Tuesday, February 28, 2006

NEWS ROUNDUP

Questions surround wild horse sales plan Ranchers may be hesitant to adopt older wild horses, as they have been asked to do by a ranchers' group and a federal agency, because of unclear laws on what they can ultimately do with the horses. Niels Hansen, a Rawlins rancher and chairman of the Wyoming State Grazing Board, said laws are "ambiguous," and it appears ranchers' hands may be tied as to what they can do with any wild horses they buy. "It's so tough that I have no interest in it," he said. Last week the Public Lands Council -- a ranchers' group -- and the Bureau of Land Management sent out 15,000 letters to ranchers who use BLM lands in the West to consider adopting some of the older wild horses now in BLM holding facilities. The BLM says if these horses, numbering about 7,000, are moved, it will make room for more horses to be rounded up from ranges. In November, Congress passed legislation making it illegal to send wild horses to slaughter for human consumption. It did so by shutting down funding for horse inspectors as of March 10 -- a move that would prevent slaughterhouses from slaughtering horses because the animals were not inspected. But last week, the USDA put forth a plan under which slaughterhouses could have their animals checked before slaughter through a "fee-for-service" system. That would allow exporters to meet federal requirements that apply to meat sold for human consumption. As soon as the USDA put forth the plan, animal rights groups sued to block it, calling it a "scheme" that circumvents Congress's intention. They also say it violates the Federal Meat Inspection Act's requirement that the agency, not private parties, pay the cost of inspection in order to ensure that inspectors are not beholden to the industries they are hired to monitor....
Overcoming the urban-rural divide A newborn calf probably owes its life to some city slicker kids from Portland who went to Eastern Oregon to discover what rural life is really all about. Two students from Sunnyside Environmental School found the calf on the ground when they went into a pasture with a rancher from Monument to check on mother cows. The calf couldn't rise in the sub-zero weather, and its mother couldn't seem to help her baby. Maria Chapman, 13, and Maddy Meininger, 12, helped get the freezing calf inside, then they bottle-fed it and named it Blackie. "It made me feel really good inside," Maria said. In fact, she has a new ambition now. She wants to get a job as a cowhand when she's old enough: "To me, being on the ranch is like home. It's so comfortable. I belong there." The two girls were among 22 youngsters from the K-8 school who visited Grant County last week at the invitation of area ranchers hoping to bridge a urban-rural divide. The split opened up last year when some students from Sunnyside testified at a public hearing in favor of wolf protections, reciting poetry and singing a rap song. The display offended some ranchers who say they need to guard their livestock from wolves if the predators establish a population in Oregon. The children were selected from 40 applicants, and priority was given to six who had testified at the hearing last March. The visit went so well that everyone is making plans to do it again....
Editorial: What is reasonable use of scarce water? One of this year's most entertaining pieces of legislation is a bill that pits kayak parks and other recreational users of water against developers who are fearful of future shortages. The Colorado Supreme Court has ruled that recreation is a beneficial and legitimate use of water and that enthusiasts are entitled to the minimum flow necessary for a "reasonable recreation experience." Senate Bill 37 is bogged down in a heated debate over how to define "reasonable." Each side accuses the other of wanting too much control over the available water. Recreational users and local governments whose economies revolve around tourism need enough water flowing through their rivers and streams to serve local river rats and tourists who come from all parts of the country. Developers say recreational users are claiming more water than they need. Democratic Sen. Jim Isgar of Hesperus, a rancher, hopes to hammer out a compromise, and we wish him good luck. "I have no problem recognizing a valid recreational amount," he says. "But we need to limit it."....
Forestland on Sale List Not All Bare Mountain property with dramatic views, the headwaters of salmon streams, tall timber and rugged backcountry, even a cave or two — all could be sold as part of a Bush administration proposal to auction roughly 300,000 acres of national forestland to fund rural schools and roads. Administration officials have characterized the land, more than a quarter of which is in California, as isolated parcels that don't belong in the 193-million-acre national forest system because they're expensive to manage and aren't vital to wildlife or recreation. But a closer look at the 85,500 California acres that the U.S. Forest Service listed for possible sale two weeks ago reveals that the tracts aren't all scraggly odds and ends. According to interviews with local forest officials and conservationists, some of the land — most of which lies in Northern California — borders scenic river corridors or has been proposed for possible wilderness protection by U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.). Some has valuable timber. Other acreage provides winter range for deer or habitat for threatened species....
Forest Service Considers Outsourcing Two-Thirds of Workforce The U.S. Forest Service is studying how to contract out more than two-thirds of its total workforce by 2009, according to agency planning documents released today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER), the national association of workers in natural resources agencies. In addition to Bush administration plans to sell off 300,000 acres of Forest Service land included in the Fiscal Year 2007 budget proposal to Congress, the agency is also seeking to privatize environmental, law enforcement, firefighting, engineering, and research positions. The agency documents say that "in accordance with current USDA direction" 21,350 full-time jobs will soon be under review for possible replacement by private sector firms. The Forest Service has a total of 31,625 full-time jobs, according to Office of Personnel Management figures for FY 2003. During the current fiscal year, 500 fire-fighting jobs in the aviation program, including the smoke-jumpers, will be examined for outplacement to interested contractors; In FY 2007, approximately half of the agency’s law enforcement agents and rangers, 600 positions, the jobs of all of its geologists, 500 jobs, and 1,100 biologists who prepare environmental studies on the impacts of timber sales, oil and gas leasing and other actions on national forest lands may be put out to bid....
Critics say money spent on California delta has produced little Frustrated members of Congress vented their anger at efforts to save California's most crucial water source, saying millions of dollars have been spent to study problems in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta with little to show for it. Water managers have spent 15 years "spending literally hundreds of millions of dollars, and billions of dollars in lost economic activity, and none of that has worked," U.S. Rep. Richard Pombo, R-Tracy, said Monday during a field hearing focused on the delta's problems. Pombo, chairman of the House Resources Committee and a critic of the federal Endangered Species Act, called the hearing to focus attention on the decline of four key delta fish species. The plight of the fish has raised concerns that the overall health of the vast estuary is being jeopardized by pesticides, agricultural pumping, invasive species and other problems. The delta is the linchpin of California's water supply, draining 42 percent of the state's land mass and providing drinking water to two-thirds of the state. It also is the key water source for one of the nation's most fertile farming regions. Scientific studies cost $2 million last year and are projected to cost $3.7 million this year in an attempt to find a cause for the historic drop in the number of delta smelt, striped bass, longfin smelt and threadfin shad. Implementing steps to save those species could cost millions more, according to state water officials, and could disrupt plans to divert more of the delta's water for Central Valley agriculture and Southern California water agencies....
The Flap Over Wind Power The Interior Department's Fish and Wildlife Service thought it would be a breeze to get interested parties together earlier this month to work out some kinks in its guidelines on how to build wind turbines with minimal harm to bats and birds. With oil and natural gas prices spiking, wind power is a growth industry. The American Wind Energy Association said some 15,000 turbines in 30 states are generating wind power. Enough units to serve 650,000 homes were installed last year, and wind is expected to provide 6 percent of the nation's electrical needs by 2020. But the towers supporting the giant windmills can reach more than 400 feet above ridgelines, and several wind projects have been linked to the deaths of thousands of bats and a substantial number of birds. Industry says the harm to birds is minimal, compared with damage done by cats, plate-glass windows and pesticides. It estimates that two to three birds per turbine are killed annually, a figure that avian experts dispute as too low....
How an ugly bird came to own a writer Condor: To the Brink and Back is a strange book about a strange bird by a strange writer. It is also an important book about an important bird by an important writer. Lots of species show up on endangered lists as the ever-expanding human species and its demands on the environment push further into territory once considered wild. But perhaps no endangered species has ever gripped the human imagination in quite the way that the condor has. Fascination with the condor is easy to understand. As National Public Radio environmental correspondent John Nielsen explains, "The California condor is a New World vulture with telescopic eyes, a razor-sharp beak and a wingspan of nearly 10 feet. Helicopter pilots says they've seen it soaring well above 10,000 feet. I have seen it glide for miles without ever bothering to flap." The giant birds date back to the dinosaur era. But dinosaurs eventually vanished from the earth. Condors remained - although just barely....
Keeping grasslands intact Eastern Wyoming grasslands are not really suitable for conversion to croplands as on other parts of the Great Plains, which means the state's grasslands still exist across relatively large, intact landscapes. That's why Wyoming plays such a key role in the recovery of endangered, threatened or declining species such as the swift fox, burrowing owls and black-tailed prairie dogs when other Great Plains states don't. Wyoming Game and Fish Department officials recognize, however, this probably will not always be the case. Increased population, rapid and growing coal-bed methane energy development, noxious weeds, more roads, more traffic and urban sprawl from cities such as Cheyenne are slowly taking a bite out of eastern Wyoming's grassland ecosystems. What better time to recognize the potential problems and to draft a grassland management plan that aims to sustain, and perhaps even enhance, those grasslands in the future, Game and Fish commissioners decided earlier this month at a meeting in Cheyenne....
Endangered bats slow runway plans Jackson County Airport's proposed runway project is crossing paths with an unpredictable flight pattern of nature -- the Indiana bat. As part of a $30 million project, the airport is seeking to realign the primary runway while extending its crosswinds landing strip to federal safety standards. However, the 670-acre site's wooded area near wetlands could be a summer roosting area for the endangered bat, according to an environmental assessment prepared to seek project approval. About 34 acres of trees would be removed during construction. The environmental report recommends no trees be toppled between April and September, when the bat migrates north. The stop-gap measure won't stem the species' declining numbers, a Bloomfield Hills-based bat researcher said....
Ag official: energy shortages mean opportunities for farms Energy sources grown on farms offer an exciting rural economic opportunity, a Bush administration agriculture official said Monday, but he urged farmers to find local sources of money, rather than relying on federal subsidies. Tom Dorr, U.S. Department of Agriculture undersecretary for rural development, said the administration's energy policy encourages less dependence on foreign oil, opening windows of opportunity to farmers who grow crops to make biodiesel, ethanol and other energy fuels. Dorr, an Iowa corn farmer and Federal Reserve Bank board member before his appointment during George W. Bush's second term, told a conference on clean energy here that the federal government can encourage development and provide incentives - but forget about subsidies....
Railroad workers pulling up history as they remove lines Railroad workers hit town this winter, swinging sledgehammers on the Union Pacific tracks. They're removing 60 miles of steel rails between Healy and McCracken, a stretch abandoned more than a year ago. In rural areas, Union Pacific plans to return the land to adjacent property owners. But spokesman Mark Davis said Union Pacific plans to retain its property in Healy and McCracken. "The Union Pacific will research all the line titles and determine how best to use or dispose of the property," Davis said. One option used for other abandoned rail lines involves a rails-to-trails program. Davis said the railroad had no such plan for the Healy- McCracken line but acknowledged the plusses of rails-to-trails....
Cloned Cow Gives Birth Again The University of Georgia is celebrating yet another birth from a cloned cow. Researchers were able to clone a cow from cells about three and half years ago. About two years later, that cow, named KC, delivered a calf. This past December KC gave birth again. This time to a 70 pound calf named Moonshine. What makes this is a neat story is the fact that KC was the first in the world to be cloned from a dead cow. Most come from a Petri dish. "We took the cells from a side of beef in our slaughter house back to our lab at the University and used it in the cloning process. Nine months later we produced KC," explains Steve Stice, a Georgia Research Alliance Scholar and one of the world's top cloning expert....
IT'S OFFICIAL: WHOSLEAVINGWHO IS RETIRED Whosleavingwho, American Quarter Horse racing’s co-world champion in 2002, has been retired. Co-owners Kim Kessinger and Jim Geiler made the announcement following the 8-year-old gelding’s fifth-place finish in Saturday’s Grade 1 Los Alamitos Winter Championship. “This is it for him – he’s taken us for a great ride,” said Kessinger. “We’ll probably send him to Vessels Stallion Farm (in Bonsall, California), and he’ll stay there for a while. We’ll eventually bring him to Colorado.” Bred by Gordon Haslam of Essex Junction, Vermont, Whosleavingwho earned $1,334,842 from 23 wins in 47 starts, and he ranks 15th on the sport’s all-time earnings list. The gelding’s 10 stakes victories include the 2002 Champion of Champions (G1) and six other unrestricted Grade 1 stakes – the Los Alamitos Winter Championship in 2003 and ’05, the Go Man Go Handicap in 2002 and ’05, the 2001 Los Alamitos Winter Derby and the ’03 Vessels Maturity. Whosleavingwho also won the Spencer Childers California Breeders’ Championship (RG1) in 2003, and in 2000 he was one of the few horses to qualify for all three Grade 1 futurities at Ruidoso Downs in New Mexico....
From Eastern elite to Wyo ranch living
She was a debutante from New Jersey who gave up a life of ease at age 20 to become the wife of a dashing cowboy who trained horses on a Wyoming dude ranch. Now, at 81, Jonesy Smith looks back with pride on her life experiences, knowing she has had the best of both worlds. "It was quite a culture shock when I faced the reality of just how different the two lifestyles were. I guess I thought if I lived here, I could just go riding all the time,” she said with a smile. “Even though that didn’t happen, I was sure I’d be OK as long as I had my horse and a lake where I could go boating.” Smith has come a long way since her precarious entry into the world of luxury as a 2-pound premature baby born in 1922 to Dr. and Mrs. Edgar Ill, who lived in an exclusive suburb of Newark, N.J. She returned to Sandy Jacques' the summer of 1942 after the death of her father and met Tud Smith, the man who would change her life. “Tud was the ranch foreman, and I knew right away he was different from other cowboys,” Smith said. “He didn’t just use a horse -- he trained them. He had a wonderful horse he had trained to jump, and he knew how to change leads. I think I fell in love with him because of his great horsemanship.” Back home in Newark, the riding academy was about to close, so Smith convinced her mother to send Amberkiss out to the dude ranch. “My horse came out by train with her own groom and a private box car,” Smith said, laughing. “And I can tell you the whole thing cost $500, which was quite a bit of money in those days.” Before the summer was over, Smith called her mother to tell her she was going to marry a cowboy she'd met. “You get on a train and you come right home." her mother replied....
Ben Johnson Ben was born in Foracre, Okla., on June 13, 1918. His father, Ben Johnson Sr., had a place on Bird Creek, northwest of Pawhuska. The senior Johnson was a respected rancher and champion roper, and is an honoree in the National Cowboy Hall of Fame. And Pawhuska honors Ben Sr. every year with a memorial rodeo named after him. Ben Jr. grew up in the Pawhuska area, cowboyed on the Chapman-Bernard Ranch, and rubbed elbows with some accomplished rodeo cowboys of that time - such names as Ike Rude, Everett Shaw, Louis Brooks and Clark McIntire. Ben liked rodeoing, too, and it is likely that he would have pursued rodeo as a career had it not been for a chance encounter with people who were making a movie for Howard Hughes. It was around 1940, and Hughes was making The Outlaw, starring Jane Russell. His crew bought a load of horses out of Oklahoma, and Johnson was asked to deliver them to the movie location near Flagstaff, Arizona. At the time, Ben was working for $30 a month, and the $300 he was offered was more than he could pass up. After the shoot, he took the horses on to Hollywood, and that's where he stayed. Ben says, "They decided I rodeo a horse pretty good, so they put me in the Screen Actors' Guild, and I went to work as a wrangler, stuntman and as a double for actors like John Wayne, Joel McRae and Jimmy Stewart." Then, in 1949, Ben was offered a 7-year contract with famed director John Ford. The contract was for up to $5,000 per week, and Ben signed immediately "before Ford had a chance to change his mind," Ben explains. Ben went right to work on such films as Wagon Master, Mighty Joe Young, She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, and Rio Grande. And in Rio Grande, he and fellow actors Claude Jarman Jr. and Harry Carey Jr. did their own stunt work in a spectacular Roman-riding scene that's still a film classic. Anyone who views that scene can easily see that Johnson is a real horseman. Despite his movie success, Johnson still felt he had something to prove to himself, so, in 1953, he took a year off and hit the rodeo circuit. He had been rodeoing all along between movies and, in 1949, had set a calf-roping record at Pendleton, Ore., where he roped and tied in 12.5 seconds with a 60-foot score. "I really thought I was something," says Ben. He continues, "I got in a position where I could afford to travel, so I decided to see just what I could do." He teamed with Buckshot Sorrells, Andy Jauregui and others in the team roping. "That was the year everybody else had hard luck," says Ben, modestly, "and I beat them out and won the world. I came home with a championship, and I didn't have $3. All I had was a wore-out automobile and a mad wife. Fortunately, they let me back in the picture business, and I've stayed there ever since."....
It's All Trew: Ghost towns aplenty in Texas Panhandle During my research, I continue to find more Texas Panhandle ghost towns I didn’t know existed. Ray Carter from Lefors called my attention to Codman, located in Roberts County. The site is located eight miles southwest of Miami, alongside the Santa Fe Railroad tracks. The legend and lore appears to be as follows, based on several different but interesting versions. Codman began as an “end-of-track” tent town used during construction of the tracks. A nearby spring of fresh water helped the town become permanent. The railroad built a section foreman’s house plus a bunkhouse for single crew employees. A post office was established in 1892, closed a year later then opened again in 1901 when additional homes and businesses came to town. Eventually, a general store and two grain elevators operated successfully until the town of Hoover, just up-track to the west, began to grow. Later, when Highway 60 located away from the town, Codman began to fade into the past....
Protect Private Property Rights, 85 Groups Tell Senate, in Endangered Species Act Reform

