Title: Public Trust Doctrine: Regulation, Property Rights, and Environmental Outcomes
1Public Trust Doctrine Regulation, Property
Rights, and Environmental Outcomes
- Gary D. Libecap
- University of California, Santa Barbara
- National Bureau of Economic Research
- Hoover Institution
- PERC
2The Public Trust Doctrine, Property Rights, and
Environmental Outcomes
- Objective
- Describe pressures to re-allocate water from low
to higher valued uses (agriculture to urban and
environmental). Australia, Chile, Mediterranean
Europe, the American West. - Describe options for market-based exchange.
- Describe the alternative reliance on state power
with the Public Trust Doctrine as an example. - Illustrate with the notorious public trust case,
1983 National Audubon Society v. Superior Court
33 Cal 3d 419, that dealt with an important
water/environmental problem and set precedents
for subsequent actions. Extended the Public Trust
Doctrine beyond navigable waterways. Example of
the use of state power rather than markets.
3The Public Trust Doctrine, Property Rights, and
Environmental Outcomes
- Shifting demands for water.
- Reallocation pressures to higher-valued uses
urban, environmental, recreational from
agriculture. - Mechanism market or judicial/administrative
reallocation. - Advantages of market.
- Speed Delay is costly and the parties are
residual claimants. - Generates information Sellers and buyers in
bargaining have incentive to calculate their
reservation values and weigh them against
opportunity costs. - Competitive bargaining brings convergence of
reservation values. Bi-lateral monopoly,
incentives for convergence. - Property rights provide incentives for investment
and trade.
4The Public Trust Doctrine, Property Rights, and
Environmental Outcomes
- Judicial/regulatory
- Adversarial, Slow, divisive
- Public Trust reallocation
- All or nothing transfers.
- Parties have incentive to misrepresent
reservation values as credibly as possible to
achieve a re-allocation in their benefit.
Low-cost for dedicated groups. Bias. - Open-access standing for litigation. More likely
to go to trial. - No compensation.
- Appeals. Divisive. Costly.
- Delay.
- Undermines property rights.
5The Public Trust Doctrine, Property Rights, and
Environmental Outcomes
- Illustrate with the Mono Basin Controversy.
- Los Angeles acquired the water rights 1930s,
1940s. - Fixed capital investment.
- High quality, gravity flow water
- 15 of Los Angeles water, Mono, 85 from Owens
and Mono. - Power generation.
6The Public Trust Doctrine, Property Rights, and
Environmental Outcomes
- No major diversion until 1970 with construction
of the second aqueduct. - Diversion results in drop in level of Mono Lake
by 46 feet drying up of 4 trout streams,
tributary to Mono Lake. - 1970s new demands for recreation and refilling
lake - Instead of buying Los Angeles water rights,
chose litigation. - Over 20 years of court battles, all the while the
lakes level continued to decline. -
7The Public Trust Doctrine, Property Rights, and
Environmental Outcomes
- 1983 National Audubon Society v. Superior Court
33 Cal 3d 419 - Thus, the public trust is more than an
affirmation of state power to use public property
for public purposes. It is an affirmation of the
duty of the state to protect the peoples common
heritage of streams, lakes, marshlands and
tidelands(33 Cal 3d 441). - Thus, the function of the Water Board has
steadily evolved from the narrow role of deciding
priorities between competing appropriators to the
charge of comprehensive planning and allocation
of waters. (33 Cal 3d 444). - Inherent publicness of certain resources.
Navigable streambeds. Avoid holdups. - Public Trust extended to stream access cases
endangered species cases, wildlife.
8The Public Trust Doctrine, Property Rights, and
Environmental Outcomes
- 2005 40 percent of Los Angeles historical
aqueduct supply directed to environmental
enhancement in Mono and Inyo Counties. - 166,000 acre feet annually,83,166,000 PV
1,427,052,576. - 1995 to 2000 the aqueduct provided 63 of citys
water. 2001-34. - Does not include costs of stranded capital nor of
lost electricity, litigation, nor of uncertainty
for other property rights.
9The Public Trust Doctrine, Property Rights, and
Environmental Outcomes
- Public trust regulatory responsibilities applied
ex post to existing water rights - use rights reconsidered in light of changing
conceptions of the trust. - Water belonged to the people.
- The court charged the State Water Resources
Control Board with monitoring water use and
re-allocating consistent with the public trust. - Creates a regulated commons. Opposite direction
from fisheries, air pollution, etc. - All or nothing transfers do not generate relevant
information for optimal reallocation. - Regulatory agencies lack sufficient information
on changing values to timely respond. - More trials, conflict and delay.
- Inherent uncertainties for property rights and
investment.
10The Public Trust Doctrine, Property Rights, and
Environmental Outcomes
- Example of reliance on the police power of the
state rather than markets to allocate resources. - If extended will weaken property rights and
reduce the ability of society to respond quickly
to changing resource values smoothly, and at
relatively low cost.