Ed Carson from the December 1995 issue
Free market and environmental organizations don't often find themselves on the same side.
The Supreme Court ruled in 1993 that such regulations violate the Commerce Clause of the
But Jonathan Adler of the Competitive Enterprise Institute says taxpayers are already paying: "They'll pay either transparently through direct taxation, or hidden through higher tipping fees like they are now." Tipping feesthe amounts landfills charge to receive refuse are 40 percent higher at sites shielded from competition, according to a study by the National Economic Research Associates.
Environmentalists don't like the local trash monopolies because they often use incinerators.
These ordinances also inhibit market-based recycling. Recycling diverts waste away from incinerators and landfills, and a county government that directs waste to its incinerator has a vested interest in sending as much trash there as possible.
Even though policy wonks across the ideological spectrum agree that "flow control" is a mistake, the Senate has already passed legislation that would give that power back to the states and local governments. The bill is currently in the House Commerce Committee, where opponents hope they can keep it bottled up.
"The reality is that if this bill gets on the floor, we'll probably lose," says Adler.
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