Jesse Walker | October 8, 2007
The Baltimore Sun's Rona Kobell explains how Maryland's open space preservation program works in practice:
[David] Sutherland's push to secure state funding for the Kudner farm prompted an outcry when it became public over the summer, particularly because of the high price he demanded for a relatively small piece of the farm. But a closer look at the deal reveals problems beyond the price.
It shows how a well-connected deal-maker seized upon a fleeting state interest in building sports complexes to persuade the government to buy his property. He persuaded county commissioners that they could put such a complex on a couple of hundred acres of land that mostly cannot be developed. And when that plan fell apart, state officials went ahead and bought the parcel anyhow.
For the details, go here.
(Full disclosure: Rona's my wife. As long as I'm promoting her work, I should mention that she is now among the contributors to her paper's Bay & Environment blog, where she writes about the Chesapeake Bay. If you're interested in the region you should check out her posts.)
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
Whats next, a news story on your kids' baby pictures?
jk good post.
What what what? A law passed ostensibly to prevent greedy developers from ruining the neighborhood, is being used as a tool of corruption by greedy speculators? I for one am shocked and outraged.
heinushut,
Did you just call Jesse's wife fat? He oughta beat you with a
garden hose.
http://omalleywatch.com/?p=148
I am glad that The Sun is finally getting around to reporting on
this.
Politicians can't be trusted not to utilize programs like this
for political purposes, whether of the ideological or buddy-buddy
variety.
There need to be firewalls created in the enabling bill to shield
the decision-making process from political interference, or this is
what you get.
Jesse's "full disclosure" isnt close to the tantalizing effect of Ronald Bailey's perpetual partial disclosures. It's like harvey keitel in The Piano vs. good B-movie boobs.
I am glad that The Sun is finally getting around to
reporting on this.
The Sun broke the original story, actually, and this
particular article has been in the works for a couple months.
joe,
If by firewalls you mean walls of burning flame built around
legislators' offices, then I can get on board with that
proposal.
If by firewalls you mean walls of burning flame built around
legislators' offices, then I can get on board with that
proposal.
Only if their offices are made of non-treated balsa wood.
And they're tied to their chairs.
And I get to film it...
Mr. Walker,
I believe TNR has already set the standard for disclosing
when staff members are related to each other. That would be by
firing the person who discloses the relationship, right before the
magazine discloses it.
Ooops, premature there, your lovely wife does NOT work for
reason.
Carry on and very good work by you both :)
Politicians can't be trusted not to utilize programs like
this for political purposes, whether of the ideological or
buddy-buddy variety.
Wichya so far, joe!
There need to be firewalls created in the enabling bill to
shield the decision-making process from political interference, or
this is what you get.
Would those be firewalls enacted by the politicians? Are you
perhaps familiar with a certain parable involving a fox and the
chicken coop?
Why not draw the obvious conclusion that, since programs like this
will inevitably be used to some degree or other for corrupt
purposes, we should do without them except in the most dire
emergencies?
Making Green Sausage
Easy enough.
Buy sausage. Put in fridge. Come back 2 months later. I do it all
the time.
The Censor could manage such firewalls, if we just
can't roll back government to its Constitutional limits
(as Mr. Dean rightfully suggests is the real solution to the
problem).
Hold on, let me get my toga.
Check your state's constitution, and you may
find that gov't is well within those limits.
Anyway, what's the solution for this agency? The article implies
that it would be less corrupt if it went out
seeking land instead of responding to offers, but
to me that seems even more corrupting.
I just want to know, from the streetcar blog entry if "Reader
Jesse" who argued the point on "GM conspiracy" is actually an
undisclosed Mr. Walker.
If so, where is the fair-shake bounce-back to editorial
contributions here in the hallowed halls of reason? And
further-more, why not just hash that out over dinner?
Politicians can't be trusted not to utilize programs like
this for political purposes, whether of the ideological or
buddy-buddy variety.
There need to be firewalls created in the enabling bill to shield
the decision-making process from political interference, or this is
what you get.
Ummm, no, joe, if you were a libertarian you would understand that
we need to completely prohibit government from taking taxes from us
to convert private property into a greenspace commons, since
certain special interest groups in effect become the "owners" of
that commons without paying for it. It's two kinds of theft /
coercion, and that generally ends badly.
If those special interest groups want the greenspace so much, they
can spend their own bloody money to acquire the property from the
owner, rather than using the government to coerce taxes and then
coerce a sale, and then bribe give campaign
contributions to politicians to write laws that give them
preferential or even exclusive use of this property.
why not just hash that out over dinner?
Because I'm married to only one of the bloggers there, and she
didn't write that post.
I didn't even know you were married Mr. Walker. Then again I really don't know very much about any of the editors here.
OK joe, lets have some full disclosure on your part. Admit it, you are looking for more work as "firewall guy". Come on now, fess up!
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245