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« There Goes My VRWC Membership Card | Main | Team of Rivals » December 02, 2006Hidden CostsArmy personnel are all-too-familiar with the plight of the red-cockaded woodpecker. An endangered species, the woodpecker has an affinity for military posts, which often have large tracts of woodland. Since they're endangered, the Army marks all trees that contain a woodpecker next, and heaven help anyone who gets within 50-100 meters of a nest. It can put a dent in training, but the Army doesn't fool around when it comes to the environment. Outside the military environs, however, people have a few other options for dealing with endangered species. And in the town of Boiling Spring Lake, North Carolina, residents have chosen an interesting method: clear-cutting every pine tree in the area to ensure their property values aren't harmed. Very few people would agree with the idea that businesses ought to be able to inflict the costs of their negative externalities on others. If I were to make, say, Thneeds by cutting down Truffula trees and starving the Brown Bar-ba-loots, it would be inappropriate for me to receive all the profits for my Thneeds while the local community had to bear all the costs of missing Truffula fruits, starving Brown Bar-ba-loots, Swomee-Swans who can't sing because of all the smoke from the Thneed factory, and so on. Because I created those costs, by rights I ought to pay for them. Yet this is precisely what we do with environmental issues under current laws. While I can't condone property owners acting in such a way as to further endanger the woodpecker, I can certainly understand their feelings. If a red-cockaded woodpecker is found on their property, their property values will drop into the sewer, as few people will want to buy a property where they will face onerous restrictions on what they can and cannot do in order to protect the woodpeckers. But if we as a people agree that we want to preserve species like the woodpecker, why should only the people who have the misfortune to have a woodpecker on their property pay the costs of preserving it? Of course, there's a very good reason why we inflict these costs on the few rather than agreeing to pay for the costs collectively: if the government were forced to pay for those costs rather than simply using government power to force the unlucky few to pay, there would be less agreement on environmental protection. Sure, we might still agree on protecting photogenic species like the red cockaded woodpecker or national symbols like the bald eagle, but there would probably be a lot more objection to protecting fish or insects. So we hide the costs, except for those people whose luck allows them to own property that is devalued. It may be effective, but it's not honest. Posted at December 2, 2006 05:05 PM
Comment policyI apologize for only allowing authenticated commenters, but comment spam overwhelms the site if I don't use those measures to prevent it. I reserve the right to delete any comment, although generally comments will only be deleted due to use of profanity or personal attacks on people. I have no objection to vigorous argument, but when name-calling begins, I'm putting a stop to it. In the immortal words of Eugene Levy, "People, people, let's stop this before somebody says something untrue!" If you want to call people names, I recommend you get your own blog. Trackback PingsTrackBack URL for this entry: CommentsBut if we as a people agree that we want to preserve species like the woodpecker, why should only the people who have the misfortune to have a woodpecker on their property pay the costs of preserving it? You are right, but unfortunately, we as a people do not broadly agree that we should be preserving such species (I think that there is tepid majority support for the idea, but fierce minority opposition which is a guarantee for inaction). We are therefore left with a set of environmental laws that work very haphazardly since there is no clear consensus on how to rewrite it to make it better. The notion that species protection also allows habitat protection was itself a heavily fought legal issue that the Supreme Court had to resolve in 1995, BABBITT v. SWEET HOME CHAP. The concept is not explicitly laid out in the statutes. Those that oppose these environmental laws probably prefer that the laws remain haphazard, rather than agreeing to some form of reasonable modification, since their goal is to scuttle it outright. Nothing helps their political cause more than forcing people to continue to endure haphazard laws, therefore undermining support for the concept in general. Posted by: dmbeaster Post a commentThanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out) (If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.) |