Sunday, June 29, 2008

Our Biggest Air Polluter

This summer day started off like most others. I got up, looked outside the window and wondered when I had last cleaned that window. Letting the cat outdoors reminded me that I had not been derelict in my window washing duty; the air washing over me from the open door smelled like a neighbor's house on the next block was being consumed by fire. Later that morning, I observed from my home office's hazy front window a couple neighbors walking their dogs while wearing what appeared to be surgical masks. I felt sorry for the mask-deprived dogs.

I was born and raised in Chicago and practiced law there for over 25 years. I lived in a community of about 6 million souls driving millions of cars on endless miles of roads. These cars were accompanied on the roads by buses that, as they accelerated, spewed clearly visible black smoke which you avoided by taking a deep breath and walking quickly across the street. Sometimes in July or August, a high pressure system would invade and occupy the area, causing a stillness in the air and a rise in the pollution index. In all my thousands of days in urban Chicago, and during my trips to places like Los Angeles, I have never experienced the continuing daily level of air pollution which plagues Hampton Roads this summer.

Unlike Chicago or nearby Gary, Indiana, Hampton Roads does not have steel plants with operating smoke stacks or other heavy manufacturing factories which provide good jobs for a hard working middle class. In fact, we lost one of those plants just last year. Rather, we enjoy the bounty of God's creation with our gorgeous Atlantic beaches and the Chesapeake Bay, and the deep harbors on the Elizabeth and James Rivers which allow massive ships to rest safely from their international duties. These natural resources, however, are not in their original state. Rather, earlier generations of Hampton Roads residents improved these ocean fronts and rivers to allow their present use, and these are now actively maintained by us as demonstrated by periodic dredging and beach restoration. This continuing maintenance is necessary to preserve these natural resources on which the tourism of our economy rests. This tourism is clearly threatened by the continuing air pollution we are now enduring (how many tourists will come back next year when they spent most of this year's vacation to Virginia Beach indoors to avoid the smoke?).

We in Virginia are not alone in suffering from smoke inhalation. Fox News reported that the good citizens of Northern California are enduring the effects of 1000 wildfires which have caused the local Air Pollution District to advise everyone in the affected areas to limit outdoor activity, stay indoors and avoid strenuous exercise. Because of the fires, air quality in some counties is approaching the level of "very unhealthy." This exposure to particle pollution caused by the fires can result in "serious health problems by aggravating lung disease, causing asthma attacks and acute bronchitis, and increasing the risk of respiratory infections."

Our current predicament and the travails of our Northern California counterparts remind us that the biggest source of air pollution in the world is Mother Nature. Yes, Mother Nature is not the benign grandmotherly type who coddles us infants and protects us from danger, but rather is often filled with rage and fury that needs taming by man rather than protection to commit more acts of violence.

Our current national environmental policies have certainly contributed to this source of air pollution. It is no accident that most of the wildfires occur in the West, where huge tracts of land are owned by the federal and state governments. It is, moreover, no coincidence that the largest amount of air pollution I have ever experienced in my lifetime is the result of a fire burning for weeks now in the federally owned Great Dismal Swamp (during my days in Chicago, I foolishly thought that swamps were filled with water and would never burn). One wonders, of course, whether this failure by the federal government to protect its land (and the people downwind from the fires) is an omen for the quality of health care if it too is nationalized.

Our misinformed national environmental policy has also contributed to the second plague confronting American consumers this summer, high energy prices. With environmental concerns blocking oil refinery and nuclear power development, energy demand will continue to exceed supply for the foreseeable future causing ever spiraling prices. Given the interaction between energy and all other production, inflation will rise quickly.

Enough gloom and doom. Maybe I'll catch a bus to go to the only place where I can get exercise this summer, the suburban indoor mall. Yes, this product of cheap energy prices and land development appears to be the only place where I can walk without small particulate matter invading my lungs. Contrary to the claims by the environmentalists, maybe land development is not all that bad after all. Whoever heard of a fire burning for weeks on a golf course?

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