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On June 9, 2011, I returned to Richmond for a one-day session to discuss redistricting of Congressional Districts in the Commonwealth. Two competing plans have emerged, one from the Republican-controlled House and one from the Democratic-controlled Senate. While not perfect, the Senate's plan is superior in that it would create more competitive districts and divide fewer communities. The plan proposed by the House was written to protect incumbents and does not represent the public's desire to draw districts that are contiguous and represent communities of interest. This will be finalized in the coming weeks as a conference committee of members of the House and Senate meet to resolve differences. While redistricting discussions are occurring in Richmond, a debate rages in Albemarle County about sustainable growth and a $1 million grant that the City, County and University of Virginia recently obtained from HUD for joint planning initiatives. This grant would assist these groups with regional planning and is designed to measure environmental impacts in the community and to develop a single map to depict land uses in the region. The grant will also assist planners in the County with the update of the Comprehensive Plan, thereby saving taxpayer monies that would otherwise be spent from the County budget. During the grant's implementation, recommendations for each jurisdiction are to be developed, but there is no requirement that any entity embrace any specific change in zoning, land use, or other policies. While the goals of the grant seem reasonable, the Jefferson Area Tea Party raised concerns and caught the interest of Supervisor Ken Boyd.In May, Boyd raised questions about whether the County should participate in the grant (despite voting unanimously months earlier to support it), and suggested the County withdraw from the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI), claiming that the group has "infiltrated" county staff. This led to a five-hour public hearing on June 8, 2011, where words like "socialist," "Marxist," and "state central control" were used by various members of the public to describe the goals of the grant. The debates over sustainability, urban planning and climate change are similar to those that occurred in Richmond last session. For example, a bill offered by Delegate Bob Marshall (HB 1721) became a vehicle for questioning the reality of climate change. The bill would have undermined the development of Urban Development Areas, a planning tool supported by many Democrats and Republicans designed to concentrate housing and infrastructure in specific areas within jurisdictions, thereby lessening sprawl, the costs of maintaining services to localities, and impacts on the environment. The concept of the Urban Development Area was introduced into the Virginia Code in 2007 through a much celebrated bill (HB 3202), initiated by House Republicans in hopes of addressing some of the Commonwealth's transportation challenges. Marshall's 2011 bill would have gutted the UDA legislation, and, in testimony in support of the bill, a number of climate change skeptics and conspiracy theorists argued that ideas like climate change and sustainability are part of a political agenda promoted by the United Nations and a worldwide network of people who would take away private property rights of Americans. Marshall's bill passed the House but died in the Senate, and it is illustrative of the degree to which the deniers of climate change have entered the public debate. I previously reported on some of these debates in an earlier update. Similar claims about the United Nations, property rights, and climate science were made during the Albemarle public hearing on the planning grant. In the view of those who argued against accepting the grant, the threat of climate change, as a human-made and highly threatening phenomenon, is at best an exaggeration and, at worst, an utter hoax. Fortunately, the County Board rejected the climate change deniers and reaffirmed its support for efforts to jointly plan with the City and University, though they voted to withdraw from ICLEI. Allowing these claims into these local policy debates is counterproductive. There is broad scientific consensus, both in this country and around the world, that climate change is real and is enhanced by human activities. National academies of science in over 30 countries have passed resolutions supporting the view that climate change is caused by human activity. While there may be debates about how to address it and how active government should be in this arena, there is little doubt about the facts.
We live in a University community where vigorous debate and discussion is supported and respect for science and scholarly inquiry is encouraged. In fact, much of our country recognizes the importance of scientific inquiry and technological advancement. My concern is that reasonable debates about the proper role of government are being undermined by distortions of the truth. It has frequently been said, "While we are all entitled to our own opinions; we are not entitled to our own facts." It is my hope that we can return to this tradition in America, so that scientific facts can guide the development of our opinions and policies, rather than the other way around.As always, it is an honor to serve the 57th district. Please feel free to contact my office any time. Sincerely, David
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