• Measure 37 One Year Later

    Editor’s note: Guest contributor Rex Burkholder is Deputy Council President of Metro, greater Portland, Oregon’s regional government. He also chairs the Joint Policy Advisory Committee on Transportation (JPACT) and serves on the Bi-State Transportation Committee, as well as other regional transportation committees. See a full bio here. This coming November marks the anniversary of the passage of the landmark Measure 37 in Oregon. The measure (described here and here) created...
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  • Getting Down To Gas Tax

    Think the gas tax in Washington State is too high?  According to this report (careful, it’s a .pdf) from the Seattle-based Economic Opportunity Institute, total gas tax receipts, as a share of total personal income in the state, are about as low as they’ve been for more than a generation.  Take a look at this chart, from the EOI report: Now, the fact that gas tax receipts are low in...
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  • Friends for Life

    There’s no question that our social environments help determine how healthy we are. In fact, I have now in front of me a small mountain of studies to that effect. Rather than bore you with the particulars of their findings, I’ll simply summarize this way: study after study shows that close social relationships—a spouse, loved one, or a close friend—help people live longer. Interestingly, social bonds don’t appear to prevent...
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  • Growth Misconduct

    The Washington Postreports today that the US poverty rate rose for the fourth consecutive year last year, to 12.7 percent.  That is, one out of eight Americans now lives in poverty.  At the same time, median incomes stagnated in 2004, and the number of people nationwide who have no health insurance grew by 800,000. Without any apparent irony, the Post reports that… [t]he increase in poverty came despite strong economic...
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  • Get On Our Bike And Ride

    Via Wired Magazine, a nifty idea from Lyon, France: a rent-a-bike program that lets subscribers borrow a bike for just over a dollar an hour.  The first half hour is free—which makes the service ideal for people who want to make short jaunts downtown, but don’t want to lug their bicycles with them wherever they go. Impressively, the service attracted 15,000 subscribers within the first 3 months. As the article...
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  • Medical Cost of Obesity

    The US national rate of obesity has doubled since 1990, so that in 2004, nearly one-quarter of Americans (23.1 percent) were classified as obese. Medical studies have established clear links from obesity to a variety of medical conditions, including type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, cardiovascular disease, and others. Obesity is also costly: the increasing prevalence of obesity and costs of treating obesity-related diseases has helped to fuel the recent...
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  • For Clean Air, Work Downtown

    In our ongoing quest to discover how land use and urban form links to human health effects, I recently stumbled across something odd. It’s a 2000 study of vehicle emissions per household in Puget Sound, authored by Larry Frank. I wanted to find out if there is a connection between air pollution and urban density. According to this study, there is, but in a way I didn’t expect. It turns...
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  • Energy-Efficient Mortgages?

    A recent article highlights yet another benefit of energy-efficient homes: they could qualify you for an energy-efficient mortgage (EEM).  Since an energy-efficient house costs less to operate, Fannie Mae, the government-established private company that backs mortgages for low- to moderate-income homebuyers, recognizes that the money saved can be spent on housing costs. Thus, it adds the projected savings to the borrower’s income, raising that income and qualifying them for a...
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  • Financing A Forest

    Oregon appears set to lead the way in an innovative approach to protecting forestlands. A new state law allows local governments to form "forest authorities," which can purchase forests using government bonds. The authority retires the bond with the revenue generated by sustainable-yield timber cutting and perhaps even recreation fees. The upshot is that local governments can preserve both timber jobs and forests, rather than losing them to sprawling development....
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  • The Way-Too-Big House

    I’ve been noticing that older houses in my Seattle-area neighborhood are being steadily replaced by much larger mansion-sized structures—one of which is large enough to be an orphanage. Apparently this is a national trend: the size of new single-family homes has more than doubled since the 1940s (from 1,100 to 2,340 sq.ft.), according to a recent article in the Journal of Industrial Ecology (see full pdf here). Combining this with...
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