|
Article Excerpt Gaveling Down the Rabble: How "Free Trade" Is Stealing Our Democracy by Jane Anne Morris. New York: Apex Press, 2008, 182 pp., $18.95 ISBN 13: 978-1-891843-39-6
In 1974, I helped found the Institute for Local Self-Reliance. As the name implies, we focus on building strong, self-sustaining, equitable and self-determining local and regional economies. Enabling that goal requires the exercise of local and state authority. Early on we encountered a surprising obstacle to the exercise of that authority, Article I, Section 8, Clause 3 of the United States Constitution: "The Congress shall have power...to regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with Indian Tribes."
At first glance, the words, popularly known as the "commerce clause" offer no surprises. When Congress decides to regulate commerce among the states, its regulation clearly pre-empts state and local statutes. But what happens when Congress doesn't regulate? The courts decide. And, therein lies a tale. For over the last 125 years the Supreme Court has ruled that when Congress has not decided it has indeed decided and decided to pre-empt state and local authority
The Institute first encountered the commerce clause with our work on solid waste. Solid waste is clearly a local problem. Local governments regulate garbage pickup. The pickup and disposal of garbage clearly come under the police powers of communities to protect their citizens' health and safety, and, from an environmental perspective, future generations as well.
In the early 1980s, Michigan adopted a solid waste statute that required all counties to develop a 20-year solid waste plan and dispose of their waste within their borders. Clearly the intent was to maximize recycling, since the more a county recycled, the longer its landfill would last. In return for their accepting responsibility for their own wastes, the state delegated to counties the authority...
|
|

More articles from Synthesis/Regeneration
Gardening alone won't fix a broken food system.(Thinking Economically), September 22, 2008 Obliterate them!(Thinking Politically), September 22, 2008 Radical clarity to the concept of real "change"., September 22, 2008 The Rhetoric of power., September 22, 2008
Looking for additional articles?
Search our database of over 3 million articles.
Looking for more in-depth information on this industry?
Search our complete database of Industry & Market reports by text, subject, publication
name or publication date.
About Goliath
Whether you're looking for sales prospects, competitive information, company
analysis or best practices in managing your organization,
Goliath can help you meet your business needs.
Our extensive business information databases empower business
professionals with both the breadth and depth of credible,
authoritative information they need to support their business
goals. Whether it be strategic planning, sales prospecting,
company research or defining management best practices -
Goliath is your leading source for accurate information.
|
|