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Examples

  • When environmental economists talked about value of life, they really were trying to figure out how much people would pay to reduce individual risk of death, so this is a more accurate term, said Heinzerling, co-author of a book called "Priceless: On Knowing the Price of Everything and the Value of Nothing."

    The Government Wants To Change The Value Of Your Life AP 2011

  • When environmental economists talked about value of life, they really were trying to figure out how much people would pay to reduce individual risk of death, so this is a more accurate term, said Heinzerling, co-author of a book called "Priceless: On Knowing the Price of Everything and the Value of Nothing."

    The Government Wants To Change The Value Of Your Life AP 2011

  • In no uncertain terms, Heinzerling, an expert on the Clean Air Act who now works as an advisor to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, testified that the agency must regulate CO2 from power plants as a result of the decision.

    David Sassoon: Clean Energy Climate Bill Gives Coal a Competitive Future 2009

  • Dean Revesz, a defender of cost-benefit analysis and author of Retaking Rationality, notes with a hint of irony that the decision-making process leading to the Iraq war is the one Heinzerling wants to apply to environmental decisions.

    The Volokh Conspiracy » Heinzerling to Head EPA’s Policy & Economics Shop: 2009

  • Heinzerling is best known for her leading role in helping the state of Massachusetts prosecute a successful 2007 Supreme Court case obligating the EPA to regulate greenhouse gases that could cause global warming.

    Who Really Runs Washington? 2009

  • Heinzerling connected that murder of "feminists" to a gap in U.S. law.

    Fred Strebeigh on Joe Biden: "Ladies' Man: The backslapping, bloviating hero of women's rights." Ann Althouse 2008

  • Mierzinski, Jacobsen, Koller and Heinzerling with additions by

    Mechanical Drawing Self-Taught Joshua Rose

  • When environmental economists talked about value of life, they really were trying to figure out how much people would pay to reduce individual risk of death, so this is a more accurate term, said Heinzerling, co-author of a book called Priceless: On Knowing the Price of

    Breaking News: CBS News 2011

  • Heinzerling traces this unfriendly attitude toward environmental regulation to Cass Sunstein, the Chicago law professor turned head of OIRA.

    News 2012

  • OIRA, says Heinzerling, has flaunted these rules, becoming a black hole for environmental regulation.

    News 2012

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