Celebrity Lobbying as an Impediment to Increasing Center City Density

The NY Post reports that "Top Chef" Padma Lakshmi opposes NYU's plan to "densify" The Village.  I have already reported that Matthew Broderick opposes the plan.   Permit me to quote the authoritative NY Post: "The famed cookbook author and onetime Indian supermodel wore a white summer dress as she slipped into one the last available seats in a Manhattan courtroom packed with about 100 activists who claim the iconic school's blueprints will illegally eliminate vital gre...

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The D.C. Circuit’s Sleeper Decision in CBD v. EPA

Before I even get to the majority opinion in Center for Biological Diversity v. EPA, a quick word about the concurring opinion by Judge Brett Kavanaugh.  Kavanaugh may be the most outspoken conservative on a court composed almost entirely of Republican appointees.  So what he has to say about climate change is really noteworthy:  In saying that [EPA's action in the case was invalid], I do not want to diminish EPA's vital public objectives in addressing global warming....

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Why Hide the Congressional Research Service’s Reports from the Public?

Q: Is there anything connected with Congress that actually works these days? A: Yes, the Congressional Research Service and the General Accounting Office. A key difference between these adjuncts to Congress, however, relates to public accessibility. The Congressional Research Service can be a really valuable resource, but their reports can be difficult to locate.  Unlike the GAO, CRS reports aren't made available directly to the public.  Access is hit-or-miss -- th...

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EPA and the Social Cost of Carbon: Part II

This is Part II of a two-part series of posts discussing Eric Posner’s critiques of the role of cost-benefit analysis in climate regulation.  In Part I of this post series, Rhead described the social cost of carbon concept, discussed the Office of Management and Budget’s (OMB) recently updated social cost of carbon estimate of $38 per metric ton of carbon dioxide emissions, and analyzed Eric Posner’s recent Slate piece critiquing OMB’s estimate. Here, I dig d...

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EPA and the social cost of carbon

This is Part I of a two-part series of posts discussing Eric Posner’s critiques of the role of cost-benefit analysis in climate regulation.  The social cost of carbon (SCC, for policy wonks) represents the cost, in today's dollars for the harm of emitting a ton of carbon dioxide equivalent gas into the atmosphere. Recently, the U.S. Office of Management and Budget (OMB) released an update to its SCC estimate, increasing the cost from $21 to $35 per metric ton. That ...

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The Long, Slow Path to Improved Air Quality Standards

The regulatory process can be slow and tortuous. Consider the case of air quality standards. Since 1997, EPA has had separate air quality standards for fine particulates, technically called PM2.5.  These tiny particles can penetrate deep into the lungs, making them a special public health concern.  EPA has revisited the standard twice, in 2006 and 2012.  The law actually requires the standards to be reviewed every five years, so we really  should have had three revis...

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The Strange World of the Small Business Administration

When you say “small business,” most people probably imagine a mom-and-pop corner grocery.  Actually, the SBA’s concept of small goes well beyond that.  For instance, it includes a computer business that does up to $25 million per year in business. A convenience store can do $27 million and still be considered “small,” while a grocery store can go up to $30 million. If you’re in parts of the financial sector, you can do $175 million in business a year and st...

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Noisy Cities and the 1%

The NY Times has published a great piece about noise pollution dynamics in New York City.  Noise is a classic urban externality as it is a byproduct of productive activity such as airplanes landing,  flying a helicopter to the Hamptons, or erecting a new building, or a subway arriving, or a motorist honking her horn or a biker accelerating his "hog" or a HVAC system working extra hard on a summer day.   Nobody (perhaps excluding the biker) enjoys creating this noise b...

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The House GOP Takes a Courageous Stand Against Food Safety

It takes guts to oppose food safety.  But that's no problem for the House GOP.  According to the NY TImes, today's House farm bill wasn't content to eliminate food stamps, it also took aim at food safety: One overlooked provision in the bill came from Representative Dan Benishek, Republican of Michigan, a surgeon, and would require additional economic and scientific analyses before a 2010 law to improve the food safety system goes into effect. A spokesman for Mr. Benis...

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Sierra Club Entitled to County’s GIS Database Under California Public Records Act, Says California Supreme Court

Back in the day, when I toiled in the California Attorney General's Office, I served a stint supervising the unit of that Office that oversees litigation involving California's "little Freedom-of-Information Act," officially known as the California Public Records Act (PRA). My standing advice to my attorney colleagues was never to allow a case to reach the appellate courts in which we were defending government's denial of public disclosure requests under the PRA. Why? ...

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