June 1, 2009

2 Min Read
Healthy Choices

Bill Wolpin ([email protected])

Environmentalism always has been a health care issue. If we foul our nest, we're endangering our health, and if we don't stop, we'll have to find new digs. Even if we found a new place to live, we probably wouldn't have enough fuel left to get there. So, we're stuck here, like Robinson Crusoe, only he had a plan to overcome his problems. For far too long, there's been no evidence that we do. Hopefully, that's changing as Congress begins to debate greenhouse gas and health care legislation.

The lack of a collective grip on our environmental/health care problems to date hasn't stopped some communities from taking the matter into their own hands. San Francisco, too, has led in addressing environmental and personal health issues. The city has banned plastic bags at grocery stores and foam containers at restaurants. Three years ago, the city's contracted hauler weighed in with its plan to generate energy from doggie doo. Well, now the poop's hitting the fan over a fee required by the city's Healthy San Francisco program. The Golden Gate Restaurant Association has challenged the requirement that employers spend a minimum amount of money on employee health care. Some of the association's members admit they are covering the additional costs by adding a surcharge to customers' checks, which is no surprise. Most businesses do the same when gasoline prices rise or governments add fees.

Who, then, ultimately shoulders the cost of health care and environmentalism? If you haven't noticed, you and I already are paying for ourselves and those who cannot afford to through insurance premiums and taxes. Less obvious costs, such as those that business and industry pass on to us, also can be added to our tab.

The solid waste industry, which is charged with keeping our environment clean and is dealing with climbing employee health care costs, should understand the importance of tackling these issues now.

For too long, we have insisted on being a country of rugged individualists who do not want government interference. The problem with that solution is threefold. First, we already are paying more every year for a dysfunctional health care system, which could bankrupt anyone without insurance with one catastrophic illness. Second, like health care, the price of clean air and water will rise more each year. And, third, being rugged individualists did not work out all that well for our forefathers. Most of them died relatively young and with very few teeth.

Stay in the Know - Subscribe to Our Newsletters
Join a network of more than 90,000 waste and recycling industry professionals. Get the latest news and insights straight to your inbox. Free.

You May Also Like