Today, a letter signed by 85 major national and state policy organizations was delivered to Senators on the Environment and Public Works Committee. The letter warns Senators that any Endangered Species Act reform effort must include strong private property rights protections. The coalition letter was spearheaded by The National Center for Public Policy Research. "Whatever action the Senate takes on ESA reform should reflect the national, bipartisan outcry for strong property rights protections," said David Ridenour, vice president of The National Center for Public Policy Research. "Quite simply, when the government takes your property, the least it can do is pay for it." National policy organizations signing the letter include: Coalitions for America, the American Conservative Union, the National Taxpayers Union, Eagle Forum, National Center for Policy Analysis, 60 Plus Association, National Legal and Policy Center, the Property Rights Foundation of America, and the American Family Association, among many others. The letter was also signed by the Honorable Edwin Meese III, who served as U.S. Attorney General under President Ronald Reagan, and the Honorable Don Hodel, who served as both U.S. Secretary of Interior and Secretary of Energy in the Reagan Administration. Former Senator Malcolm Wallop (R-WY) signed the letter as well. State policy groups, including the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs, Oregonians in Action, the James Madison Institute, the Illinois Policy Institute, and the Virginia Institute for Public Policy, among others, also signed the letter. "Today, private landowners live in fear of the ESA. Those who harbor endangered species on their property or merely own land suitable for such species can find themselves subject to severe land use restrictions that can be financially devastating," said Ridenour. "This creates a perverse incentive for landowners to preemptively 'sterilize' their land to keep rare species away. Such sterilizations benefit no one - least of all the species the ESA was established to protect." "Property owners should not be punished for being good environmental stewards, yet that is exactly what the ESA does," said Peyton Knight, director of environmental and regulatory affairs for The National Center. In order to fix the ESA's perverse incentive problem, the letter says property owners who are denied the use of their land should be given 100 percent, fair market value compensation for losses. This would bring the ESA in line with the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which guarantees such compensation ("nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation")....

