a livelier debate and more uncertainty within the scientific community than portrayed by the major media outlets. However, I do not subscribe to the Rush Limbaugh, global-warming-is- a-liberal-fraud worldview. Sufficient scientific evidence has accumulated to suggest that there is a significant risk of higher temperatures and rising sea levels. Given the potential magnitude of the consequences, as long as a risk exists, it is incumbent upon policy makers to evaluate that risk and appraise the potential impact on Virginia.


  • What Should Be the Separation of Schools and Politics

    Today is Earth Day. Friday is the Day of Silence. Both are celebrated, acknowledged, taught โ€“ what is the right verb? โ€“ in Virginia public schools. What are the public policy issues for politics in schools? Set aside support or opposition to Environmentalism as theology or the Homosexual political agenda.

    Consider who decides what โ€“ and who should decide and how โ€“ for the Day of Silence in Virginia on April 25th.

    The Concerned Women of America report โ€œThe “Day of Silence” (DOS) is organized by the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network (GLSEN), one of the most militant and well-funded of the powerful homosexual pressure groups. DOS purports to confront the alleged systematic harassment and bullying of children who self-identify as homosexual, bisexual or “transgender.โ€

    During DOS, children and teachers are encouraged to disrupt the school day by refusing to speak, in a show of support to self-described “gay,” “lesbian,” “bisexual” and “transgender” students. Kids are additionally taught that Biblical truth, which holds that human sexuality is a gift from God shared between husband (male) and wife (female) within the bonds of marriage, is “homophobic,” “hateful” and “discriminatory.โ€โ€

    Who approves the Day of Silence in Virginiaโ€™s Public Schools? The school board, superintendent, principal, or any teacher?

    What is the recourse for any student or parent who objects to the DOS?

    How do they decide – which political groups for what events – are recognized in public schools?

    Who is in and who is out of access to public schools?

    Interesting to see the list of high schools which will recognize DOS. I see in my area that only JCC/Williamsburg is supporting DOS officially. I wonder who is doing what โ€“ unofficially?

    APPOMATTOX REGIONAL GOV SCHOOL
    BROAD RUN HIGH SCHOOL
    CENTREVILLE HIGH SCHOOL
    CLOVER HILL HIGH SCHOOL
    EDISON HIGH SCHOOL
    FAIRFAX HIGH SCHOOL
    FALLS CHURCH HIGH
    FLINT HILL SCHOOL
    GALILEO MAGNET HIGH SCHOOL
    HAMPTON ROADS ACADEMY
    HAYFIELD SECONDARY SCHOOL
    HERNDON HIGH SCHOOL
    JAMES RIVER HIGH SCHOOL
    JAMESTOWN HIGH SCHOOL
    JOHN HANDLEY HIGH SCHOOL
    LAFAYETTE HIGH SCHOOL
    LAKE BRADDOCK SECONDARY
    LANGLEY HIGH SCHOOL
    MADISON HIGH SCHOOL
    MAGGIE L. WALKER GOV SCHOOL
    MARSHALL HIGH SCHOOL
    MCLEAN HIGH SCHOOL
    MEADOWBROOK HIGH SCHOOL
    MONTICELLO HIGH SCHOOL
    OAKTON HIGH SCHOOL
    POTOMAC HIGH SCHOOL
    ROBINSON SECONDARY
    ROBIOUS MIDDLE SCHOOL
    SCIENCE & TECH CENTER
    ST CATHERINES SCHOOL
    ST STEPHEN’S & ST AGNES SCHOOL
    STUART HIGH SCHOOL
    T. C. WILLIAMS HIGH SCHOOL
    THOMAS JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL
    WAKEFIELD HIGH SCHOOL
    WASHINGTON LEE HIGH SCHOOL
    WEST POTOMAC HIGH SCHOOL
    WEST SPRINGFIELD HIGH SCHOOL
    WESTERN ALBEMARLE HIGH SCHOOL
    WESTFIELD HIGH SCHOOL
    WOODBRIDGE HIGH SCHOOL
    YORKTOWN HIGH SCHOOL

    Update: Here’s another interesting case study. The Virginia Gazette reports:

    An evangelical Christian group is challenging [Williamsburg-James City County] Schools in federal court to get equal access for religious-themed Good News clubs. …

    Child Evangelism Fellowship, a non-profit founded in 1937, sponsors Good News clubs after school in public school buildings. … Tom Boor, the local coordinator for the Christian clubs, began applying to use school facilities in 2006 but was ignored for more than a year, according to Staver. Liberty Counsel sent a letter to the division in March 2007 expressing concern over the lack of response and the possibility that they were being denied for discriminatory reasons.

