River Conservationist
Wins $100,000 Idea Contest
February 02, 2006 — By Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A river conservationist
who proposed taxing fossil fuels and pollution to pay for renewable
energy development and environmental restoration won a $100,000 contest
of ideas sponsored by the Service Employees International Union.
"The idea is to promote broad-scale environmental restoration and
sustainable use of resources," said Peter Skidmore, the contest winner
and a 41-year-old river conservation manager from Seattle. "There's a
little bit being done here and there, but nothing on a scale that makes
a difference."
Skidmore, married and the father of two young sons, proposed a "resource
tax" that would tax use of fossil fuels, pollution and any type of
development that degrades the environment.
Two second-place winners each claimed $50,000. Leslie Hester, a 26-year
old graduate student studying forestry in Raleigh, N. C., would reform
public education by redistributing tax revenues for schools, controlling
tuition at public universities and raising teacher salaries. Filippo
Menczer, a 40-year-old associate professor at Indiana University in
Bloomington, would tie the minimum wage to the cost of living.
Source: Associated Press
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