Go here(pdf) to read the letter.
EDITORIAL: Oregon court upholds property rights

The Oregon Supreme Court did the right thing last week, upholding the right of the people of Oregon to amend their constitution through Measure 37, which requires state and local governments to compensate property owners for any diminution to the value of their properties imposed through land use restrictions. The measure does not prevent governments from "preserving" attractive scenery, wildlife habitat and the like. It merely prevents governments from shuffling the costs of those noble undertakings onto others. If a local Oregon town or county wants to bar the owners of a hilltop farm from selling off part of their property for a subdivision -- in order to maintain the "pretty view" for all the neighbors -- the municipality can either buy the land, or pay the land owner the amount he or she loses by not being allowed to use the property as the owner sees fit. This is well in keeping with the letter and intent of the federal Fifth Amendment, which requires "just compensation" for any property taken for "public use." Self-styled "preservationists" moan this will limit their ability to "preserve" all kinds of stuff which they either do not choose or cannot afford to actually buy. Yes, and laws against bank robbery make it harder for gunmen to accrue the capital they need to live the Life of Riley....

Monday, February 27, 2006

A REMINDER

Implementation of the Split Estate Section 1835 of the Energy Policy Act of 2005; Listening Sessions

February 15, 2006 (Volume 71, Number 31)]
[Notices]
[Page 7995]

AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior.

ACTION: Notice of public listening sessions.

SUMMARY: Listening sessions will be held by the Bureau of Land Management to solicit suggestions from the public on how best to implement the split estate provisions of the Energy Policy Act of 2005. Section 1835 of the Energy Policy Act directs the Secretary of the Interior to review current policies and practices for managing oil and gas resources in split estate situations, that is, how the BLM provides for oil and gas development and environmental protection where the surface estate is privately owned and the mineral estate is owned and administered by the Federal Government. The Act directs that this review be conducted in consultation with affected private surface owners, oil and gas industry, and other interested parties. Dates and Locations: Listening Sessions will be scheduled during late March 2006 in Colorado, Montana, New Mexico, Wyoming, and Washington, DC. The BLM will announce exact times and locations through the local media, e-mail, and on the Split Estate Web site at: http://www.blm.gov/bmp at least 15 days prior to the listening sessions.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jim Perry, Senior Natural Resource Specialist for the BLM Fluid Minerals Program at (202) 452-5063, or visit the Split Estate Web site at http://www.blm.gov/bmp.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The listening sessions will begin with an overview of the split estate provisions of the Energy Policy Act and current split estate practices, policies, regulations, and laws that guide management of the Federal mineral estate. participants who request to speak will be provided a set amount of time to provide recommendations for managing oil and gas resources in split estate situations.


UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20240

June 22, 2004

In Reply Refer To: 3100 (310) P2800 (350)

EMS TRANSMISSION 06/22/2004

Instruction Memorandum No. 2004-194

Expires: 09/30/2005

To: All Field Officials

From: Director

Subject: Integration of Best Management Practices into Application for Permit to Drill Approvals and Associated Rights-of-Way

Program Areas: Oil & Gas Operations; Geothermal Operations; Helium Operations; Lands & Realty.

Purpose: The purpose for issuing this Instruction Memorandum (IM) is to establish a policy that Field Offices consider Best Management Practices (BMPs) in National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) documents to mitigate anticipated impacts to surface and subsurface resources, and also to encourage operators to actively consider BMPs during the application process.

Background: BMPs are innovative, dynamic, and economically feasible mitigation measures applied on a site-specific basis to reduce, prevent, or avoid adverse environmental or social impacts. BMPs are applied to management actions to aid in achieving desired outcomes for safe, environmentally sound resource development, by preventing, minimizing, or mitigating adverse impacts and reducing conflicts. The early incorporation of BMPs into Application for Permit to Drill (APDs) by the oil and gas operator helps to ensure an efficient and timely APD process.

Policy/Action: All Field Offices shall incorporate appropriate BMPs into proposed APDs and associated on and off-lease rights-of-way approvals after appropriate NEPA evaluation.

BMPs to be considered in nearly all circumstances include the following:

* Interim reclamation of well locations and access roads soon after the well is put into production;
* Painting of all new facilities a color which best allows the facility to blend with the background, typically a vegetated background;
* Design and construction of all new roads to a safe and appropriate standard, “no higher than necessary” to accommodate their intended use; and
* Final reclamation recontouring of all disturbed areas, including access roads, to the original contour or a contour which blends with the surrounding topography.

Other BMPs are more suitable for Field Office consideration on a case-by-case basis depending on their effectiveness, the balancing of increased operating costs vs. the benefit to the public and resource values, the availability of less restrictive mitigation alternatives, and other site specific factors. Examples of typical case-by-case BMPs include, but are not limited to the following:

· Installation of raptor perch avoidance;
· Burying of distribution power lines and/or flow lines in or adjacent to access roads;
· Centralizing production facilities;
· Submersible pumps;
· Belowground wellheads;
· Drilling multiple wells from a single pad;
· Noise reduction techniques and designs;
· Wildlife monitoring;
· Seasonal restriction of public vehicular access;
· Avoiding placement of production facilities on hilltops and ridgelines;
· Screening facilities from view;
· Bioremediation of oil field wastes and spills; and
· Use of common utility or right-of-way corridors.


A menu of typical BMPs can be found on the BLM Washington Office Fluid Minerals website. The website is updated frequently and submission of new BMPs and photos is encouraged. http://www.blm.gov/nhp/300/wo310/O&G/Ops/operations.html

BMPs have been developed and utilized by numerous oil and gas operators throughout the nation. When implementing new BMPs, Field Offices are encouraged to work with affected operators early, to explain how BMPs may fit into their development proposals and how BMPs can be implemented with the least economic impact. Discuss potential resource impacts with the operators and seek their recommended solutions while encouraging operators to incorporate necessary and effective BMPs into their proposals. BMPs not incorporated into the permit application by the operator may be considered and evaluated through the NEPA process and incorporated into the permit as APD Conditions of Approval or right-of-way stipulations.

Field Offices must be cautious to avoid the “one size fits all” approach to the application of BMPs. BMPs, by their very nature, are dynamic innovations and must be flexible enough to respond to new data, field research, technological advances, and market conditions. Following implementation, Field Offices should monitor, evaluate, and modify BMPs as necessary for use in future permit approvals.

The overall goal of the Bureau is to promote the best examples of responsible oil and gas development. Public lands should be showcases of good stewardship while providing for responsible, sustainable, and efficient development of the nation’s oil and gas resources. BLM will use the Quality Assurance Team (QAT) and General Management Evaluation (GME) processes in order to review our progress. To recognize good environmental stewardship work through the use of BMPs, BLM is establishing an annual “Best Management Practice” awards program with annual awards for industry and BLM offices, the details of which will be available subsequently.

Timeframe: Immediately.
Budget Impacts: Minimal.
Manual and Handbook Sections Affected: None.
Coordination: AD-200.

Contact: Please direct policy questions to Tom Lonnie, Assistant Director, Minerals, Realty, and Resource Protection (AD-300) at (202) 208-4201; or by E-mail at thomas_lonnie@blm.gov ; and technical questions to Jim Perry, Washington Office Fluid Minerals Group (WO-310), at (202) 452‑5063; or by E-mail at jim_perry@blm.gov ; or to Tom Hare, Washington Office Fluid Minerals Group (WO310), at (202) 452‑5182, or by E-mail at tom_hare@blm.gov.

Signed by: Francis R. Cherry, Jr.

