“Atlas Shrugged” came to life in the chambers of our county supervisors on Tuesday, August 21, a day that will long live in infamy for the people who produce our food, build our communities, and deliver our goods. County supervisors Joan Hartmann, Laura Capps, and Das Williams set in motion that day two multi-billion-dollar actions that is causing every sector of our economy to writhe in anticipatory agony, especially our farmers.
The two actions? Approval of the county’s climate action plan, and future consideration of a $26 minimum wage for farmworkers.
If you are not familiar with Ayn Rand’s seminal work "Atlas Shrugged,” you soon will be. The novel warned of a day when the producers of the world – who carry the weight of the world on their shoulders – would shrug off the burden, thereby debilitating every segment of our economy and society.
The “Action” Plan
Regarding the climate action plan, the supervisors had their staff calculate the cost of the plan for the first six years of implementation to the county itself, i.e., how much it would cost county operations to go all electric, including replacing vehicle fleets, including heavy construction equipment, along with furnaces, water heaters, etc. The answer is: over $300 million.
So, how much will it cost the private sector?
We don’t know because the board admitted that it did not consider or bother to estimate the costs to the private sector, including the cost to every business and every homeowner, every construction company, every trucking company, and every farmer. That is, money is apparently no object.
How can they pass a mandate and not reveal the costs?
I can assure you it is going to cost billions. In fact, the largest trucking company and the largest winery in the county have already closed due to similar mandates being imposed by other agencies.
A New “Minimum” Wage
The second item, the proposed $26 per hour labor rate for farmworkers was suggested by economically illiterate social justice activists. Please consider the fact that the largest sector of our local economy (over $2 billion per year) is agriculture and that agriculture in the form of wineries is also the largest tourist draw to our region (tourism, too, generates over $2 billion per year). Farmers in every sector of our economy have told me in no uncertain terms that a $26-hour minimum wage for farmworkers would cause their immediate bankruptcy and the certain layoff of their entire workforce. The truth is strawberry producers have already been losing money for the past two years and so too have wine grape and flower growers.
This would be the last straw.
Unlike fast-food operators who have a mandated $20-hour minimum wage, farmers do not have the luxury of simply raising their prices and passing the costs on to their customers. The buyers of produce, including grocery stores and restaurant chains, dictate the price they will pay daily based on global competition. That is, farmers are price-takers, not price-makers. Market prices have not kept up with the costs of inflation for growers, especially in California, as our farmers already have some of the highest labor, water, land, and fuel costs in the country, if not the world.
“Bidenomics”: Root Cause of Inflation
Farmers would be taking a double hit with these two board actions. Supervisors Hartmann, Capps, and especially Williams (Williams is a lame duck with a mere four months left in this, his last term) have no business setting a unique minimum wage for any sector of our local economy, least of all the most vulnerable to state, national, and international competition. Moreover, as was pointed out by Supervisor Bob Nelson, the county has some 400 of its own employees – nearly 10% of the county workforce – that don’t make $26 per hour!
One of the most famous lines in “Atlas Shrugged” is from Karl Marx: “From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs.” Our supervisors have decided that due to the inflationary policies they themselves supported (read: Bidenomics!), farmworkers need a “living wage,” regardless of their ability to produce associative value for their employers, and the farmers should be able to give it to them, as if money was no object.
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Please ask the supervisors to save our farmers by refraining from devastating the entire north county economy here at: https://www.countyofsb.org/1599/Board-of-Supervisors
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Joan Hartmann, Laura Capps, and Das Williams proved again they do not want Santa Barbara County affordable to families, 75+ elders, or those workers without guarantees of lifelong govt pensions. Let us eat cake! Complicit locals are a problem; along with the cult followers who have supported these three progressives for decades. These voters have no concern for their struggling neighbors.
Consider joining the Ayn Rand Society to connect with like minded. After reading Rand’s collection of writings at age 19, five decades ago, a Stanford College Prof suggested we think hard on the significance of Rand’s messaging. I joined! I get it. Thank you Andy.
Thank you Andy for sounding the alarm. We need to use the same language they use on us; these people are dangerous and an existential threat to democracy. They need to be voted out, we need to organize and get our candidates ready and funded.
It is amazing how STUPID many people are in SB County. Or not, maybe it’s the majority are just protecting their six figure government pension?
We as conservatives need to get funded, loud and confrontational.