    He said WJC Schools responded in August by saying that the clubs could use school facilities, but at a cost ranging $12.50-$25 per hour, while other groups like the Boy Scouts were allowed to use the facilities for free.


  • Time for “Pay As You Drive” Insurance

    Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner, authors of of the best-seller “Freakonomics,” have applied economic reasoning to all manner of social and public policy issues, from crime to drugs, parenting to sumo wrestling. Now they have turned their sights upon transportation.

    “Americans drive too much,” Levitt and Dubner proclaim on their blog. “This isnโ€™t a political or moral argument; itโ€™s an economic one.”

    The cost to motorists of driving does not incorporate significant externalities, such as traffic congestion, carbon emissions and traffic accidents. While Global Warming and greenhouses gases get all the attention these days, the social cost of CO2 emissions amounts to a modest $20 billion yearly in the United States, the authors say. Congestion costs significantly more: $78 billion a year. But the biggy is traffic accidents, which runs up the tab by $220 billion a year.

    The authors are big fans of congestion tolls, which allocate scarce roadway capacity, as well as the gasoline tax. (Gee, they sound just like Bacon’s Rebellion!) But they acknowledge that “political hysterics” are not conducive to either solution. But there may be a way to rationally allocate the costs of driving by reforming the market for automobile insurance, Levitt and Dubner suggest.

    While some insurance companies do offer a small discount for driving less โ€” usually based on self-reporting, which has an obvious shortcoming โ€” U.S. auto insurance is generally an all-you-can-eat affair. Which means that the 27,000 more miles than Zelda that Arthur drives donโ€™t cost him a penny, even as each mile produces externalities for everyone. It also means that low-mileage drivers like Zelda subsidize high-mileage drivers like Arthur.

    Crediting other economists for the idea, Levitt and Dubner advocate “Pay As You Drive” insurance: All other things being equal, the more miles you drive, the greater risk you have of getting into an accident, and the more insurance you should pay.

    PAYD insurance programs are entering the marketplace but it is too early to determine if insurance companies like Progressive Insurance will make money. If all they do is give discounts to their own low-mileage customers while their high-mileage customers seek cheaper insurance elsewhere, they’ll lose business. On the other hand, such policies may succeed in luring low-mileage customers from other insurers. Society has a vested interest in seeing PAYD succeed. Write Levitt and Dubner:

    If Progressiveโ€™s PAYD insurance can induce some of its high-mileage customers to drive less and especially to drive more safely, resulting in smaller claims payouts for Progressive and fewer negative externalities for everyone, then it could truly be a win-win-win situation.

    Insurance is regulated by state government. The General Assembly should take the lead in studying the feasibility of introducing PAYD insurance in Virginia. Politically, PAYD should be less controversial than tolls and gasoline taxes — it’s hard to make the argument with a straight face that people who drive more shouldn’t also pay more insurance — so we can hope that legislators might be willing to tackle it.

    All things considered, PAYD is one of the best ideas I’ve heard in a long time. (Hat tip to Jonathan Mallard for pointing me to the Freakonomics blog.)


  • Revving up “Pentagon South”

    It looks like Hampton Roads is moving towards an “Economy 4.0” paradigm: mobilizing resources to build its defense-industry cluster rather than opportunistically chasing any old business-relocation opportunity that comes down the pike. The Hampton Roads Technology Council and the Defense & Homeland Security Consortium have launched an initiative to promote the region as “Pentagon South.”

    Outside of Northern Virginia (and possibly Southern California), Hampton Roads is home to the largest defense-industry cluster in the United States. Hampton Roads is the largest center for military shipbuilding and repair in the country (which makes it the largest in the world). Outside the shipbuilding sector, however, most private-sector defense businesses once consisted mainly of field offices serving local military clients. But the size and scope of defense-related business have grown steadily over the years to encompass “systems integration, analysis, innovation, solutions and services across multiple disciplines.”

    Illustrative of the “new” defense sector in Hampton Roads is the up-and-coming modeling & simulation cluster in Suffolk, the ultimate in sophisticated information technology.

    The Pentagon South initiative combines a number of components: (a) provide necessary training and workforce development, (b) create networking opportunities for businesses in the sector, and (c) to brand the region nationally and internationally. (Read the list of goals here.)

    This initiative makes sense. Not only does Hampton Roads have a strong military presence and defense-industry cluster to build upon, it enjoys a significantly lower cost of doing business and lower cost of living than competing defense-heavy regions. Equally important, Pentagon South organizers are attentive to the “soft infrastructure” needed to support a growing industry. The preliminary indications are very positive.