Environmental
regulations can protect the economy and human health. It's also possible to
grow smart and be profitable.
By
FRANK CARINI/ecoRI News staff
Misquamicut Beach in Westerly, R.I., was hit hard by Hurricane Sandy in 2012, but of the 29 waterfront properties damaged, only five were built to better withstand climate change. (istock) |
Leading
up to last year’s midterm elections, the two-word phrase “economic growth”
flowed freely from the mouths of incumbents and candidates alike. Talk of job
creation easily trumped all other issues combined.
Now,
some six months since Nov. 4, those words continue to echo in the hallways and
chambers of southern New England’s three statehouses. To deliver on their
campaign promises to create more jobs, lawmakers in Connecticut, Massachusetts
and Rhode Island have inevitably focused on building more of the same.
In
February, when Gov. Gina Raimondo announced her six nominees to the I-195
Redevelopment Commission, she said it was the first step in
advancing efforts to revitalize vacant land in Providence. “We’re focused on
expanding opportunity and creating jobs for Rhode Island families, and the 195
land can be a key lever to attract businesses and boost economic growth,”
Raimondo said.
Not
surprisingly, the combined experience of Raimondo’s six nominees was
real-estate rich. Pleased that Rhode Island’s new governor made these
commission appointments a priority, Senate President M. Teresa Paiva Weed,
D-Newport, said, “The redevelopment of the former I-195 land is a major
opportunity to help reinvigorate Rhode Island’s economy.”
House
Speaker Nicholas Mattiello, D-Cranston, added, “This valuable land has the
potential for great job growth and economic development activity, and we must
work collaboratively to turn these opportunities into reality in the near
future.”
“We
need to catalyze Rhode Island’s economy by capitalizing upon resources such as
the developable land where I-195 once stood,” Commerce Secretary Stefan Pryor
said.
It
seems that the nearly 20 acres unlocked by the relocation of a section of
Interstate 195 is being viewed by lawmakers as the panacea to Rhode Island’s
economic woes. This chunk of freed-up land separated by the Providence River
certainly presents the city and the state with opportunity. In fact, many
people and interests, in state and out, are eager to see how this newfound
space will be used.
Will
those in power continue to drive us down the well-traveled, bumpy road of
economic development that delivered us the 38 Studios debacle, a $35 million
budget deficit and a long run of double-digit unemployment rates, or will we
change lanes and embrace an economic shift that accounts for sustainability and
environmental health?
One
of the development ideas for the I-195 land is from a Dallas-based developer
seeking to build privatized student housing. Not exactly a job sustainer once
built, and certainly not a fresh economic idea.
Another
old-school idea has the new Pawtucket Red Sox ownership group moving the team
to Providence and reportedly asking the state for $120 million to build a new
stadium on I-195 land, some 7 miles from historic and well-attended McCoy
Stadium. The average attendance at PawSox games during the past five seasons
was 7,872 fans a game, and it was only a decade ago that, with a paid
attendance of 688,421, the 2005 PawSox ranked fourth among all minor-league
teams in any sport in North America.
How
Rhode Island decides to use the I-195 land will go a long way in shaping the
future of the state, and perhaps even the region. Instead of continuing to bank
on exaggerated economic promises — i.e., Curt Schilling’s short-lived
video-game company that falsely promised to create 450 local jobs — and the
lure of endless development, perhaps these 20 acres will help change Rhode
Island and southern New England’s economic paradigm.
Natural value
The
worldwide economic model and national accounting have long ignored the benefits
that nature provides. The popular economic development model, at least to those
in many boardrooms, that overuses and misuses natural resources is
unsustainable and ignores the inherent value of a healthy environment.
There’s
a debate going on in Rhode Island now about sacrificing some of the land that
helps protect the state’s 71,000 acres of freshwater and coastal wetlands to
development wants.
The
illusion that we can continue to build our way out of an economic downturn at
the expense of the environment persists. Timothy Stasiunas of the Rhode Island
Builders Association testified before a Senate committee in late March that new
development standards would allow the construction industry to lead the state
out of recession.
The
hearing was for a bill that would
create a new statewide standard for building closer to wetlands. Developers
basically told the Senate Committee on the Environment and Agriculture that it
takes too long to get approval, and there is too much paperwork.