Authenticated by: Barbara J. Brown Acting Director Policy & Records Group, WO-560
NEWS ROUNDUP

Federal protection has led to wolves unafraid of people Some ranchers say the wolves in the Madison Valley have grown increasingly brazen and are apparently unafraid of people. State wildlife officials say such behavior is to be expected, given the federal protection the predators have had in the decade since being reintroduced in the Yellowstone National Park. Jack Atcheson Jr. said he was spooked on a recent hunting trip, when three men and three mules got within 47 yards of a wolf that was staring right at them. The Butte hunting outfitter, who books international trips, said he had never seen wolves in Alaska, Asia or other places act so boldly around people. "It was approaching us with the wind right in its face -- we were standing around the animals, but he was focused on us," Atcheson, 55, said. "He was not afraid at all." The wolf finally stopped when one of Atcheson's hunting partners chambered a rifle, while Atcheson snapped a photo. Even then, the wolf merely lay down and stared at the hunters before eventually walking away. Sunny Smith, manager of the CB Ranch near the Madison Range, said the wolves are "just like domestic dogs." And with calving season just weeks away, that lack of fear has ranchers worried about the prospect of the wolves attacking livestock....
Column - Rocky Mountain Nat'l Park: An ecosystem wanting wolves Elk graze on neighborhood lawns, golf course greens and the grass around city hall in this gateway town to Rocky Mountain National Park. The burgeoning herd browsing through Estes Park is a popular tourist attraction, but it's also a sign of an ecosystem out of whack. About 3,000 elk roam the national park and the Estes Valley. In the absence of native predators, they devour willows and aspens inside the park, and hundreds of them head down-valley to chow on lawns in town. As a result, the National Park Service may limit the elk population, and some are promoting the reintroduction of wolves to restore the ecosystem. The park is "mandated to look at the natural processes, which (in this case) is wolves," says Park Service spokeswoman Kyle Patterson. Wolves could reduce elk numbers, she says, and keep the herd mobile; ultimately, they could re-establish the park's predator base. But before Canis lupus returns to Colorado, supporters will have to placate the state wildlife managers in charge of surrounding lands, who fear wolves will wander outside the park and create more problems than they solve....
Court rejects rancher's appeal A Wyoming rancher's right to due process was not violated when the Bureau of Land Management revoked a settlement agreement that it said the rancher repeatedly violated, the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled. In a decision handed down Thursday, the court rejected Harvey Frank Robbins' appeal, saying Robbins could still challenge the individual citations, but that terminating the agreement itself did not violate his rights. Robbins, of Thermopolis, and his attorney, Marc Stimpert, argued that the settlement agreement itself was a form of property because it provided a valuable benefit -- it would have erased 16 citations for alleged grazing violations -- and that the BLM couldn't, therefore, revoke the agreement unilaterally. The court rejected that argument, writing: "Robbins emphasized the 'serious consequences (to his) livelihood' that voiding the Settlement Agreement entails, noting that, '(w)ithout the settlement agreement, Mr. Robbins must litigate 16 cases against the BLM and face the consequences including possible loss of his BLM grazing permits. In contrast, Robbins can have these 16 cases dismissed and, in doing so, have his slate wiped clean.' "However, it is well established that 'an entitlement to nothing but procedure' cannot 'be the basis for a property interest."' The BLM also had argued that it had sovereign immunity from such lawsuits, but the court rejected that argument....go here to read the court's opinion....
Sponsors expect little change to bill aimed at protecting landowners’ rights The Colorado Senate sponsor of a bill that would help private landowners recover lost land value and property damages from energy companies that develop their land said Thursday he does not want to rewrite the bill. Sen. Jim Isgar, D-Hesperus, said he intends to keep most of the details in the bill as it proceeds through the Senate. “I’ll sit down with the industry and the other parties like the Realtors and agricultural groups that back the bill to make sure their concerns are addressed,” he said. “But neither side will get all of what they want. That’s what I think is reflected in the bill now.” The state House gave final approval Thursday morning to the bill by a 60-3 vote, with two members absent. Backers of the bill observing the vote applauded the action. House Bill 1185, sponsored by Rep. Kathleen Curry, D-Gunnison, would require landowners and oil and natural-gas operators to try to negotiate surface-use agreements to guide how land would be developed. If an agreement were not reached, operators would make a settlement offer to the landowner. If that offer was rejected, the companies could post a bond of at least $15,000 for each proposed well and proceed to drill the wells. The bill would call for “current fair market value” and an appraisal process to determine property damages....
Fate of 3 prairie species hinges on each other Before the arrival of Europeans in the New World, bison, prairie dogs and black-footed ferrets ran a co-op that benefited all three. Today, the loss of one threatens the others. Prairie dogs were the farmers of this cozy community. The little varmints cleared the prairies of brush and trees. Buffalo close-cropped the grass that would have overwhelmed the dogs. As many as 6 billion black-footed ferrets trimmed the prairie dog population. Prairie dog towns stretched from horizon to horizon. One colony in Texas was 250 miles long and 100 miles wide. Catastrophic diseases that exterminate colonies today would be lost in the depth of a gene pool that contained billions of individuals. By 1960, prairie dogs had vanished from 98 percent of their historic range. Thought to have vanished, the black-footed ferret was discovered alive and healthy in a prairie dog town near Meeteetse, Wyo. In 1981, a ranch dog came home with a dead ferret in its jaws. After threatening to prosecute the rancher, the feds set up a ferret watch and studied the born-again weasel. The ferret was studied almost to death....
Column: Sell Disney the Grand Canyon Earlier this month, the Bush administration proposed to sell 200,000 acres of federal land in order to raise money for rural schools in 41 states. Despite the fact that the proposed sale represents only tiny fraction of the total federal estate — and despite the fact that the parcels in question range from only a quarter of an acre to 200 acres in size — many environmentalists are apoplectic. Admittedly, many Americans believe that the federal government needs to own land in order to keep it out of the hands of developers. That is why so many recoil from privatization. But why should those who oppose development be able to impose their preferences regarding land use on everyone else? If there is more money to be made by turning the Grand Canyon over to the Walt Disney Co. rather than to an eco-sensitive tourism cooperative, it simply means that the public demand for Disney's services at the Grand Canyon is greater than the public's demand for Deep Green Trail Services Inc. In this case, environmentalist complaints are really complaints about the preferences of the rabble. If the preferences of the rich were to dominate the market, the environment would likely benefit because the rich (as a group) care a lot more about the environment than anyone else. The demographic profile of the membership of major environmental organizations certainly bears that out....
In Fire's Wake, Logging Study Inflames Debate If fire ravages a national forest, as happened here in southwest Oregon when the Biscuit fire torched a half-million acres four years ago, the Bush administration believes loggers should move in quickly, cut marketable trees that remain and replant a healthy forest. "We must quickly restore the areas that have been damaged by fire," President Bush said in Oregon four years ago after touring damage from the Biscuit fire. He called it "common sense." Common sense, though, may not always be sound science. An Oregon State University study has raised an extraordinary ruckus in the Pacific Northwest this winter by saying that logging burned forests does not make much sense. Logging after the Biscuit fire, the study found, has harmed forest recovery and increased fire risk. What the short study did not say -- but what many critics of the Bush administration are reading into it -- is that the White House has ignored science to please the timber industry. The study is consistent with research findings from around the world that have documented how salvage logging can strip burned forests of the biological diversity that fire and natural recovery help protect. The study also questions the scientific rationale behind a bill pending in Congress that would ease procedures for post-fire logging in federal forests....
Is it a New Day for the Timber Industry? He's not sure of the date, but Craig Thomas remembers a frozen night about 20 years ago. At 4 a.m. he was driving to Libby to begin his work day as a logger for Champion International when he saw a Volkswagen bug on the side of the deserted road at the bottom of Evaro Hill, outside Missoula. As he drove past, his headlights picked up a young woman kneeling beside the driver's side front tire. She was blonde and couldn't have weighed more than a hundred pounds, Thomas said. He saw that she had a flat and was struggling to remove the wheel's lug nuts. Thomas said she was trying to twist them the wrong way. He hit the brakes and threw his truck in reverse, parking on the shoulder 50 feet behind the Volkswagen. He climbed out of his truck and cautiously identified himself to the woman, looking around as he did so. Thomas had heard of assaults in situations like this one where a group of men waited to rob whoever pulled over to aid the woman with a flat tire. But this woman appeared genuinely distressed, and grateful for Thomas's help. As he knelt to remove the lug nuts he explained how Volkswagens were odd; the nuts unscrewed in the opposite direction of American cars. He had just gotten the final lug nut off when the woman paced back toward the direction of his truck and started shouting. "Cease and desist!" Thomas remembers the woman yelling....
FBI Green scare continues more arrests this week In what has been dubbed the “green scare” by environmentalists across the nation, the U.S. government returned three additional federal grand jury indictments this week for individuals allegedly involved in actions claimed by the Earth Liberation Front (ELF) and the Animal Liberation Front (ALF) between 1998 and 2003. In the more than two months of intense attention from the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI), eighteen people have now been indicted for more than a dozen actions of property damage. In Olympia, Washington, Nathan Fraser Block and Joyanna L. Zacher were arrested February 23 on two separate 14-county indictments for the May 21, 2001 arson at Jefferson Poplar Farm in Clatskanie, Oregon. Block and Zacher join four other defendants already charged in connection with the action. Tucson environmental and indigenous activist Rod Coronado was arrested February 22 at his workplace in Tucson, Arizona, by agents with the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms & Explosives (ATF). The arrest was in connection with a San Diego federal grand jury indictment charging Coronado with "teaching and demonstrating the making and use of a destructive device, with the intent that the device be used to commit arson" at a public gathering in the Hillcrest neighborhood of San Diego on August 1, 2003. Coronado is not charged with setting a fire 15 hours before his lecture that caused $50 million in damages and destroyed a large apartment complex under construction in the University Towne Center area of San Diego. Three animal rights activists in San Diego were jailed in contempt of court for refusing to testify in the secret Grand Jury investigation and were released at the end of last year. Block and Zacher join the other 11 co-defendants involved in the Eugene grand jury investigation, all which are scheduled to go to trial October 31, 2006. The trial is expected to last between five and ten weeks....
