Ecocity Builders October 2008
new.deal.poster
                                                                                                       Pennsylvania Historial Museum Commission
Dear Ecocity Builders Members and Friends,

I'm convinced that understanding the "bail out" that alleviated the Great Depression and prepared for, then prevailed in, the Second World War is crucial to finding solutions to today's economics in the real world, the world that is heading into urban overload, climate change and species collapse globally.

So far I haven't heard one word from any commentator, legislator, government administrator, banker or letter-to-the-editor writer about the relationship of jobs and actual work to economics in discussions of our current economic mess. It's as if economics had absolutely nothing to do with production of actual physical wealth and how THAT works. It's worth thinking that issue through and realizing we have some assets and good experience to capitalize on, some positive precedents for the fix we are in.

Normally we don't send out more than one or two e-mail blasts and newsletters a month, but these are far from normal times. For the past several days the San Francisco Chronicle has not published this Op-Ed, so... here it is.

Richard Register
President, Ecocity Builders


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DON'T BAIL OUT, BUILD OUT OF OUR PRESENT ECONOMIC DEBACLE
by R
ichard Register patandurbar

Once upon a time there was an economic disaster that laid low the United States of America and spread hardships from sea to shining sea and even out across the oceans blue. Then came a war of unprecedented proportions. But we beat back the Great Depression and won the Second World War. It's more than a little relevant at this point to ask, "How'd we do that?"

Far from the federal government's admonition to spend vaguely toward prosperity, delivered in the early days of sliding toward our current meltdown with delivery of our juicy little "economic stimulus payments," which we're the first of this year's bail outs and which cost the United States around $150 billion dollars, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt built us out of the Depression and won the War by saying, "Don't spend - save.  Invest in the future of this country and let's built it up as if we believed in its future."

The "it" that got built started out with dams, bridges, post offices, soil reclamation and reforestation projects. The government was paying people, but they actually did something. Then, with Nazi Germany on the warpath and Imperial Japan too, the "it" turned into tanks, guns, bombs and airplanes. But build as if our survival depended on it we did.

Today we wake up to discover we've been building suburban sprawl, the most inefficient form of habitat we could ever have imagined, a form so bad it renders car-based cities the largest contributor to climate change and species extinction extant. There's where the bizarrely expensive houses miles from anything else, with the even more bizarre mortgage terms, began and spread. There's where the mess was first and worst, compounded by the raising cost of gasoline, asphalt, car depreciation and everything else automotive. Take a map of the Bay Area or anywhere else and you will see the per-person demand for energy and contribution to climate change goes up as population density and "mixed-uses" goes down. Surprise! We are facing another World War, the War of the current built environment against the World itself.

So what to build this time around? Instead of dams, guns and bombs our economic and ecological, national and planet survival depends on building the ecologically tuned, higher density, mixed-use city with its subsystems of transit and bicycle transportation and solar and wind energy. Bail out is not the right term for infusing federal money into building a better world and I doubt Roosevelt used the term, though extreme conservatives of his time probably though of it as a bail out of the worker. Today's bail out is proposed for the people who at best could go on to loan money into action by financing... something - but what?  The last big thing on their track record was exactly what imploded causing the current disaster: car-dependent sprawl, plus a certain measure of their own contagious greed.

Liberals say bail out the small guy (and don't mention the same old sprawling mess) by trying to shore up mortgages to energy hog buildings and commutes. The general notion that the federal government should actually do something here is completely appropriate, but what?

In early 1942 Roosevelt told the automobile manufacturers it was going to be illegal to make any more cars until this war gets won. They didn't believe it at first, but they got paid, too. And that's what they did: joined everyone building us out of the Depression and War. For a year and a half in the middle of the war - amazing to our ears today - not a car was produced. And we won. We need a clear strategy like the New Deal building up to win the Second World War. I wouldn't advise banning cars today, but I would advise building the city that simply doesn't need them. In other words, how to get out of our economic mess? Build out, don't Bail out. Ecologically tuned cities are the answer.

Richard Register is President of Ecocity Builders, Inc., of Oakland, and author of Ecocities - Rebuilding Cities in Balance with Nature, New Society Publishers.
Ecocities
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We need cities to thrive with lower energy demand, which people are now beginning to appreciate with increasing oil and gasoline prices. The ecocity model addresses energy and economic issues starting where they begin, at the land use foundation.

Ecocities, together with their appropriate subsystems - rail, bicycle and foot transportation, solar and wind energy and organic farming - constitute what to build for a prosperous future.

Please join us and help make it happen!
 
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