“This
type of scenario has contributed to the lost decade ... that has plagued our
economy for years, if not decades,” Stasiunas said.
In
Rhode Island, since the early 1980s, development has sharply outpaced
population growth.
Nature,
at no charge, provides drinkable water (wetlands purify it), breathable air
(ocean microbes produce half the oxygen we breathe), healthy food (pollinators
deliver us fruits, nuts and vegetables) and natural waste treatment (worms turn
waste into soil). Environmental regulations designed to protect these ecosystem
services, which are substantially more valuable to society than, say, subprime
mortgages and derivatives, are often viewed as an impediment to economic
development.
Plenty
of research, however, suggests placing sustainability ahead of profitability
won’t stymie the economy or kill jobs. In fact, protecting the environment and
investing in healthy ecosystems has the duel benefit of sustaining the economy
and protecting public health.
“Without
full valuation of less-tangible natural benefits from ecosystems, use will
remain unsustainable and degradation inevitable, leading to the potential
collapse of important ecosystem functions and services. It is increasingly
evident that there is a need to develop an economic model that accurately
reflects benefits to people from the environment and the costs associated with
ecosystem degradation,” according to a 2010 United Nations Environment
Programme policy brief.
“Getting this right will help move us toward sustainability.”
“Getting this right will help move us toward sustainability.”
But
a powerful cabal of politicians and special interests continues to argue that environmental
regulations are too expensive and hinder the economy. For years, many
mainstream economists have dismissed the claims of “limits to growth,"
arguing that regulation can impact workers by, for example, forcing businesses
to close or relocate to places with weaker regulations.
Justin
Katz, research director for the Rhode Island Center for Freedom
& Prosperity, which has a mission to “return government to the
people by opposing special interest public policy and advancing proven
free-market solutions,” said restrictions, such as environmental regulations,
minimum-wage mandates and the Affordable Care Act, represent huge costs and
place burdens on businesses, especially small-business owners.
He
said Rhode Island’s renewable-energy mandates are particularly egregious. Katz
also said the state should implement a moratorium on all new environmental
regulations and purge the system of unnecessary restrictions that put an undue
burden on economic development.
“People
want to live in a nice place,” said Katz, noting that environmental regulations
can cause abuses of the free-market system.
The
R.I. Center for Freedom & Prosperity has been one of most vocal opponents
of the RhodeMap RI initiative, which was
established to create long-term objectives for housing, land use,
transportation and economic development.
The
idea is to make the nation’s second-most densely populated state more walkable,
bikeable, and less centered on cars and sprawl. In rural areas, the concept
aims to preserve local character and open space. Zoning changes would
allow for combined development and would help protect land for recreation and
agriculture.
Basically,
the idea is to stop construction that stresses natural resources and consumes
swaths of open space.
Opponents,
such as Rep. Brian Newberry, R-North Smithfield, are concerned the
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development could forcibly require
municipalities and/or property owners to forfeit their property rights. It's a
great example of the type of baseless fear-mongering that now dominates political
leadership.
However,
the very real possibility of actual land-taking, by a non-federal government
entity, has elicited barely a whisper from the Statehouse. Houston-based
Spectra Energy has said it might have to take some land in Tiverton, Little Compton
and/or Burrillville temporarily or perhaps permanently during the
construction and expansion of a natural-gas pipeline.
There
has been little to no outcry from the General Assembly about an out-of-state,
for-profit company taking local land to, in essence, increase climate-changing
greenhouse-gas emissions. The energy company is granted the power of eminent
domain through a 77-year-old law, the Natural Gas Act of 1938.
Spectra has since scrapped plans to take land in Tiverton and Little Compton,
but the possibility still exists in Burrillville.
Mike
Stenhouse, founder of the R.I. Center for Freedom & Prosperity, has called
the RhodeMap RI initiative another affordable-housing mandate. Mike Puyana of
the Rhode Island Tea Party has claimed there is deep concern, particularly
among those living in rural areas, that this proposed template for state
planning and economic development will strip away municipal authority in those
communities.
In
2013, opponents — mostly rural municipalities and environmentalists — of Rhode
Island’s controversial “slopes” bill made
essentially the same argument. The General Assembly passed and then-Gov.