State backs roadless rule Montana joined the legal battle Friday over the Bush administration’s repeal of the 2001 Roadless Rule by filing an “amicus brief” supporting reinstatement of the rule. Last year, the states of California, Oregon, and New Mexico filed a lawsuit alleging the Bush administration violated federal law by not studying the environmental impacts of repealing the Clinton Roadless Rule. Washington State joined the lawsuit earlier this year. In Friday’s brief, Montana Attorney General Mike McGrath and Maine’s Attorney General G. Steven Rowe write that they support a motion by the four other states for summary judgment, meaning that they want a court to rule now that the repeal of the Roadless Rule should be set aside. “Protected roadless areas serve as a primary source of clean water for fish and for wildlife, as well as for sources for the water supplies for our states’ cities and towns,” the attorneys general wrote in the legal filing. “Protection of roadless areas provides habitat for threatened and endangered species as well as for big game species.”....
Spendy salmon Northwest populations of Pacific salmon accounted for one of every four state and federal dollars spent on saving endangered or threatened species during 2004, according to a new report by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Government agencies spent $393 million on helping the five Pacific salmon species protected by the Endangered Species Act -- chinook, steelhead, coho, sockeye and chum. Total government spending for 1,838 listed species was $1.4 billion, the report said. And the cost promises to rise. The Bush administration says it will spend $6 billion over the next 10 years to modify eight federally owned hydroelectric dams on the Snake and Columbia rivers to make them less lethal to salmon. Cost is increasingly becoming a factor in the debate over how best to restore struggling salmon runs....
Column: Column: Land-grabbing spurs a backlash by voters State after state is rushing to bar government from "taking" private property for transfer to another private entity. It's part of a populist firestorm triggered by the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in a New London, Conn., case in which homeowners were ordered out of their houses to make way for a city-ordered redevelopment scheme. And it could be only the opening shot. Tempers also are growing short over the use of "regulatory takings" -- government-imposed rules that deprive owners of the full use of their property without compensation. Such takings were in the spotlight at the Supreme Court last week, where oral arguments took place on a pair of cases emanating from Michigan. The first involves a Midland developer, John Rapanos, who has been fined millions of dollars for filling in three parcels of property alleged to contain wetlands. The second involves developers June and Keith Carabell, who were prevented from building a 112-unit condominium complex in suburban Detroit after regulators determined it might jeopardize the "navigable waters" of the United States....
At the crossroads Helen Quinn steps out from behind the broken screen door of her son’s house on the hill at the end of Showdown Lane. Her breath curls in the frosty air as she stretches a wrinkled hand to point out the ranch to her left and the row of brand-new houses to her right. The sound of banging hammers echoes up from a construction site, matched periodically by moos from the white Charolais crosses grazing on the other side of the road. In front of the new houses, hulking yellow Caterpillars and Bobcats lay dormant in the fresh snow. “I’m sorry they had to subdivide this,” Quinn says with a sigh. “It was really pretty to see the horses on one side and the cows on the other. But it’s progress, I guess, with a question mark.” The aptly named Showdown Lane separates ranchland from subdivisions in Missoula’s Miller Creek area, and as such it defines a conflict the city has yet to reconcile as it expands. Once the rolling hills of the Miller Creek area were pasture and farmland, most part of the 3,200-acre Maloney Ranch. Now Miller Creek is the epicenter of a heated debate between longtime ranchers and developers. As ranching grows more difficult and less profitable, the land is being bought, subdivided and developed....
Bill pushed to stop any new agriculture rules Hands off agriculture. That's the message of a bill that would restrict the ability of the state Legislature and citizens to pass laws regulating the agriculture industry. Aimed, in part, at quashing a citizens' initiative on farming practices that is opposed by the industry, the proposed constitutional amendment would go much further. It would constitutionally bar legislators or citizens from passing agricultural laws, and experts worry it also could exempt the industry from broader state laws such as a state minimum wage law or even new environmental regulations. Critics are calling the measure absurd and radical and questioning the logic of putting a single industry out of reach of citizens or their elected representatives. The proposal, Senate Concurrent Resolution 1035, introduced by Republican Sen. Jake Flake, prohibits any new laws or regulations that "limit or restrict the production of agricultural products" except in certain circumstances, including public health and safety and water use. Any new laws that do apply to agriculture could be enforced or adopted only by an unnamed state agency to be designated by the Legislature, unless lawmakers or citizens amend the state Constitution....
Down 'n drought An East Texas man who once observed numerous lakes drying up said it was the first time he ever had seen fish with ticks on them. A West Texas rancher who watched heavy rains break a long drought said it hadn't rained in so long that 3-year-old bullfrogs were drowning because they didn't know how to swim. Indeed, some humor can be found almost anywhere, but anyone who is seriously concerned about the effects of this winter's Texas drought on outdoors activities, plants and wildlife know that it is not a laughing matter. The consensus among wildlife observers, outdoor-events planners, fisheries officials and others is that if the drought continues through spring and summer its effects are going to be the worst in at least a half-century. On Jan. 19, Gov. Rick Perry declared drought disaster for all 254 counties in the state after wildfires had claimed 455,000 acres and destroyed more than 300 homes and were blamed for at least three deaths. According to the National Climatic Data Center, 2005 was the 12th-driest year on record for Texas. April through December was the third-driest period on record, surpassing only the same periods in 1917 and 1956....
Climate change affecting agriculture, wildlife, recreation The old-timers are right. The snowdrifts were deeper back then, and winter persisted far longer. Climate studies in western Montana show spring is arriving two to three weeks earlier than it did 50 years ago. Missoula's annual average temperature is up 2 degrees over the same period. And the number of frost-free days in the growing season increased by about 16 days. Gov. Brian Schweitzer asked Montana's Department of Environmental Quality to form a Climate Change Advisory Group to thoroughly study the impact of global warming in Montana. Schweitzer wants a Climate Change Action Plan by next year....
Newcombe ranch to be auctioned One of the West River area's most historic ranches, where Chief Big Foot camped on his way to Wounded Knee and where famed trick rider Mattie Goff Newcombe and her husband, Maynard, raised cattle for many years, will be sold at auction this week. It is attracting interest from potential buyers in 19 states, as well as local ranchers. The nearly 16,000-acre Newcombe ranch, which has been in the same family since it was homesteaded in the 1890s, will be auctioned at 11 a.m. Thursday, March 2, in the Central Meade County Community Center at Union Center. Chief Big Foot and his band of Miniconjou Lakotas camped a mile or two east of the present Newcombe ranch headquarters downstream from the confluence of the Belle Fourche and Cheyenne rivers, according to Hereford resident Hugh Reichert, 85, who has lived in the area his entire life. Members of a local ranchers' militia called the Home Guard reportedly harassed Big Foot's band, and cavalry troops from Fort Meade kept an eye on the Lakotas, Reichert said. Big Foot and his band slipped away and traveled south through the Badlands to their ill-fated date with history on Wounded Knee Creek on Dec. 29, 1890. Meanwhile, 18-year-old John Newcombe emigrated from England to the Black Hills in about 1881, according to a grandnephew of Mattie's, Derral Herbst of Hawaii, who has examined U.S. Census records....
Man re-creates conveyances of Old West The vehicle housed inside Russ Tyndall's garage won't break any modern day land speed records. But there was a time, Tyndall said, when his 4-horsepower "interstate cruiser" could have gone unchallenged as it charged across the vast plains and mountains of the West. Tyndall's vehicle, a functional, nine-passenger stagecoach, is in mint condition. It has candle burning lamps, interior leather seating, and 23-carat gold-leaf exterior scrollwork. "It's an exact reproduction of the Western-style coaches originally manufactured by the Abbot Downing Company at (its) factory in Concord, New Hampshire, in 1864," Tyndall said from his 8-acre property in Cochise....
Lambing season's here: But sheep ranching a dying breed' Buck Guntley, a descendant of generations of sheep ranchers, remembers when family outings included driving on foot or horseback, about 1,200 head of sheep over Highway 101. "We used to trail sheep from here to Anderson Valley," the 74-year-old Guntley recalled Friday from his 4,000 acre ranch, hidden off Highway 20. "There used to be a slaughter house there. We'd take a buggy and a couple of horses ... We'd drive them on the ground right down Highway 101 ... " he said, until they reached a corral, then located near where Frank Zeek School is now. The next morning, they'd travel the rest of the way to their destination, he said, noting their last trip was made in 1947, by which time there were a few cars to deal with. "Cars coming would wait ... we'd wait until we had three or four cars behind us and then we'd take the sheep and move them over to one sie of the road (to let the cars go by)," he said. "It's a dying breed," Guntley said of sheep ranching. His family has been at it since the 1800s, and moved to the area in 1906, Guntley said....
Cattle drive became Okeechobee history Not so terribly long ago, cattle drives passed through town to sales or new pasture. On one such drive, a nine-year-old boy was allowed to accompany his grandfather and father on the three week long trip. In the mural, he is shown riding his Shetland pony and his father is on a grey horse. Many of you know this boy, now a grown man, as local rancher Haynes Williams. This is his story of that memorable cattle drive in 1937. “Back then cattle ranged free; no one owned the land his cattle grazed. Most of the land was owned by out-of-town big investors, like Okeechobee, Inc. or the State of Florida. “It had gotten crowded up near where we were in Highlands and Desoto Counties. Grandpa needed more grazing space for his cattle. We came from Highlands County down to Okeechobee on our way to grazing land over at Allapattah Flats. I was allowed to ride with the drive on my pony, Dan. My father, Zibe K. Williams, was on the cattle drive riding his grey horse. “I was nine years old and that three weeks was the horror story of my life! It was July and it rained every day. “You made maybe five miles a day with those cracker cows ‘cause you had to let them stop and graze part of every day. They had to eat. I cried every day of that trip to go home, but there wasn’t any going home. It was days away by horse through the mud. We didn’t have raincoats then and I didn’t even have a hat....
On the Edge of Common Sense: Chicken by any other name tastes the same It may come as a shock that I, a man who cannot fry eggs without searing an impermeable layer of Formica on the bottom, who still has not mastered Minute Rice and whose idea of a salad is a jalapeo and Miracle Whip, would keep abreast of the latest trends in haute cuisine. Many of you are aware that sous vide (plastic vacuum-sealed gourmet meats for boiling or simmering) has now jumped from the convenience store bean burrito you put in the microwave, to the Anazazi frijle blue tortilla wrap with Santa Fe red chile and mango sauce you buy at Trader Joe's for $12.99. It just shows you can paint racing stripes on a Geo and fool some of the people all of the time....

