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Don't
Buy Political Bulbs
by
John R. Lott, Jr.
by John R. Lott, Jr.
DIGG THIS
No matter how
well-meaning, politicians frequently fail to understand all the
consequences of their laws. Real world costs, the costs and benefits
faced by those who will actually have to live with the regulations,
often elude those who pass these rules. Yet, even by those depressing
standards, problems with the mandated that people will soon be forced
to use stand out.
The advantages
of compact fluorescent light bulbs are obvious. While the fluorescent
bulbs can cost 10
times more than incandescent ones, fluorescent bulbs use 75
percent less electricity and last up to 10
times longer.
But longer
life and energy savings come with a caveat the fluorescent
bulbs must be used for at least 15
minutes once they are turned on and ideally for at least several
hours at a time. Turning them off quickly after you have turned
them on dramatically reduces their life expectancy. Not being able
to use light bulbs simply when it is convenient is a cost the consumers
will bear even if politicians didnt factor it into their estimates
of savings.
But those are
just a tiny fraction of the other real world costs. As many now
know, the compact fluorescent light bulbs contain mercury. The hazards
are not trivial. One study found
that immediately after the bulb was broken and sometimes
even after a cleanup was attempted levels of mercury vapor exceeded
federal guidelines for chronic exposure by as much as 100 times.
The EPA has
come up with detailed
advice on how to put bulbs into sockets, clean up spills, dispose
of bulbs, and even safely transport them. For example, drop cloths
should be placed on the floor under sockets in case bulbs are dropped,
to cushion the fall. But if that fails, the cleanup process becomes
incredibly involved.
First, the
EPA warns to immediately evacuate the room of all people and pets,
and to ensure that no one walks through the breakage area on their
way out of the room. Windows must be opened and no one may re-enter
the room for at least 15 minutes. Any central heating or air-conditioning
system should be shut down.
Take the relatively
simple cleanup instructions for hard surfaces. Quoting from the
EPA warning:
- Carefully
scoop up glass pieces and powder using stiff paper or cardboard
and place them in a glass jar with metal lid (such as a canning
jar) or in a sealed plastic bag.
- Use sticky
tape, such as duct tape, to pick up any remaining small glass
fragments and powder.
- Wipe the
area clean with damp paper towels or disposable wet wipes. Place
towels in the glass jar or plastic bag.
- Do not use
a vacuum or broom to clean up the broken bulb on hard surfaces.
More rules
apply the next several times one cleans the area. Each time one
vacuums the area again: open the windows and shut off any central
heating or air-conditioning system. The windows should also remain
open for at least 15 minutes after the vacuuming is completed.
It
is not just customers who face risks. Undoubtedly many people will
simply dispose of used compact fluorescent light bulbs in the trash.
As John Skinner, executive director of the Solid Waste Association
of North American, the group representing those who handle the trash,
warned:
“The problem
with the bulbs is that they'll break before they get to the landfill.
They'll break in containers, or they'll break in a dumpster or they'll
break in the trucks. Workers may be exposed to very high levels
of mercury when that happens.
Even
transporting your new unbroken light bulbs creates all sorts of
problems.
Warnings state that the bulbs be put in containers with tight-fitting
lids and further suggesting the containers be filled with kitty
litter around the bulbs to protect them from breaking due to sudden
shocks. There is even the helpful suggestion that the container
be labelled Mercury DO NOT OPEN. Of course, you
should transport these packages in a car trunk, but if you must
keep them in the passenger compartment, make sure that it is well
ventilated.
These
are just some of the hassles to this latest do good
regulation. Politicians place a premium on saving energy to the
exclusion of saving peoples time, or, in this case, even their
health.
When one looks
at the problems with these bulbs, it becomes very understandable
why people arent rushing to own them. Possibly people are
a little smarter than the Democrat controlled congress that passed
these rules.
June
4, 2008
John
Lott [send him mail] is the
author of Freedomnomics:
Why the Free Market Works and Other Half-Baked Theories Don’t
and The
Bias Against Guns (Regnery 2003).
Copyright
© 2008 John Lott
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Lott Archives
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