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The Ayes Have It: Yes, Yes, Yes and Yes

THE BALLOT QUESTIONS

Certain Massachusetts environmental groups, the chief proponents of Question Three, convincingly argue that several major industries have not kept up their side of the bargain. They have proposed the Recycling Initiative to force industries to follow one of five possible solutions in order to solve the solid waste problem. Each of these guidelines will reduce "virgin" packaging by about 25 percent by 1996 and by 50 percent by 2002. Industries could either reduce packaging, make their packaging recyclable or recycle from already-used packaging. We endorse Question Three as a prudent pro-environment, pro-business answer to a major problem.

Opponents of the initiative would have you think differently and have invested over $5 million in a carefully crafted negative ad campaign. Using some of the most cynical rhetoric of this politics-as-sausage-making season, the "No on Three" campaign has attempted to depict the moderate ballot question as the embodiment of all the evils associated with legislation of this sort--President Bush with his repeated denunciations of the "spotted owl crowd" would be proud.

The reality behind each half-truth of the negative television advertising blitz reveals false anti-environment propaganda. The opposition claims that the measure would hinder small business and create unwieldy state bureaucracies. But an exemption stipulates that the law will only apply to businesses with over 10 employees and the state's Department of Environmental Protection has acknowledged that the legislation will require only about 10 more employees for enforcement.

Finally, the most ambitious claim forwarded by "No on Three," that passage of the initiative would cost each Massachusetts family approximately $230, is also the most specious one. First of all, any increase in cost of living will at least partially be offset by reductions in the amount of money we now spend on incinerators and landfills. But, "No on Three" arrived at this $230 per family figure by assuming that all industries would need to adjust expensively their packaging methods and would then pass that burden onto the consumers, an assumption that is patently false. Many packaging industries--such as aluminum canners--have already met the 25 percent requirement. In fact, most industries have met this requirement. It is only a few plastics companies that will have to adjust to new standards.

It should be no surprise that the companies leading the $5 million campaign against Question Three are the very same industries that manufacture virgin plastic packaging. These industries (92 percent of the opposition money comes from out-of-state) include major corporations like Dow and Dupont, who of course will lose if the initiative wins--at least in the short term.

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Any economic losses incurred in the short term will be compensated in the long term with expansion from the recycling industry. In any case, Question Three regulations would not go into effect until 1996. Another plus is that the numerous options in the bill give the industries flexibility in complying. Even pro-business Governor William F. Weld '66 supports the initiative. And given the dwindling amount of landfill room and the tendency of both landfills and incinerators to toxify, it makes sense to make excess packaging obsolete.

Question Three will finally make a few unwilling industries do their part for the environment. And it will make these industries actually recycle the materials we have carefully separated. We urge you to vote yes on Question Three.

4 In terms of environmental problems, safe disposal of toxic waste remains one of the most problematic issues. Residents and non-residents alike will be surprised at the astounding number of toxic waste sites in Massachusetts: the state's Department of Environmental Protection lists approximately 2,700 confirmed sites and 2,500 suspected ones. The Cambridge-Boston area alone is home to several hundred toxic sites. In Woburn, about 30 minutes from Cambridge, several lethal toxics-related cases of leukemia among children were reported a few years ago. In Leominster (about 90 minutes away), in an even more publicized case, parents of over 100 autistic children claimed toxics as the cause of their children's disabilities. More generally, over 100 towns in the state have lost all or part of their drinking water due to contamination.

It is with this understanding that we support the Polluter Pay Initiative--Question Four on the ballot. If passed, this binding referendum would place an excise tax on toxic chemicals and industrial petroleum purchased by major users. The money raised will go to the state's Environmental Challenge Fund that will be used to clean up abandoned sites in Massachusetts and to hire environmental officials to monitor existing hazardous waste sites. Proponents of the legislation cite the grim statistic that only two of the 5,000 sites in Massachusetts were cleaned up in the last 18 months.

As with Question Three, many industries have a vested interest in seeing that Four loses and are campaigning hard on television. These advertisements vary: some are half-truths and some are persuasive. The claim that the money raised from the tax can be appropriated by the state legislature in any fashion and need not be used to clean up sites is, while technically accurate, practically fallacious. After all, the initiative would require the revenue to be placed in the environmental fund. While this technically would require final legislative approval, no politically astute legislator would openly undermine the will of the electorate.

The other major claim of the "No on Four" ads, that the initiative would cost all families a tremendous amount of money, is an exaggeration. One of the ads in fact depicts a woman rattling off a numerous list of items that will become more expensive and she mentions several that are specifically exempted by the initiative!

The opposition's basic claim, however, is true. Businesses will have to pass the cost of the tax onto consumers. Supporters of Question Four, however, have calculated that price increases will be negligible: Boston Edison, who will pay the most per year of any company taxed (the tax is proportional to the quantity of toxics), still will only need to raise fees by about 25 cents per month per household.

Question Four's biggest weakness has actually been ignored in the advertising, at least so far. Although proponents of Question Four have powerfully noted that the polluters of over 200 of Massachusetts' toxic sites--companies like W.R. Grace and Mobil--are paying for the "No on Four" campaign, this still doesn't seem quite fair to those companies currently not engaging in illegal dumping. Under the initiative, all companies using hazardous chemicals will be taxed, even ones with strong environmental policies.

But this problem with Question Four is inherent in all attempts to clean up sites where the perpetrator has skipped town. Someone has to pay the cleanup: either we tax the companies for their use of dangerous chemicals, and indirectly pay ourselves, or we choose to do nothing--an option that seems unconscionable when we consider that deathly sites like the Leominster dump still actively threaten citizens' lives. We choose the former and urge a yes vote on Question Four.

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