|
EDITION
32 |
|
Grass roots are greener in Pennsylvania
by Albert Paschall
Even if the environmental advocates at Citizens for Pennsylvania’s
Future don’t like it open space and farmland preservationists have won a big
one in Pennsylvania. Last week
Governor Ridge signed his $645.9 million Growing Greener bill.
With matching county and municipal funds Pennsylvania governments will
have more than $1.3 billion to buy land and development rights to slow growth
largely in suburban townships that surround Philadelphia and in Lancaster and
York Counties.
The good news of Growing Greener may not be the bill itself.
If the general assembly continues to fund its five-year plan we should
easily be able to measure the results. The
fear of it is that the academicians of land use and planning will gobble up the
funding to create excessive theoretical tomes that gather dust on library
shelves. But whatever one’s
perspective is, the beauty of Growing Greener is the process of its ultimate
passage since earlier this year it was given about as much chance of success as
the Philadelphia Eagle’s have of getting into the Super Bowl.
So what turned 49 of Pennsylvania’s 50 Senators and 85% of the State
House into friends of the earth? Was
it the Governor’s determination to add environmental credentials to a resume
he hopes will be nationally recognized? Was
it as simple as the Christmas spirit of generosity to the folks back home?
Or just a rush to get out of Harrisburg and wrap up the year?
None of the above. It was
pure fear that moved the legislation. The drive to stake the claim to farmland was driven not only
by the Governor’s determination but by the only two words that can halt
Harrisburg’s steadfast march to beat and follow its own drum at the same time:
public referendum.
In November’s election 14 Pennsylvania and Southern New Jersey
townships approved by solid majorities public referenda to raise their own taxes
to buy open space and arrest development. The
four suburban Counties around Philadelphia have budgeted huge sums for open
space acquisition. Chester
County’s $50 million dollar fund has been renewed and Montgomery County’s
outgoing commissioners received virtually no public resistance to a tax increase
to continue funding a $100 million farmland preservation program.
At least 30 municipal governments in those counties have formed open
space, preservation or historic review committees to expand policies for more
control of zoning and land use matters. Open
Space referendums are heading for municipal ballots in the Fall.
If Harrisburg had failed to fund Growing Greener, despite opposition from
some of the state’s largest business organizations and unions, Harrisburg
would have had open space or their heads handed to them next November.
With a razor slim majority in the House, Republicans from all over the
state were willing to hug trees to keep the dominant Republican suburban voters
in the southeast happy.
Public referendum, its roots in the purest form of American government,
the town meeting, terrifies the political class in this nation.
If referendum were to become the process rather than the derivative of
the process than the power of the eternally elected would diminish virtually
overnight.
Growing Greener’s debate is over. Whether one likes it or not it is now state policy and its backed by enough money to make it work. Five years and $645.9 million from now we will know if it did preserve open space or just preserve consultants’ earnings. But the beauty of the process of Growing Greener may be its ultimate legacy. The people’s agenda in the southeast and south-central areas of the state moved this legislation. Its passage means the grassroots are greener in Pennsylvania and the hope is that someday it may grow into a movement for more public participation and referendums in the state.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Albert
Paschall is senior commentator for the Lincoln Institute, a non-profit
educational foundation in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Ó
Calvin-Graham Enterprises 1999. www.lincolninstitute.org
![]() |
"Some days" © Calvin-Graham Enterprises, distributed at no charge to selected newspapers in the the Commonwealth Of Pennsylvania by the Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc., 453 Springlake Road Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17112. Receipt of distribution is permission to publish as bylined op-ed only. Not available as letter to the editor. The Lincoln Institute is a non-profit, non-partisan educational foundation dedicated to promoting the ideals of free market economics and individual liberty through the conduct of public opinion research. The opinions expressed in "Some Days" do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the institute its officers or directors. |