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Date: Sat, 4 Aug 2001 00:20:33 EDT
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Subject: SNET: When "SD" Comes To Your Town......

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VOLUME 6, NUMBER 9 - JUNE, 2001

SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

The following commentary by Henry Lamb is offered to any and all interested
parties who would like to know what to look for in their communities in
order to be alert to the United Nations influence on what is happening in
localities across the nation. Henry Lamb is the executive vice president of
the Environmental Conservation Organization (ECO), and chairman of
Sovereignty International. He has been studying UN activities for many years.

Commentary

When "SD" comes to your town
By Henry Lamb

"SD" is Sustainable Development, and it has probably already permeated your
town, county, and state. It was conceived at the 1987 U.N. Conference on
Environment and Development, and entered the world at the 1992 U.N. Conference
on Environment and Development, in the form of Agenda 21. Since then, it has
infested nearly 150 nations, including the United States.

The symptoms are unmistakable. Tell-tale terms begin appearing in local
newspapers and local newscasts: urban sprawl; open space; brownfields; infill;
bike paths; public transportation; visioning process; consensus; and
"somethingorother-2000." Then there are reports about results of visioning
process. Finally, there is a plan. Suddenly, your town is a "Sustainable
Community."

Typically, the "plan" for your sustainable community will be named "Yourtown
2020," or something similar [maybe Region 2020], it will embrace several
political jurisdictions, involve a "commission" or "council" with some
measure of authority to "oversee" the implementation of the plan, and it will
contain several components that are remarkably similar to all the other
"sustainable communities" around the country. Virtually all of the components
come from recommendations contained in Agenda 21.

The plan is designed to limit urban sprawl; preserve open space; infill
dilapidated brownfields with public/private partnership projects; provide bike
paths and improve public transportation; and do it all in a coordinated
fashion
with all the other political jurisdictions in the region.

What could possibly be wrong with this objective or the process that brings it
about?

Much! To begin with, the concept of sustainable development and sustainable
communities, completely disregards a fundamental principle of freedom that has
been honored in the United States since before our country was founded: a
person should be able to live wherever he chooses to live. In a sustainable
community, a person can live where he chooses to live - as long as it meets
the
approval of the governing body.

Many sustainable community plans go much further than defining where a person
cannot live; they often define the size of the home, the type of materials
that
may be used to construct the home, and even the type of landscaping that may
be
used. These restrictions are imposed, ostensibly, to protect the environment.

The individual's right to live wherever he chooses is rarely given any value
at
all. When the question is raised, it is often disregarded in the belief that
the so-called "public good" outweighs the individual's rights.

This belief assumes that growth limits are a public good. We challenge this
assumption. Growth in a community is evidence of economic expansion propelled
by a free market. If a person chooses to live ten miles from town, he must
acquire the land, build a home, provide transportation, and whatever services
he requires.

The argument in support of a growth boundary says that if the person is
required to build within the growth boundary, the public will be spared the
expense of providing roads and utilities, and the avoided travel will reduce
the demand for fossil fuels and the pollution from automobile use.

This argument sells well, but it is not valid. The roads and the utilities are
paid for by the segment of the public that uses them - not the public at
large.
If people choose to live ten miles from town, they do so fully aware of the
costs they must incur to satisfy their desire. Why should the desire of these
people be less valid than the desire of others who think they should not live
where they choose?

Open space is the great bugaboo. "We have to preserve open space for future
generations," is the oft-quoted reason for growth limits. Open space is a
wonderful asset for any town or community. The park systems in Chicago, and in
many other cities can certainly be described as a public good. But should a
city or county own land that is not a public park, just land - owned for no
other reason than to insure that it is not developed?

The land acquisition fever that has descended upon federal, state, and local
governments is not for the purpose of expanding parks and public areas; it is
to insure that development cannot occur on that land. This is an extremely
dangerous practice.

The practice interferes with a free market in real estate, and thereby forces
development to occur only where the government thinks that it should occur.
Once again, thwarting the free choice of individuals. More importantly, when
land is acquired by government, it stops producing tax revenue, and thereby
increases the tax burden on the remaining private property owners. What's even
worse, the only way a government can get the money to acquire land is to force
taxpayers to pay for it.

>From this perspective, taxpayers are being forced to pay a higher tax than
would otherwise be required, to enable a government to buy the land which will
no longer produce tax revenue, insuring that the tax bill for the remaining
private property owners will be higher than would otherwise be required.

Land acquisition has many faces. In some cases, it is an outright purchase by
the government from a willing seller. In other cases, the government may use
its power of eminent domain to force a private owner to sell. Increasingly,
governments are resorting to the purchase of development rights, and
conservation easements, and third-party arrangements with land conservancy
organizations. The result is still an interference with a free real estate
market, a reduction in tax revenue, and government-managed development.

A procedure that is said to be for the benefit of future generations is
actually a pox on future generations. The current generation of land managers
is assuring that future generations are unable to use the land as they wish or
deem necessary.

Look a hundred years into the future with the current government land
acquisition fever unabated. Governments, which already own more than 40
percent
of the total land area in the United States, will own a much higher
percentage,
that we, the taxpayers, have paid for. Perhaps more importantly, is the
quality
of the land that is owned by government, or its surrogate land conservancy
organizations. The resources this land contains will be owned and controlled
by
government. When government owns the sources of production, it is a defacto
socialist society.

Land acquisition and land use policies embraced by sustainable community plans
dictate where people may or may not live. Sustainable community plans also
seek
to control how individuals live.

Getting people out of automobiles and into public transit, or onto bicycles
and
foot paths is another common component in the vision of a sustainable
community.
Using the flawed argument that automobiles contribute to global warming,
community planners feel compelled to do everything possible to force people
out
of their cars. Thus, the urban boundary.

Many communities are using some variation of the "Community Unit" development
concept. This idea requires that any proposed development set aside a
specified
percentage of the acreage in open space, sometimes as much as 50%, thereby
doubling the price of the land for each dwelling. This concept also requires
the inclusion of specified businesses, often with access by non-motorized
vehicles, and quite often, even requires houses to be constructed of materials
that meet certain "green" standards. These "unit" designs can also prescribe
the number of houses that may be built within specified price ranges.

This is how governments are transforming what was a free society into a
managed
society - and calling it a sustainable community.

The sustainable community process says that free markets have produced
unlivable communities and the visioners can design communities that are much
better than the ones individuals have created on their own.

Sustainable development, sustainable communities, any activity preceded by the
word "sustainable," means that some authority - not the private individual -
decides what is or is not sustainable. The word "sustainable" should be
replaced with the words "government-managed" when considering any proposal.

Government-managed development, and government-managed communities are not
quite as inviting as sustainable development and sustainable communities. They
are the same, however. You can't have one without the other.


One of the dangers of the process so aptly described by Mr. Lamb is the
creation of Commissions or Boards to oversee the Sustainable Community, which
generally will incorporate an area under the jurisdiction of several
'local governments.' This overlap of jurisdictions mandates that a Board or a
Commission be created to coordinate activities.

What is not spelled out for the citizen during the organizing process is the
fact that much of the authority that was vested in elected officials - mayors,
city councils, county commissions - will be transferred to these appointed
Boards or Commissions, which will be accountable only to their own idea of
what
sustainable development constitutes. In effect the very form of our government
is being changed from one that represents the people to one that does not.

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