Lincoln Chafee signed the development-friendly bill into law.
A
related bill that would
make Rhode Island more accommodating to development by allowing building closer
to wetlands has the support of the construction industry. The proposed zoning change would
allow construction closer to wetlands in six Rhode Island communities and shift
much of the jurisdiction over granting exemptions to the state.
Concern
about striping away municipal authority hasn’t been broached regarding this
bill. The hypocrisy would be laughable if it wasn't so shortsighted and damaging.
Unchecked
and under-regulated economic growth does a poor job of protecting the
environment and public health. If it had, taxpayers wouldn’t be helping to fund
the remediation of brownfields — Rhode Island alone has some 1,800 — and
nonprofits wouldn’t be helping to restore waterways
polluted by the likes of General Electric.
The
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the state of Massachusetts wouldn’t
have had to reach a settlement with four of the parties largely responsible for
the contamination of New Bedford Harbor,
which has some of highest concentrations of PCBs in a Superfund marine
environment.
Society
wouldn’t still be paying for the health impacts of lead poisoning. In the early
1920s, the dangers of leaded gasoline were already known, but major oil
companies were allowed to use the technology anyway. Five decades later, only
after environmental hazards became overwhelmingly apparent, the EPA announced a
scheduled phase-out.
DuPont
made a huge profit selling lead paint before it was eventually banned, and the
multinational has since been accused of misleading consumers about the dangers
of lead-based paint. In 2010, DuPont was named a top-20 polluter,
dumping 5.3 million pounds of toxic chemicals into waterways.
“Humans
don’t always take very good care of natural resources,” Sara N. da Silva
Quintal, restoration ecologist for the Buzzards Bay Coalition, said during a
late-March forum held at the New Bedford Whaling Museum entitled “Restoring
Rivers and Estuaries, Native Fish and Shellfish.”
She
spoke specifically about the coalition's Acushnet River restoration
project, and how, through dam removal, riverbank restoration and
invasive plant management, the river's herring population has increased
dramatically. She also detailed how a derelict lumber yard and abandoned
industrial complex have been transformed into a 19-acre park that will open to
the public this summer.
Evaluating
the economic cost of regulation can be tricky, though, as there have been few
studies that have examined the issue in depth after regulations have been
imposed. Some economists have claimed that various regulations designed to
protect the environment, such as the federal Clean Air Act, have resulted in
far lower costs and job losses than initially feared.
Reams
of research, however, show that environmental regulations reduce infant mortality,
decrease hospitalizations and increase real-estate values.
Healthy
ecosystems, and the biodiversity that thrives within them, protect water, soil
and air quality, ensure food security and provide flood protection. The
pressures of economic growth since the Industrial Revolution, however, have
stressed the health of vital ecosystems and cost U.S. taxpayers plenty, in the
form of Superfund cleanups, flood damage, and health-care costs associated with
lead poisoning and rising asthma rates.
Southern
New England, however, continues to view the economy and the environment as
separate issues. In her fiscal 2016 budget announced in March,
Gov. Raimondo said it was developed around three guiding principles: build,
attract, innovate.
On the take
Protection
of the environment and economic development are largely viewed as competing
aims, as if they are mutually exclusive and operate in a vacuum. Through that
dull prism, it’s easy to see why economic growth has been upstaging
environmental protection and public health for centuries.
Jesse
Rye, co-executive director of Farm Fresh Rhode Island,
calls this the “extractive economy.” “The take, take, taking of natural
resources,” he said.
About
a hundred acres of mostly undisturbed woodland in North Kingstown, R.I., was
cut down in 2011 to make space for prospective business tenants in the Quonset
Business Park.
This clear-cutting,
including the leveling of hundreds of mature trees, is part of a master plan to
make the business park more attractive to light industry and manufacturing.
Nearly
four years later, the once-wooded area sits vacant, treeless.
The
Roman Empire clear-cut forests for fuel and housing, which eventually forced it
to build its cities to take advantage of passive solar energy. In fact, this
pattern of woodland obliteration to fuel economic development left much of
England, France and Germany barren of forest by the early 1600s.
The
switch to coal and other fossil fuels began the pattern of profits over
protection. Chemical processing helped advance economic growth, but it also
negatively impacted public health.
