By FRANK CARINI, News editor for
EcoRI
The Rhode Island Statehouse isn't
very friendly when it comes to the environment. Sure, the vast majority of
those who walk the building’s marbled corridors, the lobbyists who write bills
and the elected officials who approve them, like green, just not the shades
found in forests, wetlands and open space.
The government’s environmental
successes are largely accomplished by voters spurred on by nongovernmental
organizations.
For reasons financial, most of the work needed to ensure our air is clean, our water drinkable and our soil isn’t dirt requires people to donate money and volunteer time to nonprofits and causes that protect those pillars of life.
Lawmakers and their appointed bureaucrats then use the passing of green bonds to say, “See what we are doing to protect the environment.”
For reasons financial, most of the work needed to ensure our air is clean, our water drinkable and our soil isn’t dirt requires people to donate money and volunteer time to nonprofits and causes that protect those pillars of life.
Lawmakers and their appointed bureaucrats then use the passing of green bonds to say, “See what we are doing to protect the environment.”
Taxpayers and voters, don’t be
fooled.
In 2016, Rhode Island voters, by a
vote of 68 percent to 32 percent, approved $35 million in green economy bonds.
Of that voter-approved spending, $4 million was earmarked for improvements and
upkeep to state properties, including Fort Adams State Park, Brenton Point,
Colt State Park and Goddard Memorial State Park.
Another $5 million was earmarked for
cleaning up former industrial and commercial sites — problems created by
negligent business/property owners and apathetic officials. Another $3 million
was earmarked to help reduce stormwater pollution that contributes to beach and
shellfish closures and contaminates waters used for drinking.
The $48.5 million environmental bond Gov.
Gina Raimondo has proposed for the fiscal 2019 state budget offers more of the
same: $10 million to improve state park facilities and $4 million to clean up
brownfields.
Janet Coit, director of the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM), described the governor’s green bond to Rhode Island Public Radio as a “big ticket item” that will help better state parks, bikeways, brownfields and drinking water.
Coit also said $5 million will go
toward a new coastal resiliency initiative. She noted that the initiative “is
intended to help communities mitigate and reduce flooding risks, promote green
infrastructure and ensure, as we encounter sea level rise and flooding, that we
continue to have public access to our 400 miles of coastline.”
Why does funding for sea level-rise
mitigation, in the Ocean State of all places, need voter approval? We should
have started properly funding such measures decades ago.
Begging voters to fund drinking-water protection is a big-ticket item? Seems like it should be a funding must. Voters keep letting our elected officials off the hook when it comes to respecting the environment and public health.
Begging voters to fund drinking-water protection is a big-ticket item? Seems like it should be a funding must. Voters keep letting our elected officials off the hook when it comes to respecting the environment and public health.
What happens if voters decide this
November they don’t want to pay for cleaning up a corporation's mess, fixing up
crumbling state park infrastructure, or preparing for sea-level rise? Nothing,
at least when it comes to protecting natural resources and public space.
Lawmakers will continue to debate the elimination of the state car tax, push for the use of public money to build a private stadium, and shrug their collective shoulders as the state’s shoreline continues to be hardened, trees bulldozed and surfaces paved.
Lawmakers will continue to debate the elimination of the state car tax, push for the use of public money to build a private stadium, and shrug their collective shoulders as the state’s shoreline continues to be hardened, trees bulldozed and surfaces paved.
Rhode Island voters didn't get to
decide if loaning $75 million to a former major-league pitcher to make video
games was a good investment, or if giving taxpayer money to millionaires so
they can build a new minor-league baseball stadium is the wisest use of public
money.
Instead, Rhode Island voters get to
decide if the state should fund the maintenance of public parks and the
protection of its beaches, fishing areas, and drinking-water supplies.
Shouldn’t those items be expenditures covered in every fiscal budget? Shouldn’t the business owners and look-the-other-way state and local officials who allowed the poisoning of our collective environment be held responsible for the clean up? After all, we live in a capitalist society, not a socialist one.
Shouldn’t those items be expenditures covered in every fiscal budget? Shouldn’t the business owners and look-the-other-way state and local officials who allowed the poisoning of our collective environment be held responsible for the clean up? After all, we live in a capitalist society, not a socialist one.
Voters should be deciding whether to
fund video games and ballparks. The role of Rhode Island voters and elected
officials needs to be reversed. That won’t happen, in large part, because the
environment and public health, despite tough talk and campaign promises, aren’t
a priority.
Elected officials continue to shirk their responsibility to provide better parks and cleaner air by leaving those funding decisions up to voters and cheerleading organizations. These important quality-of-life items and in-the-best-interests-of-the-public issues don't garner campaign contributions or promise a well-paying job in the private sector.
Elected officials continue to shirk their responsibility to provide better parks and cleaner air by leaving those funding decisions up to voters and cheerleading organizations. These important quality-of-life items and in-the-best-interests-of-the-public issues don't garner campaign contributions or promise a well-paying job in the private sector.
Here's a recent example of the
Statehouse's commitment to undervaluing the environment and public
health: Gov. Raimondo, according to Rhode Island Public Radio,
is proposing to slash funding from an air-quality improvement program that
hasn’t even gotten started.
The Clean Diesel Program, passed during the
2016 legislative session, is intended to provide grants to municipalities and
companies to replace diesel trucks with more fuel-efficient and less-polluting
vehicles. The governor’s proposed fiscal 2018 budget would cut the program’s
funding by two-thirds, from $1 million to $250,000.
Coit told RIPR the cuts are needed
to help close a projected $60 million state deficit.
“Given all the choices that we had
to make, not going forward with a new program was a better choice than cutting
existing programs,” Coit said.
There's one item in the state budget
that could certainly afford a pay cut: the amount of money spent on press
secretaries, communications directors, videographers and social-media gurus. As
of last September, there were at least 73 public-relations staffers on the
state government and college payroll, earning a combined $5.4 million,
according to a recent Providence Journal story.
Funding for the Clean Diesel Program
would be eliminated completely for fiscal 2019, to help close a projected state
shortfall of $204 million.
Posted on the DEM website is a link
to a presentation that
notes, “Reducing emissions from diesel engines is one of the most important air
quality challenges facing the country.” Other DEM documentation notes
that exposure to elevated levels of diesel particulate matter has been linked
to a variety of health effects, including respiratory symptoms, chronic
bronchitis, aggravation of asthma, increased respiratory and
cardiovascular-related hospital admissions and emergency room visits, and
premature death.
Posted on the URI website is a DEM report noting
the importance of reducing diesel emissions. In fact, diesel exhaust is listed
as one of the most significant cancer-causing air pollutants in each of New
England’s six states.
Perhaps Rhode Island voters will get
the chance one day to approve funding for the Clean Diesel Program. It’s
apparent the program isn't a priority in the governor's office.
Frank Carini is the ecoRI News
editor.