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That's Debatable

Joe Biden and Sarah Palin on stage at the 2008 vice presidential debate.

During their only televised debate, vice presidential candidates Joe Biden and Sarah Palin displayed their differences on several key energy and environmental issues—from global warming to tax breaks for oil companies.

Politics & the Environment

Larry's Environmental Issues Blog

Make Your Vote Count in This Election—and Every Election

Monday October 6, 2008
Here’s some election news that is both encouraging and troubling.

The good people of Minnesota are leaning heavily toward passing a constitutional amendment that would authorize a statewide sales-tax increase to provide more money for the environment and the arts, according to a telephone poll of likely voters commissioned by the Star Tribune newspaper.

Fifty-nine percent said they planned to vote for the amendment, and 32 percent said they would vote no. Support for the amendment came from all age, income and gender groups, and was also favored by both urban and rural voters.

Despite strong support for the amendment, however, very few Minnesota voters really know what it would do.

Here are the basics:

The amendment would usher in a small sales tax increase (three-eighths of one percent), which would raise $276 million annually for 25 years and cost the average Minnesota household only $60 a year (or $5 a month). Thirty-three percent of the money would support clean water projects, another 33 percent would finance work on game, fish and wildlife habitat, 19.75 percent would go to arts and culture projects, and 14.25 percent would be used to build and maintain parks and trails.

Good stuff, right? But here’s the trouble: the poll also shows that 40 percent of those surveyed said they have heard “nothing at all” about the proposed amendment, while 49 percent said they had heard “some” or “only a little.” Only 10 percent said they had heard “a lot” about the ballot measure.

Both supporters and opponents of the proposed amendment took this news as a sign that they have to work harder to get their message to the voters. And while that may be true, the poll also points to a disturbing and growing trend in voter habits.

Are You Making Your Vote Count?
More and more often, we end up voting for candidates and proposals we know little or nothing about. There are many reasons for this, of course. We’re all extremely busy with work and family obligations, and both sides of every campaign try so hard to persuade us to adopt their point of view that they often make it harder, not easier, to understand the issues. But there are no good excuses.

As a citizen in a free society with a representative government, your vote is one of the most powerful tools you have to effect change and to help determine the priorities and future direction of your community and the nation. And your status as a voter and a taxpayer gives additional force to many of your other tools—from community organizing to civil disobedience—because decision makers from City Hall to Washington, D.C., draw their power from you.

This election, and every election, make the effort to get informed and vote strategically. Find out how local ballot measures will affect you and your neighbors, and which candidates best represent your views and are likely to advance or safeguard the issues you value.

Always be sure to vote—it is your right and your responsibility—and when you do vote, make sure you are informed and prepared to use your vote well.

Also read:

Are Smart Cars Safe and Economical—or Just Small?

Thursday September 25, 2008
What's so smart about Smart Cars? Sure, their small size (at first glance, they seem to be no bigger than a large roller skate) makes them easy to maneuver in and out of city traffic, and you can park them almost anywhere, but does their small profile translate into big savings on fuel? And what about safety? Can a car the size of your shoe keep you safe on the road?

Learn more about Smart Car safety and fuel economy, and whether they're worth the sticker price, by clicking on the link and reading the article.

Photo courtesy of Spike55151/Flickr

What Will Happen When the Offshore Drilling Ban Expires?

Wednesday September 24, 2008
Faced with the threat of a presidential veto that would have shut down the federal government in the midst of an economic crisis, congressional Democrats reluctantly agreed to allow the offshore drilling ban to expire on September 30.

Renewal of the 26-year-old offshore drilling ban was included in the stopgap funding bill that is needed to keep the government afloat financially until a new president and Congress can take office and make a number of major spending decisions. President Bush had threatened to veto the bill unless any restrictions on offshore drilling were removed.

Now that the offshore drilling ban is set to expire, and the Republicans’ mantra of “drill, drill, drill” is another step closer to reality, there are still important questions that remain unanswered:

  • What will happen when the offshore drilling ban expires?
  • What effect will the loss of the offshore drilling ban have on the environment and the economy?
  • What chance will there be of reinstating the offshore drilling ban when the next Congress convenes and a new president occupies the White House?

    Finding strategic solutions that will enable the United States to strengthen its economy and meet its energy needs without causing irreparable harm to the environment is one of the most important challenges facing the nation and its leaders today. Removing the offshore drilling ban and opening America's coastal waters to oil and gas exploration raises more questions than it answers.

Few Voters Give Energy and Environment as Reasons to Support Obama or McCain

Monday September 22, 2008
In a year when every presidential candidate is talking almost daily about energy and the environment, and staking out positions on issues such as global warming, offshore drilling and nuclear energy, you might assume that many voters would be deciding how to cast their ballots based on how the candidates plan to address those issues once they become president. According to a recent Gallup Poll, you would be wrong.

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