Hydraulic
fracturing and tar-sands oil are now helping to fuel economic growth, while
their environmental and public-health impacts are largely ignored or dismissed.
It’s an-all-to-familiar pattern: shareholders profit, the environment suffers,
and the public pays.
Powering
our way of life comes with consequences — public-health concerns, social
injustices and environmental damages. But that doesn't mean we should frack
first and let others, after those who profited from the damage walk away, deal
with the fallout.
It doesn't mean we should continue mountaintop-removal mining at the expense of vital waterways and public health, especially when other energy alternatives are available.
It doesn't mean we should continue mountaintop-removal mining at the expense of vital waterways and public health, especially when other energy alternatives are available.
An
energy portfolio that actually encourages and supports the use of renewables
and a power grid that can better harness this energy would help lessen the
impact of mankind’s voracious appetite for power. But we continue to allow
those who profit from fossil fuels to have most of the power.
Despite
significant scientific evidence about the threats posed by increased
greenhouse-gas emissions and the impacts of a changing climate, such as
sea-level rise, many business groups and lawmakers continue to clamor for the
dismantling of laws designed to protect the environment and call for the
neutering of the EPA and state regulatory agencies.
The
energy industry fights to reclassify mine waste as “fill” so contaminated
material can be legally dumped into rivers and streams. Developers regularly
call for less restrictions on where they can build.
Driving
these efforts is the claim that four-plus decades of environmental regulations
have strangled the U.S. economy and undermined economic competitiveness.
Countless sets of facts and figures, however, tell a different story. In fact,
the political machine, special interests and the wealthy "job creators"
doing most of the current complaining have gained plenty since Richard Nixon
made protecting the environment a priority.
For
example, average compensation for the chief executive officers of the top 350
U.S. firms was $15.2 million in 2013, up 2.8 percent since 2012 and up 21.7
percent since 2010, according to the Economic Policy Institute (EPI).
Also,
according to EPI, from 1978 to 2013, CEO compensation, adjusted for inflation,
increased 937 percent — more than double stock-market growth and substantially
greater than the 10.2 percent growth in a typical worker’s compensation over
the same 35 years.
In
1965, five years before Nixon created the EPA, the CEO-to-worker compensation
ratio was 20 to 1, and by 1978 it was 29.9 to 1. In 2013, the ratio was 295.9
to 1, according to EPI.
Also,
according to the nonpartisan think tank, the number of U.S. congressional
districts in which trade with China has produced more jobs than it has cost is
one, out of 435.
At
the close of 1970, the year the EPA was created, the Dow Jones Industrial
Average was 838.92. Today, that key indicator of economic growth has grown more
than 20-fold despite increased measures to better protect the air we breathe,
the water we drink and the soil that grows our food.
In
the 1970s, the decade the EPA was created, the top 0.1 percent of the
wealthiest Americans held 7 percent of the nation’s wealth. Today, nearly five
decades after environmental protections were made a priority, the 100 wealthiest
U.S. families have as much wealth as the 80 million families who make up the
bottom 50 percent in wealth, according to a story in the March 29 Boston Sunday
Globe.
In
fact, since the United States began better protecting the environment and
public health, largely through regulation, corporate profits have soared.
In
a March 2014 Gallup Poll Social Series survey on the
environment, Americans said the environment is a priority over economic growth
by a 50-percent-to-41-percent margin. In the 30 years that Gallup has asked
this question, Americans have almost always chosen the environment over
economic growth as a priority.
It's
time the health of the planet and its many interconnected
inhabitants take precedence over greed and fabricated fear. But how
do we deconstruct a broken, centuries-old economic model? By thinking
differently and embracing change.
A vibrant environment supports a healthy economy. (David Smith/ecoRI News) |
Sustainable approach
The escalating demand being
placed on the planet’s natural resources by 7 billion and counting people — a
million more are added every four and a half days — has made it imperative that
we manage nature’s generosity better.
Sustainable
economic development turns the model of short-term profits over long-term
public and environmental health upside down. Protection of natural resources
and human health are the priority, with economic development approved as long
as it doesn’t degrade either of those preferences. If it does, the business
and/or industry is substantially taxed or fined.
