• Property Polls – #28

    New poll data from Montana: I-154, the property-rights measure, had the support of 51 percent of those polled, while only 24 percent were against it. 25 percent said they are undecided. A district court invalidated the initiative because of fraudulent signature-gathering, but the state supreme court has yet to rule on the case and could overturn the lower court’s decision. In any event, valid or not, I-154 will appear on Montanan’s...
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  • Taking All My Time – #27

    [This is part of a series.] New items are coming in faster than I can keep pace with. But here are a few gems… In Washington, a group of developers and affordable housing advocates released a report arguing that I-933 would severely impair efforts to supply decent affordable housing. In a similar vein, David Horsey, at the Seattle P-I, has a clever cartoon in today’s paper. Researchers at the University...
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  • Trojan Horses – #26

    [Note: This is part of a series.] There was an odd little story in USA Today on Sunday, covering the raft of so-called “property rights” initiatives on the November ballot throughout the Western U.S. I say odd, because it almost completely misses the point. As the story notes, a lot of people are pretty exercised about a 2005 US Supreme Court decision in the case of Kelo vs. New London,...
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  • Taking All Our Money – #25

    When, oh when, will Eric end this Ahab-like fixation on the takings ballot measures? Don’t hold your breath. Yesterday, Washington’s Office of Financial Management released estimates of the financial impact of Initiative 933. It’s not pretty. Analysts are ballparking the costs to taxpayers at between $7.3 and $9 billion over the next six years. I won’t get into the technical details today—partly because I haven’t studied the analysis carefully yet....
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  • Two Property Initiatives Shot Dead – #24

    [Note: This is part of a series.] What do the words “fraud” and “unconstitutional” have in common? (Hint: It relates to my latest obsession.) Give up? Okay, the answer is that those words were used by courts in Nevada and Montana to describe the “takings” initiatives in those states. What’s perhaps even more interesting is that those words—and the legal reasoning that engendered them—could easily be applied to the mirror-image...
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  • Go West, Young Wolf

    It seems that wolves are returning home to Oregon. A little more than a decade ago, Oregon was wolf-less, along with the rest of the American West, a legacy of government-sanctioned poisoning, trapping, and shooting to make the land safe for cows and sheep. [Here’s a cool animated map depicting our shrunken wolf range.] But then in the mid-1990s federal biologists reintroduced a few dozen wolves back into their native...
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  • Not-So-Charismatic Megafauna

    Here’s the deal: there’s a 3 foot long pink earthworm living in the Palouse region of Idaho and Washington and nowhere else on the planet. It can burrow 15 feet underground and it was re-discovered last year after scientists believed it had gone extinct. Also, it smells like a lily. At the risk of sounding unserious: awesome! Anyway, a small group of local conservation groups is petitioning to get the...
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  • The First Law of Car-lessness

    One of the most interesting transportation programs around these days is TravelSmart. It’s not interesting because of what it does but simply because it works. You see, in theory, TravelSmart should be a dismal failure. That it performs minor miracles is proof of the flaws of economic theory. And understanding those flaws sheds light on a fascinating paradox of car-less living. It also hints at a massive opportunity to help...
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  • The Initiative Conspiracy Theory – #23

    [Note: This is part of a series.] I’ve suggestedbefore that the so-called “property rights” initiatives in the Northwest are not exactly a grassroots movement. They’re ordered and funded by reclusive networks of donors and directors, many from back east, who prize their anonymity. That doesn’t necessarily mean that they’re bad policy. But it deserves, I think, the skeptical arch of an eyebrow. Enter a fascinating bit of investigative journalism from…...
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  • Cascadia's World Heritage

    Cascadia has a wealth of astonishing and pristine natural places. It’s part of why residents here are so committed to this place. One measure of the Northwest’s bounty is the number of world heritage sites—natural and cultural places so unique that they are designated by the United Nations as the most important repositories of the planet’s ecological richness and humankind’s legacy. The boundaries of Cascadia include all or part of...
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