Sunday, February 26, 2006

FLE

Mexican helicopter entered U.S. airspace

An unmarked helicopter belonging to the Mexican Attorney General's Office crossed into U.S. airspace Tuesday night, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection and nearly 30 eyewitnesses. The helicopter -- described as a black Huey -- was flying 40 yards off the ground and crossed into the United States near San Luis, Ariz., which is close to the Colorado River, before making its way back across into Algodones, Mexico, according to eyewitnesses and U.S. officials. Algodones is close to Yuma, Ariz. "The unmarked helicopter crossed into U.S. airspace and continued along the Colorado River for approximately half mile before returning to Mexico," according to a statement from the Yuma sector of U.S. Customs and Border Protection. "After proper coordination and verifications with the government of Mexico, they confirmed that the helicopter belonged to the Mexican Attorney General's Office (PGR) and had mistakenly and unintentionally crossed into U.S. airspace." PGR is the Mexican federal police force that investigates federal offenses, predominantly drug trafficking and organized crime. Eyewitness accounts of how long the helicopter was in U.S. airspace and who was on board conflict with a Customs and Border Protection release issued Thursday night. Denny Sheredy, another civilian border watcher, heard the U.S. Border Patrol agents on his scanner. "I heard it on the scanner and then nearly 20 minutes later I saw it for myself," Sheredy said. "That's about how long it took me to get to the group. That's how we know the helicopter was in U.S. airspace for at least that amount of time."....

Senate panel to tackle immigration legislation With immigration bills already flying left and right in Congress, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee on Friday unveiled his own comprehensive reform proposal. It's a big bundle, spanning 305 pages and covering everything from border fences to guest workers. But Specter stops short of what the House bill would do. The House measure, for instance, authorizes construction of a double-layer fence along much of the U.S.-Mexico border that could cost $2.5 billion or more. The Senate bill only authorizes studying a fence. The House bill makes illegal presence in the United States a felony. Specter would keep it a misdemeanor except for repeat violators. The House bill would require all workers to have their eligibility checked against a national database. The Senate bill covers only new employees. The Senate bill includes, as well, a new guest-worker program and a temporary legal status program that the House bill lacks. Tougher enforcement measures, including Specter's proposal to hire more than 1,000 additional customs and Border Patrol officers and investigators, are certain to be part of any immigration bill. A much bigger fight looms over the illegal immigrants already in this country. Specter's bill would create a new "conditional nonimmigrant work authorization" status for those currently in the United States illegally. The "alien," as the legislation puts it, would have to pay back taxes while the employer would have to pay a $500 fee. Separately, the Senate bill does include a new guest-worker provision, not limited to agriculture, which would permit working immigrants to enter the United States for a maximum of six years. Afterward, they would have to return home....

Trial may expose agency's inner code

The ongoing trial of two Border Patrol agents who shot an admitted drug dealer in the buttocks last year, sheds a rare light on the inner culture of the agency beyond rules and regulations. Prosecution lawyers in the case have talked of a "thin green line" of agents banding together, of a pecking order in which rookie agents don't dare question those with more seniority, and of the competition to land a drug seizure and the recognition it begets. Meanwhile, defense lawyers exposed the reality of agents who have relatives or friends on the other side of the law. The incident that led to the charges of assault against agents Ignacio Ramos and Jose Alonso Compean occurred on Feb. 17, 2005. The agents shot at Osvaldo Aldrete Davila, who was running back into Mexico near Fabens. Compean allegedly shot at least 14 times and Ramos once, hitting Aldrete in the buttocks. The victim made it back to Mexico where he received medical treatment. There were seven other agents at the scene of the shooting, including one who said he saw Compean shoot, several who heard the shooting and the rest who arrived later, according to information that came out in court. But no one reported the shooting, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Debra Kanof said when internal affairs agents started investigating at the Fabens station, "nobody would talk." Kanof said the "thin green line," referring to the color of the Border Patrol uniform, "had to be permeated."....

Border debate shifts to employers

Businesses that hire undocumented workers are emerging as a new target for state lawmakers in a year already brimming with illegal immigration measures. In Iowa, state Democratic leaders want the attorney general to investigate companies that hire undocumented workers. In Arizona, Gov. Janet Napolitano (D) is backing a bill that would impose heavy fines on companies that employ illegal immigrants. Similar proposals have been discussed in a growing number of states, including Colorado, Indiana, Maryland and New Hampshire, as legislators ratchet up state-based efforts to deal with illegal immigration by pointing their pens at those who hire illegal immigrants, not just at workers. The focus on penalizing employers comes as states increasingly are frustrated with federal border enforcement and are forced to address an immigration boom, which has affected everything from schools to hospitals to prisons. The results have been a rash of new state laws -- and more legislation in 2006 -- targeting where illegal immigrants can live, work and learn....

National Guard outlines cost of border stations

More than $32,000 a day. That's what it would cost - $32,100, to be exact - for Gov. Janet Napolitano to station 100 of the state's National Guard troops on the border. Arizona National Guard officials presented that figure Thursday to a legislative panel considering the feasibility of using the military to secure the border. Napolitano is said to be considering the issue. In August, she joined fellow Democratic Gov. Bill Richardson of New Mexico in declaring an emergency along the border. More recently, Napolitano kicked off the legislative session with a State of the State address that asserted her willingness to station guardsmen on the border if the federal government will pick up the tab. Maj. Gen. David Rataczak of the Arizona National Guard told lawmakers Thursday that those negotiations between the Governor's Office and Department of Defense are continuing. Even if the feds won't pony up, Rep. John Allen, R-Scottsdale, suggested the state would see a savings in illegal immigration costs by funding the operation. Members of the House Select Committee on Government Operations, Performance and Waste heard testimony from ranchers and others who described a border in chaos with drug running, human smuggling and a continual flow of people across their properties. Roger Barnett, who has a 22,000-acre ranch near the border in Cochise County, showed legislators pictures of bodies and marijuana bales. He's found both on his property. "We're getting run over," he said. "Our lives are jeopardized."....

US fears Mexico "Laser Visas" being used illegally

A growing number of high-tech U.S. visas aimed at boosting security on the Mexico border may be winding up on the black market for sale or rent, U.S. officials said on Friday. At least 11,840 Laser Visas, issued to Mexican citizens for travel to the United States, were reported lost or stolen in two major border cities last year, up nearly 15 percent from 2004, they said. The credit card-sized documents, which include the bearers' photograph and scanned fingerprints, were introduced in 1998 to increase security and standardize documents used by Mexicans to cross the border. "While many may have been legitimately 'lost,' it seems probable that quite a few are either 'stolen' or 'reported stolen' in order to sell them," a U.S. consular official, who declined to be named, told Reuters. "There appears to be a healthy market for both buying and renting laser visas on the border," she added. Dubbed "micas" in border communities, they allow holders to cross by land without other supporting documents, and travel up to 25 miles inside California and Texas for a stay of up to 30 days. According to figures obtained by Reuters, 8,745 of the border crossing cards went astray last year in Ciudad Juarez, south of El Paso, Texas, and 3,095 in Tijuana, opposite San Diego, California. No figures were available for other cities along the 2,000-mile (3,200-km) border....

Making a Meth of the PATRIOT Act

If you thought al Qaeda or Iraqi insurgents were the major threats facing America, Rep. Charlie Dent (R-Pa.) says you're wrong. According to Dent, "The growing availability of methamphetamine is a form of terrorism unto itself." Many of Dent's colleagues apparently agree, so they've attached surveillance, "smuggling", and "money laundering" provisions to the reauthorization of the USA PATRIOT Act. These vast new police powers, contained in a new "Combat Methamphetamine Act" (CMA) and other provisions, serve no purpose in the ongoing and serious struggle against terrorism. One proposal could place millions of Americans who purchase cold medicine on a huge government watch list; another could broaden powers that have been used to prosecute people for catching lobsters whose tails are too short. What could possibly be Congress' motivation in adding stuff like this to a mammoth piece of counterterrorism legislation (ironically, as part of an agreement negotiated with wavering Senators to put more checks on the government's PATRIOT Act powers)? The answer is, to tweak the parlance of pundits, very September 10th. The CMA pushes Congress's favorite pre-9/11 bipartisan activity: escalating the never-ending War on Drugs. Ironically, some Democrats who objected to National Security Agency wiretaps in December actually championed provisions that step on privacy in the name of stopping meth. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, (D-Calif.), who voted for a filibuster after the revelation of the National Security Agency's domestic spying program in December, co-sponsored the CMA and helped insert it into the PATRIOT Act conference report after failed attempts to pass it through other legislation. The new provisions were stalled with the filibuster and temporary PATRIOT extensions, but now appear to be poised for passage with the compromise bill. The CMA would move cold medicines such as Sudafed behind the counter, on the grounds that their active ingredient, pseudoephedrine, is a potential meth component. In DiFi's words, the solution to this non-problem would include "requiring purchasers to show identification and sign a log book." Once you sign for your medicine, your name becomes part of "a functional monitoring program" that would "allow law enforcement officials to track and ultimately prevent suspicious buying behavior of ingredients for meth production," according to a Feinstein press release describing a similar stand-alone bill. Provisions such as these have already been enacted at the state level, and they've attracted criticism from groups not normally opposed to strong measures in the war on terror or the war on drugs. The conservative groups Frontiers of Freedom and the American Legislative Exchange Council, along with Dennis Vacco, New York State's Republican former Attorney General, have criticized state bans on over-the-counter cold medicine. But the federal CMA goes further than even many of the state laws have. In North Carolina, a state not notorious for being soft on drugs, lawmakers exempted liquid and gelcap forms of medicines with pseudoephedrine, as well as children's versions of the medicine, from behind-the-counter rules. The federal CMA makes no such exceptions....