Healthy
ecosystems are immensely valuable, because they are inextricably tied to human
survival. Healthy habitats also provide recreation, tourism and business
opportunities, such as bicycling, fishing, hiking, swimming, surfing, birding
and boating.
Rhode
Island’s wildlife populations generate about $130 million annually from
sportsmen (hunting), birdwatchers and other wildlife observers. The director of
the state Department of Environmental Management (DEM), Janet Coit, told those
who attended the Southern New England Recreational Fishing Symposium in late
March that the recreational fishing industry alone brings Rhode Island $200
million in revenue annually.
"This
industry is a real economic driver, and is growing its importance
economically," Coit said. "We need to be innovative and smart when it
comes to this ecosystem. We want our children and grandchildren to be able to
go fishing in the future."
Southern
New England's fisheries, however, are feeling the pressures of a changing
climate, global overfishing, and pollution from stormwater runoff, wastewater
discharges and the overuse of nitrogen-rich fertilizers.
Rhode
Island’s lobster fishery could disappear by the end of the next decade,
according to some projections. Overfishing alone doesn’t account for the local
decline in winter flounder; warming waters also have played a big part.
So
what is a protected environment worth? Many would likely argue that it’s
priceless, but in reality that question is rarely given much thought. In the
quest for economic growth, most accounting practices leave the environment
shortchanged.
Property
rights enable owners — and those who lease public land from state or federal
government — to produce goods (subsidized crops, oil, natural gas) and services
(cattle grazing) to sell, often for a considerable profit.
There
are, however, few property rights for natural resources such as water and air,
so they have been used — and often abused — for free as receptacles of the
waste created by economic growth. And since there is no market for maintaining
biodiversity, economic development decisions regarding, say, land use are
unlikely to account for the considerable public health and environmental
benefits that vibrant ecosystems provide.
Environmental
regulations are typically designed to prevent, reduce or at least better manage
abuses against the environment and public health.
The
management of pollution and waste from economic development has improved
significantly in the past century, thanks in large part to regulations that
require compliance and spur innovation. A century of regulations also has
improved working conditions and public health.
Gina
McCarthy, the nation’s top environmental official, has said environmental
protection is good for the economy and creates jobs. The EPA administrator has
repeatedly dismissed the claim that environmental regulations restrain economic
growth.
The
Boston native and former commissioner of the Connecticut Department of
Environmental Protection has cited stricter fuel-economy standards set in 2011
for auto manufacturers as an example, noting car makers responded by increasing
miles-per-gallon averages, which lowered carbon emissions and made their
products more attractive to consumers still dealing with the economic fallout
of 2007-08.
McCarthy
has cited statistics dating back to the early years of the EPA that demonstrate
environmental regulations and economic development can be achieved
simultaneously. Emissions of harmful air pollutants have dropped nearly 70
percent since 1970, according to McCarthy. In that time, national economic
growth has exceeded 200 percent.
Local investment
This
flipped-upside-down economic model would feature policies that call for
sustainable practices, reduced energy use, the efficient use of resources and a
fairer distribution of wealth, according to its advocates. They say a
sustainable economy focuses on eradicating poverty, educational empowerment and
environmental protection.
Four
of southern New England’s greatest economic assets are Narragansett Bay, Cape
Cod Bay, Buzzards Bay and Long Island Sound. Many industries, from fishing,
both commercial and recreational, to tourism, would suffer greatly if these
vital ecosystems were damaged.
Several
estimates suggest that the total value of the natural resources of the
Narragansett Bay watershed — about 60 percent of which is in Massachusetts
— exceeds several billion dollars annually, according to a 2003
University of Rhode Island study.
Some
12 million people visit Narragansett Bay annually to fish, swim, surf and sun.
Many of those visitors also shop and dine locally. In the late 1990s, the Ocean
State’s tourism industry was second only to health services in terms of total
wages, and 30 percent of that tourism was associated with amenity-based uses of
Narragansett Bay, according to a 2008 study funded by
the EPA.
Narragansett
Bay also is commercially important for the shellfish industry. An estimated 15
percent of Rhode Island’s total lobster landings are caught in the bay,
according to that 2008 report. In addition, the state’s quahog fishery is
contained mostly within Narragansett Bay, with an average value of about $7.5
million annually.
