Thursday, November 15, 2018

A Green New Deal

By Drew Hanson

We in the United States obsess too much over cutting taxes. The problem is not how much we spend, it is how we spend it.

It is not wasteful for our neighbor to have a living wage job, or to make our communities vibrant, or to ensure we have safe drinking water, or to keep our bridges from crumbling, or to head-off increased flooding.

At the height of the Great Depression, when most of the country was penny pinching out of dire necessity, the United States launched several New Deal programs that were the opposite of cost cutting. Opponents at the time said we could not afford them. But the Civilian Conservation Corp (better known as the CCC), the Works Progress Administration (WPA) and other progressive programs put millions of people to work investing in the future. They built public structures out of stone to last, painted amazing murals in buildings like post offices, created some of our favorite public parks, and much more.

A crowd-sourced, interactive map and database of New Deal projects is at https://livingnewdeal.org/ Check it out! Many of these projects created facilities that are among the most enduring and popular public works of the 20th century. Many of them continue to be gifts from our grandparents that keep on giving.

Dells of the Eau Claire, one of six CCC project areas on the Ice Age Trail

Unfortunately, these far-sighted programs ended in World War II. A reshuffling of our nation’s priorities ensued. The selective obsessive cost cutting that followed turned into what our grandparents might these days call penny wise and pound foolish.

Today, while some of our roads, bridges, national parks and national scenic trails desperately need help, we lavish public dollars on sports stadiums and huge corporations like Foxconn and Amazon. What would our grandparents say? I think mine would say we’re being damn foolish.

America needs a New Deal for the 21st century that creates the public infrastructure for the next 100 years. We need programs to address the backlog of projects on our national scenic trails such as having seasonal trail crews on the Ice Age Trail. Instead of more dams, long-distance transmission lines, and fossil fuel pipelines, we need investments in local renewable energy that do not alter the planet’s fisheries or climate. We need to reauthorize the Land and Water Conservation Fund. We need more sidewalks and bike lanes. We need to prevent invasive exotic species from over-running our lands, waters, and us. We need a Green New Deal.