- Sat Aug 25, 2012 8:58 pm
#4982
Now I actually have the question in front of me.
Answer choice A says that rehabbing is right choice "UNLESS the building is believed to pose a threat to neighborhood safety." Since the stimulus tells us that these abandoned houses DID pose a threat to safety, we are in the realm of the exception (the "unless" clause), and thus, rehabbing is NOT the proposal that should have been adopted. But this answer choice doesn't even address demolishing as an option, so it can't be the right answer; in other words, it doesn't "determine that demolishing the houses was the right decision," as the question stem commands.
Answer choice D says, in a nutshell, "Don't demolish, until all other possible alternatives have been tried." And they didn't try all possible alternatives (such as rehabbing), so this answer choice basically translates as "Demolishing shouldn't have been done." But just like (A), this answer choice only mentions one option: demolishing. Rehabbing isn't referred to in any way. So because it doesn't "determine that rehabbing was the right decision," it can't be the answer either.
Answer choice B, on the other hand, mentions "two proposals" and says that when only one of them prevents trying the other one later, then the approach that doesn't foreclose the other (in other words, rehabbing, which doesn't foreclose trying demolition later) should be the one adopted. In short, "rehabbing should be the proposal adopted." Because it endorses a proposal, rather than merely frowning upon the alternative proposal, it's the only one that answers the question stem.