But
the environmental degradation of Narragansett Bay caused by the pursuit of
economic growth has lessened the economic value of this natural resource. For
example, eelgrass beds are a critical habitat for bay scallops, and
Narragansett Bay once supported a large bay scallop fishery. In 1880, more than
300,000 bushels of bay scallops were harvested from Narragansett Bay, a
quantity that would be worth some $33 million today, according to the EPA
study.
By
2003, however, bay scallop landings in Narragansett Bay were largely
nonexistent. The loss of this fishery can be traced to the loss of eelgrass
beds — wiped out by disease, pollution and coastal development. Recovery has
been slow.
In
fact, thanks in large part to the byproducts of economic growth, the Rhode
Island commercial fishery has been forced to move offshore. With the exception
of the quahog and small lobster fisheries, Narragansett Bay no longer supports
a major commercial fishery.
Recreational
fishing attracts some 300,000 anglers annually to the Ocean State and is a
major part of the state’s tourism industry. The historical abuse of the bay’s
watershed, though, now requires fish consumption advisories, which are issued
based on the level of contaminants detected in fish tissue. PCB advisories have
been in effect since the early 1990s; mercury advisories were first issued a
decade later.
“From the far western end of Long Island Sound
east to Narragansett Bay, twin scourges plague our region’s waters: bacterial
pollution and nitrogen poisoning,”
Curt Johnson, executive director of Save the Sound, said earlier this year when his organization and Providence-based Save The Bay submitted comments to the EPA regarding polluted stormwater runoff from Massachusetts. “The coastal waters where we swim, fish and boat provide huge environmental and economic benefits for our region, and we must join together to protect them.”
Curt Johnson, executive director of Save the Sound, said earlier this year when his organization and Providence-based Save The Bay submitted comments to the EPA regarding polluted stormwater runoff from Massachusetts. “The coastal waters where we swim, fish and boat provide huge environmental and economic benefits for our region, and we must join together to protect them.”
The
natural capital provided annually by the Long Island Sound basin, which
stretches to the northern tip of New Hampshire, is between $17 billion and $37
billion, according to a study released this year.
There
are some 135 industries, such as shellfish farming, wind power and nature
parks, that depend directly on the basin’s natural capital. The 84-page study entitled
“The Trillion Dollar Asset: Economic Valuation of the Long Island Sound Basin”
found that about $5.2 billion in direct wages and some 190,000 jobs depend on
the natural resources of Long Island Sound and its basin.
Cape
Cod Bay contributes a minimum of $1.5 billion a year to the region’s economy,
according to a 2012 study. The tourism and fishing industries
supported by the bay — designated as a state ocean sanctuary in 1970 — are
dependent on good water quality and the protection of coastal and marine
habitats.
In
surveys of tourists in coastal areas, 65 percent identified clean water and
clean beaches as the most important factors for an enjoyable vacation,
according to the 52-page report.
At
least 20 percent of visitors to Massachusetts visit Cape Cod and the Islands,
the second-most visited destination after Boston, according to a 2011 report by the Cape Cod Commission. The
report notes that the Cape’s myriad coastal ecosystems, especially its beaches
and water quality, are the foundation of the region’s tourism industry.
In
2009 alone, domestic tourists generated about $65 million in local tax receipts
for Barnstable and Plymouth counties, according to the U.S. Travel Association.
Besides
protecting these four natural and cultural assets from the byproducts of
economic development, environmental regulations also protect countless
businesses and jobs in southern New England.
In
fact, environmental protection is no less an industry than, say, the
manufacturing of costume jewelry. That industry dominated the 25-block Jewelry
District in Providence well into the 1980s, creating jobs — some 32,500 at its
peak in 1976 — and also polluting the Providence River with heavy metals and
toxins. Most of those jobs are long gone, and much of the pollution remains.
The
wetlands, forests, open space and estuaries within the Narragansett Bay, Cape
Cod Bay and Buzzards Bay watersheds and the Long Island Sound basin aren’t
fleeting investments, and they don’t depreciate in value like costume jewelry
and video games. Strategic and diversified investment in natural capital is a
sound risk-management strategy against climatic, social and economic
volatility, according to the authors of the Long Island Sound study.