TIA Lives On

A controversial counter-terrorism program, which lawmakers halted more than two years ago amid outcries from privacy advocates, was stopped in name only and has quietly continued within the intelligence agency now fending off charges that it has violated the privacy of U.S. citizens. Research under the Defense Department's Total Information Awareness program -- which developed technologies to predict terrorist attacks by mining government databases and the personal records of people in the United States -- was moved from the Pentagon's research-and-development agency to another group, which builds technologies primarily for the National Security Agency, according to documents obtained by National Journal and to intelligence sources familiar with the move. The names of key projects were changed, apparently to conceal their identities, but their funding remained intact, often under the same contracts. It is no secret that some parts of TIA lived on behind the veil of the classified intelligence budget. However, the projects that moved, their new code names, and the agencies that took them over haven't previously been disclosed. Sources aware of the transfers declined to speak on the record for this story because, they said, the identities of the specific programs are classified. Two of the most important components of the TIA program were moved to the Advanced Research and Development Activity, housed at NSA headquarters in Fort Meade, Md., documents and sources confirm. One piece was the Information Awareness Prototype System, the core architecture that tied together numerous information extraction, analysis, and dissemination tools developed under TIA. The prototype system included privacy-protection technologies that may have been discontinued or scaled back following the move to ARDA. A $19 million contract to build the prototype system was awarded in late 2002 to Hicks & Associates, a consulting firm in Arlington, Va., that is run by former Defense and military officials. Congress's decision to pull TIA's funding in late 2003 "caused a significant amount of uncertainty for all of us about the future of our work," Hicks executive Brian Sharkey wrote in an e-mail to subcontractors at the time. "Fortunately," Sharkey continued, "a new sponsor has come forward that will enable us to continue much of our previous work." Sources confirm that this new sponsor was ARDA....

'Big Brother' Watching E-mail, Computer Data: US Report

Fast-evolving Internet and communications technology is outpacing privacy laws and leaving a treasure trove of personal data prey to government surveillance, a new report warned. The survey by the non-profit Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT) appeared as debate rages over a domestic wiretap program in the United States and government lawyers demand search records held by firms like Google. "The gap between law and technology is widening every day, and privacy is eroding," said Jim Dempsey, the CDT policy director who authored the report. "What makes this even more troubling is that most users of these new technologies don't realize they are putting their privacy in jeopardy." Modern consumers live in an age when web based e-mails pileup on services like Microsoft's Hotmail and Google's Gmail, and all kinds of files from personal photos to bank, medical and travel records are stored online. Few computer users realise however, that web based e-mail is subject to much weaker protections than messages stored on home computers. While the government needs a warrant, issued by a judge, to search someone's home computer, it can access a person's webmail account with only a subpoena, issued without judicial review. In another example, the ubiquitous cellphone makes communication on the move easy -- but it has a downside, in that it can be used theoretically by government agencies to pinpoint an individual's location. There are no existing laws laying out explicit standards for government location tracking, so official use of such technology is only controlled by an inadequate patchwork of laws and precedents, the report said....

The limits of the anti-terrorism powers asserted by President Bush are hard to see

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales says Congress approved the National Security Agency's warrantless domestic wiretaps when it authorized a military response to the September 11 terrorist attacks. He also has said President Bush later decided not to ask for congressional approval of the surveillance program (approval he supposedly already had) because Congress probably would have said no (even though, by Gonzales' account, it already had said yes). Now the Bush administration is pursuing legislation suggested by Sen. Mike DeWine (R-Ohio) that would provide the congressional blessing it says it always had yet never sought. But since the president apparently thinks he has unilateral authority to do whatever he deems necessary to prevent terrorism, any law that aims to regulate his conduct in this area may not accomplish much. The administration claims the post-9/11 Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF) amended the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which requires warrants to monitor communications of people within the U.S. The legislators who voted for the AUMF clearly did not think they were saying anything about wiretaps, since they later explicitly loosened the rules for surveillance in ways that would make no sense if they already had granted the exemption discerned by Gonzales. The administration tries to bolster its argument by citing a 2004 decision in which the U.S. Supreme Court recognized the detention of prisoners captured on the battlefield as "a fundamental incident of waging war" implicitly authorized by the AUMF. But while it's hard to imagine how U.S. forces could have attacked Al Qaeda and its Taliban allies in Afghanistan without taking prisoners, monitoring the international e-mail and telephone calls of Americans on U.S. soil—even Americans suspected of links to Al Qaeda—is not a necessary part of the military action approved by Congress....

The spy who bills us

WHEN YOUR phone bill arrives this month, you might want to take a moment to think about how much you trust your telephone company. While the National Security Agency has gotten a lot of press since it was revealed in December that its analysts engaged in the warrantless surveillance of US citizens, the eavesdropping agency would not have been able to conduct the operation without the intimate -- and likely illegal -- cooperation of private telecommunications providers. After the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, the NSA adopted a bold new approach. Seeking more unfettered access to the vast communications channels that run through the country, the agency approached executives at major telecommunications companies and requested that they provide the NSA with secret backdoors into the hubs and switches through which our telephone calls and e-mails are routed. Whereas the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act requires spies to obtain individual warrants for each target in an investigation, the phone companies provided unfiltered access to the full current of communications -- not just Al Qaeda's calls, but everyone else's as well. One problem with this approach is that it's like drinking from a fire hose. The NSA intercepts about 650 million communications worldwide every day, and, in something of a paradox, the better the agency is at hoovering in phone calls and e-mails, the worse it is at isolating critical and timely information from the white noise. According to recent reports, few of the tips the agency generated from its wiretapping program resulted in the identification of actual terrorists or plots. Another problem is that trolling indiscriminately through the communications stream is illegal. The mechanism for eavesdropping established by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act is simple: Target first, eavesdrop second. If there are grounds to suspect that a person is a terrorist or agent of a foreign power, a warrant is granted to spy on that person. With this new program, the agency has inverted the traditional steps: Eavesdrop first, then identify targets within the stream of intercepted communications....

America's fleecing in the name of security

Rest easy, America. As a response to the Sept. 11 attacks, the Princeton, N.J., Fire Department now owns Nautilus exercise equipment, free weights and a Bowflex machine. The police dogs of Columbus, Ohio, are protected by Kevlar vests, thank God. Mason County, Wash., is the proud owner of a half-dozen state-of-the-art emergency radios (never mind that they are incompatible with existing county radios). All of these crucial purchases -- and many more like them -- were paid for with homeland security grants. Doesn't it make you feel more secure that $100,000 in such money went to fund the federal Child Pornography Tipline? That $38 million went to cover fire claims related to the April 2001 Cerro Grande fire in New Mexico? And that $2.5 billion went to "highway security" -- that is, building and improving roads? Since Sept. 11, 2001, Congress has appropriated nearly $207 billion to protect us from terrorism. Total homeland security spending in 2006 will be at least $50 billion, split between the Department of Homeland Security and many other agencies, including, improbably, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of Commerce and NASA. But far from making us more secure, the money is being allocated like so much pork. While the Department of Homeland Security is finally making some improvements in how it allocates resources, much more needs to be done, especially by Congress. Indeed, as the above examples suggest, states and cities are spending federal homeland security grants on pet projects that have little or nothing to do with security....

Why's a Retired Army Lieutenant Colonel on the "No-Fly" List?

The federal officials who are busy assuring Americans that they've got their act together when it comes to managing port security are not inspiring much confidence with their approach to airline security. When Dr. Robert Johnson, a heart surgeon who did his active duty with the U.S. Army Reserve before being honorably discharged with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel, arrived at the Syracuse airport near his home in upstate New York last month for a flight to Florida, he was told he could not travel. Why? Johnson was told that his name had been added to the federal "no-fly" list as a possible terror suspect. Johnson, who served in the military during the time of the first Gulf War and then came home to serve as northern New York's first board-certified thoracic surgeon and an active member of the community in his hometown of Sackets Harbor, is not a terror suspect. But he is an outspoken critic of the war in Iraq, who mounted a scrappy campaign for Congress as the Democratic challenger to Republican Representative John McHugh in 2004 and who plans to challenge McHugh again in upstate New York's sprawling 23rd District....

Justice Dept. Rejects Google's Concerns

Concerns by Google Inc. that a Bush administration demand to examine millions of its users' Internet search requests would violate privacy rights are unwarranted, the Justice Department said in a court filing. The 18-page brief filed Friday argues that because the information provided would not identify or be traceable to specific users, privacy rights would not be violated. The brief was the Justice Department's reply to strident arguments filed by Google last week as a rebuff the government's demand to review its search requests during a random week. The department believes the information will help revive an online child protection law that has been blocked by the U.S. Supreme Court. By showing the wide variety of Web sites that people find through search engines, the government hopes to prove Internet filters are not strong enough to prevent children from viewing pornography and other inappropriate material online. The Justice Department submitted a declaration by Philip B. Stark, a researcher who rejected the privacy concerns, noting that the government specifically requested that Google remove any identifying information from the search requests. "The study does not involve examining the queries in more than a cursory way. It involves running a random sample of the queries through the Google search engine and categorizing the results," Stark, a statistics professor at the University of California, Berkeley, said. Mountain View, Calif.-based Google has staunchly resisted the Justice Department since receiving a subpoena last summer, setting the stage for the current legal battle....

