The President's Council on Sustainable Development,
created by executive order and consisting of appointed, not elected,
individuals, decided that a new process of policymaking was in order.
The panel concluded that:
We need a new collaborative decision process
that leads to better decisions; more rapid change; and more sensible
use of human, natural and financial resources in achieving our
goals.
The idea of sustainable development emerged from the
U.N.'s 1987 Commission on Environment and Development, in a report
called "Our Common Future":
Sustainable development is development that
meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of
future generations to meet their own needs.
This idea has supplanted the idea that governments
derive their just power from the consent of the governed. It has
happened in small and large communities, and it has happened without
the consent, or even the awareness, of the governed. It is happening
again in Washington state. Few of the governed are aware of what is
happening in their government.
Gov. Christine Gregoire has requested, in both the
state House and Senate, that a bill be introduced to create a new
state agency: The Puget Sound Partnership (SB5372).
This new agency will be responsible for creating an "Action
Agenda" (by 2008) that will embrace 12 counties, to "reach a
healthy Puget Sound by 2020."
This agency will consist of a seven-member
"Leadership Council" appointed by the governor. A
chairman appointed by the governor, and an executive director, appointed
by the governor. Incidentally, the governor can remove any member, any
time at her discretion.
The council will appoint an
"Implementation Advisory Board" that will consist of one
representative from each of the 12 local governments in the region,
each of the three tribes, representatives from state and federal
agencies, and businesses and non-government organizations. The council
will also appoint a "Science Advisory Committee" of
no more than 15 individuals.
This council may accept and make grants, enter into
contracts, issue rules and – for all practical purposes – become a
government power superior to the local and county governments in the
12-county region, at least in matters that affect Puget Sound. This
most definitely includes land and resource use in the entire area.
This legislation has been given
"emergency" status, which means that it will go into effect
on July 1, 2007, if enacted. If enacted, a whole new appointed
bureaucracy will be created that will have virtual authority of the
elected officials of the 12 counties, perhaps forever. Bureaucracies
are rarely shut down once created.
This is, in fact, a clear example of the "new
collaborative decision process" that is required by the
advancement of sustainable development. Nowhere in the process is the
"consent of the governed" considered. Nowhere in the
structure is there direct accountability to the people who must abide
by the rules promulgated by this appointed governing authority. The
people who are most directly affected by this council have absolutely
no recourse if the policies it creates are oppressive or offensive to
the people who are governed.
This is precisely how the idea of sustainable
development is replacing the fundamental principle of representative
government in America. What's happening now in Washington state has
happened – in on form or another – in every state and community
across the country. And it is destroying the idea, and the power, of
representative government – as well as the freedom that was once the
hallmark of the American system.
Sustainable development is nothing more than
restraints on freedom, prescribed and imposed by appointed
individuals who think that they know best how everyone else should
live.