[Mb-civic] Look to states for leadership - Scot Lehigh - Boston Globe
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Tue Apr 25 03:56:43 PDT 2006
Look to states for leadership
By Scot Lehigh | April 25, 2006 | The Boston Globe
THE STATES have long been the laboratories of democracy -- and these
days, those public-policy workshops are striving to fill a vacuum
created by the federal government.
From global warming to healthcare and stem cell research, the states
are moving into areas where the Bush administration declines to take
meaningful action.
With the president basically ignoring global warming -- and
administration operatives having been accused of attempting to muzzle
government scientists who insist immediate measures are a must -- a
number of states are trying to reduce greenhouse gases themselves.
Because it is the world's 12th-largest emitter of those gases,
California is crucial to that effort. Although specific legislation has
not yet passed, the Golden State goal is to cut greenhouse emissions to
1990 levels over the next 15 years. One important political development
came this month, when Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declared
his support, albeit gingerly, for eventual emissions caps on industry.
California has already set rules requiring a reduction in greenhouse gas
emissions from vehicles by an average of 29 percent by 2016. There, the
state faces not just a lawsuit from the auto industry but opposition
from the Bush administration.
Still, nine other states have adopted the same vehicle exhaust rules.
Together, the states moving forward constitute about one-third of the US
auto market, says Ashok Gupta, director of the air and energy program at
the Natural Resources Defense Council.
Eight Eastern states, meanwhile, have also taken up the broader cause of
combating global warming with the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative.
That effort, catalyzed by New York Governor George Pataki, another
Republican, is aimed at stabilizing, and eventually reducing, greenhouse
emissions through a cap-and-trade system for power plants. ''It's a step
in the right direction, but a small step," says Seth Kaplan, senior
attorney at the Conservation Law Foundation.
Regrettably, Massachusetts and Rhode Island have abandoned that effort.
Although Governor Romney has cited cost issues, some suspect that
national political concerns better explain his opposition. Maine, New
Hampshire, Vermont, Connecticut, Delaware, New Jersey, New York, and
Maryland are all moving ahead.
''Because there is a vacuum of leadership from Washington, the governors
on a bipartisan basis have really stepped up to the plate when it comes
to global warming," says Gupta.
On the issue of healthcare, national attention has been focused on
Massachusetts lately.
After months of work by the Republican Romney and the Democratic
Legislature, the state has adopted a new law designed to expand
healthcare coverage.
Other states have also been active. Maine passed its Dirigo Health
Reform Act, aimed at providing universal access to affordable coverage,
in 2003; in 2005, Illinois enacted a program to cover everyone under 18;
in January, Maryland approved a law requiring any employer with 10,000
or more employees in the state (read: Wal-Mart) to either spend at least
8 percent of payroll on healthcare or contribute the difference to a
state healthcare fund.
''States step into the breach when there is federal inaction," notes
John McDonough, a former Massachusetts legislator who now serves as
executive director of the advocacy group Health Care for All.
Then there's stem cell research. With President Bush's policy
restricting federal funding for embryonic stem cell research to stem
cell lines already in existence in August 2001, some states are trying
to make themselves centers of research.
California has led the way by approving $3 billion in state funding for
research over the next decade. On April 10 the California Institute for
Regenerative Medicine awarded its first grants, $12 million to train
stem cell researchers. (Although opponents are trying to block such
expenditures, a California court just handed the institute an important
victory.)
New Jersey, Connecticut, Illinois, and Maryland have also moved to
provide public dollars for embryonic stem cell research. Still, that
patchwork policy is a poor substitute for a nationally funded research
effort.
''I think most scientists think it would be preferable to have the
research funded at the federal level through an established mechanism
like NIH," notes Dr. Stuart Orkin, professor of pediatrics at Harvard
Medical School and a member of California's grant-application review board.
With the Bush administration ideologically averse to addressing those
issues, state action may have to be the model for the next few years.
And certainly that's preferable to inaction.
Yet the initiatives we're witnessing in state capitals should also serve
as a stark reminder of the lack of leadership we've seen from Washington.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2006/04/25/look_to_states_for_leadership/
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