To
create a sustainable economy in southern New England will require better use of
the region’s strengths — natural resources, aquaculture, intellectual capital,
innovation and locally sourced food. It certainly isn’t about quick fixes,
gambling on casinos, endless development and tax breaks for corporations that
hide their profits in overseas tax havens.
Providence
was named a top food city in 2012 by Travel + Leisure, and last year Boston was
named one of the 10 best foodie cities by Livability.com. There
are more than 50 aquaculture farms, with nearly 180 acres, in Rhode Island
alone. In 2013, the value of Rhode Island aquaculture products for consumption
was $4.2 million, an increase of 49 percent from the previous year, according
to a Coastal Resources Management Council (CRMC) study.
A
sustainable economy invests in maintaining its existing stock of natural and
human-built capital — not, in say, building a second minor-league baseball
stadium, complete with plenty of parking, that will create more stormwater
runoff within the Narragansett Bay watershed. Stormwater runoff is the largest
single source of pollution of U.S. bays and freshwater ecosystems.
Building a better economy
Building
a sustainable economy for southern New England means accounting for
climate-change impacts, investing in communities, and building local
partnerships and regional networks.
It
means making better use of the waterfronts in Fall River, New Bedford and
Providence. It means enforcing environmental regulations, and not allowing, for
example, a Providence scrap-metals recycler, which began operating without
proper permits in 2009, to pollute upper
Narragansett Bay for five years. The mess this illegal operation could
potentially leave behind could cost taxpayers millions to
clean.
It
means making the funding of public transportation a priority. It means better
maintaining public infrastructure. It means embracing ideas that better connect
the region’s many strengths, such as local food, the technology sector and the
outdoors.
In
fact, there are those who believe a more vibrant local food scene would make
the region more attractive to business professionals, students and tourists.
“People
want a high quality of life and food is s big part of that,” said Leo Pollock,
network coordinator for the Rhode Island Food Policy Council. “We already have
a strong food culture here, and there is momentum to build on.”
The
Providence resident also said jobs associated with greater production and
distribution of local food could be the region’s new “manufacturing” workforce.
“There’s
a lot of high-paying tech and medical jobs here, and they are important, but
local food could help support low- to middle-wage jobs — the base Rhode Island
lost when manufacturing left,” Pollock said. “That’s still an important job
base.”
In
the past few years, Wholesome Wave, a
Bridgeport, Conn.-based organization, has helped strengthen this sector by
coordinating some $4 million in investment in
local food infrastructure.
The
organization worked with Farm Fresh Rhode Island to secure a $100,000 loan with
a philanthropic guaranty in order to expand cooler space and support working
capital. With this additional space and money, Farm Fresh has increased sales
of local and regional foods, supporting farmer incomes and spurring local job
creation.
Wholesome
Wave helped Red’s Best, a Massachusetts-based “fish
hub” that buys catch from small New England boats, secure and structure a
multimillion-dollar line of credit that allowed the business to expand its
capacity, serve new markets and create new jobs.
The
organization also worked with the Dorchester Bay Development
Corporation to secure public-private financing for redeveloping
an old factory into a food enterprise hub. The building is being converted into
a commercial kitchen and food-processing facility managed by Crop Circle Kitchen, a nonprofit that
provides business development services and food-safe rental space to
Boston-based food businesses.
Lisa
Raiola, the founder and visionary behind Rhode Island’s new culinary
incubator, Hope & Main, has offered the idea using
some of Providence’s reclaimed I-195 land to build a vertical farm.
“It
would be model for all of New England,” she has said. “It would be an urban
living space with agriculture. It would attract funding and tourism. Everyone
would see it from the highway — a living-learning experiment that could be the
future of local food.”
David
Dadekian, founder of EatDrink RI and the recipient of a
$300,000 Rhode Island Foundation Innovation Fellowship last year, wants to create
a year-round marketplace in Providence that would be similar to Quincy Market
in Boston, Pike Place Market in Seattle or Reading Terminal Market in
Philadelphia.
Simply
encouraging and supporting the use of what already exists — like using the
region’s rooftops to grow more food, house aquaponic systems and capture more
rays — would make southern New England’s economy more sustainable.
“There’s
this mindset that we have to attract new things,” said Rye of Farm Fresh. “Why
can’t we focus on what we have here and make that stronger?"