Homeland Security Objected to Ports Deal

The Homeland Security Department objected at first to a United Arab Emirates company's taking over significant operations at six U.S. ports. It was the lone protest among members of the government committee that eventually approved the deal without dissent. The department's early objections were settled later in the government's review of the $6.8 billion deal after Dubai-owned DP World agreed to a series of security restrictions. On Saturday, congressional leaders, the company and Bush administration officials appeared to move closer to a compromise intended to derail plans by Republicans and Democrats for legislation next week that would force a new investigation of security issues relating to the deal. Discussions underway Saturday were to continue through the weekend. The company's surprise decision Thursday to indefinitely postpone its takeover of U.S. port operations did little to quell a political furor or appease skeptical members of Congress that the deal does not pose any increased risks to the U.S. from terrorism. Among the proposals being discussed is a new, intensive 45-day review of the deal by the government — something the White House had refused to consider as recently as Friday....
SATURDAY NIGHT AT THE WESTERNER

Barkalounges and pawdicures: a world gone to the dogs

By Julie Carter

It was in 1982 that Hank the Cowdog first showed up on America’s bookshelves and now, six million copies later, there are very few folks who haven’t at least heard about Hank.

For those of you that perhaps lived in a cave somewhere and don’t know Hank, he is the creation of Texas born cowboy turned author, John R. Erickson.

Based on actual dogs Erickson once worked with at the ranch, Hank the Cowdog is a scruffy, smart-alecky super-sleuth with a nose for danger and an eye for the ladies. And as “Head of Ranch Security” on a West Texas ranch, he’s usually up to his ears in all kinds of amusing trouble.

Whether he is called upon to bark-up the sun, investigate suspicious goings-on, or defend the ranch against marauders, Hank’s hilarious, hair-raising adventures delight young and old.

Hank, his timid sidekick Drover and his sworn enemy Pete the Barncat have shared adventure after adventure at the M Cross ranch through soon-to-be 48 books.

To know Hank is to love Hank. He is the epitome of the typical ranchdog. He represents the thousands of his brethren lying in the shade of the gas tanks, under the porches and behind the stock trailers of America’s ranches.

Hank and I have a lot in common -- beside the scruffy, smart-alecky, and laying in the shade parts. We are just who we are. The ranch is where we want to be and assigning ourselves jobs that surely make the world a better place is what we do. I don’t bark at the sun but I have barked a few varmints into a corner, usually two-legged ones.

I have often wondered what it would be like for the Hanks of the west if they were to visit one of those fancy city salons for pampered pooches. I’ve been told about a couple with intriguing names. One is called The Grand Paw and the other The Frou Frou Room.

For the pampered canine, these “kennels” offer overnight suites and plush cabanas, a training and agility course, oral hygiene, organic and holistic foods, a grooming salon and a day spa that include milk baths as well as hot oil and silk treatments.

For DOGS they offer aromatherapy, massage, birthday cakes, pawdicures, a day camp or social club, an indoor barkalounge (as opposed to an outdoor one I suppose). Of course exercise, affection, a chauffeur service and doggy psychology are also available.

This is a world where the dogs have names like Ambrose, Guinevere, Tranquilla and Nicolette instead of Gus, Slick, Murphy and Damn U.

Hank would be amazed at the money spent on dogs. Fifty dollars a night can buy you a pawdicure and time in the barkalounge (whatever that is!). Hank and I both know fifty dollars a day in our world is called “wages” and a barkalounge sounds very much like a cowboy honky tonk.

And about Nicolette. Hank would like her to know that if she wants to visit the ranch, he’d be happy to give her a tour of the machine shed and the post pile. If she was real adventurous, he would even take her out to meet his coyote buddies, ole Rip and Snort.

Nothing says cowdog romance like a night howling at the moon.

© Julie Carter 2006


The Business of Farming

By Larry Gabriel

What is the business model for your farm or ranch? Every business has one.

If we ask the average farmer or rancher what business model he uses for his operation, we might get a blank stare.

That is because most of the world doesn't view farming or ranching as a "business". Only in some of the developing countries are agricultural stories in the business section of the news.

Those of us not paying attention to our business model are following one selected by other people.

The model can be inherited, because that's the way dad always did it. A model can be suggested by a lender who requires a business plan. Sometimes it is created by trial and error. Other times it is created by a government program. Often it is formed by intuition.

Some people believe the government should design a universal business model for all of our farmers and ranchers. Such people usually crave uniformity and control.

There are two reasons a government farm model won't work. First, most of us don't appreciate being told how to run our operations. Second, every operation and every operator is different.

A model that works well on a farm with heavy loam soil and 24 inches of annual precipitation will not work on poorer soils with 16 inches of precipitation.

We all have different abilities. Some people take pride in doing all the labor themselves, while others cannot do the labor. Some can skillfully supervise only one employee, while others can supervise a hundred.

A model for a grain commodity operation might work well for someone skilled and knowledgeable about using the futures market to reduce his risks, and not work at all for someone who views the commodity market as a place to gamble.

Whatever your business model may be, it should include three things in my view: 1) something you enjoy; 2) something that meets your family's financial needs, and 3) one that does not infringe on the freedom or rights of others.

Within those parameters, the options are almost unlimited. We can diversify production, develop specialty products, integrate vertically in the market, learn to use futures markets, improve production, lower costs, add value, expand use of renewable energy, develop new markets and sell services, just to name a few.

When we view our farms and ranches as businesses, we will see business opportunities we otherwise would miss. Someday, farming and ranching will be accepted as businesses.

It may not be today, but it is closer.

Mr. Gabriel is the South Dakota Secretary of Agriculture
OPINION/COMMENTARY

Property Rights Improve Environment, Book Says

Re-Thinking Green: Alternatives to Environmental Bureaucracy edited by Robert Higgs and Carl P. Close Independent Institute, 2005 480 pages, $22.95 paper, ISBN 0945999976 The American public has shown significant concern for environmental quality since the first Earth Day in 1970, yet the maze of environmental laws and regulations enacted since then has fostered huge government bureaucracies better known for waste and failure than for innovation and success. In Re-Thinking Green, 22 economists and political scientists explain how environmental quality can be enhanced more effectively by relying less on government agencies, which are increasingly politicized and unaccountable, and more on environmental entrepreneurship and the strict enforcement of private property rights. The environmental bureaucracy has grown in size and scope because of a misguided belief that unless mankind reduces consumption of natural resources, cataclysmic environmental disasters will occur. "Sustainable development" is the fashionable but nebulous term associated with proposals to deal with the limiting of growth the environmentalists call for. It focuses primarily on limiting, if not eliminating, private land ownership. The authors of Re-Thinking Green brilliantly describe the fallacy in this type of thinking, and along the way they completely defrock unfounded concerns regarding population growth and the biggest environmental scam of them all: global warming. Re-Thinking Green does an excellent job of explaining, for example, the total failure of the Endangered Species Act. This 1973 law not only has a dismal record of reinvigorating endangered species populations, but in the process of failing it confiscates private property without offering any compensation to the citizens whose property rights have been violated. The authors contend that a law rewarding property owners for acting as stewards of endangered species would be far more successful than one that encourages property owners to do everything possible to avoid having endangered species take a liking to their land. Similarly, the authors deftly expose "smart growth" as a semantic fraud that subsidizes high-density urban living while creating the undesirable side effects of unaffordable housing, air pollution, and increased traffic congestion. The book focuses largely on Portland, Oregon, which has adopted many of the failed central planning techniques of the old Soviet Union....

Big stake in wetlands case

Landowners with so much as a puddle on their property should prepare for a showdown: Tomorrow the U.S. Supreme Court is going to hear two cases that might settle once and for all whether the 1970 Clean Water Act allows federal bureaucrats to regulate any wetland anywhere -- as they are effectively claiming -- or if there are some constitutional limits to their reach. No doubt the bureaucrats will rattle off a litany of supposed environmental benefits to justify their ever-extending tentacles to the court. But what the justices won't hear from them is the cost to the economy. The more egregious of the two cases involves John Rapanos, a pugnacious developer, who has become something of a cause celeb among property rights advocates. Federal bureaucrats began harassing him 20 years ago when he moved some dirt on his property without first obtaining a wetland permit. Despite repeated lawsuits, he refused to cave in to their demands on grounds that their jurisdiction ended 20 miles away from his property -- where the nearest navigable waters were located. What's more, apart from two little wet spots that he was not planning to touch, his property was bone dry, thanks to its sandy soil. Indeed, if he needs a federal permit, then potentially every property owner housing the smallest pond or puddle needs one. (It costs on average $300,000 to obtain this permit). This surely can't be the intention of the Clean Water Act, he argues. But if it is, Mr. Rapanos maintains, then the act itself violates the Constitution's Commerce Clause, which limits Uncle Sam's reach only to areas abutting navigable waters. Setting aside the serious constitutional issues involved, what are the economic costs of such federal mandates?....

Keeping Our Cool

"With God's help, we can stop global warming for our kids, our world and our Lord." - Television spot by Christian evangelical leaders A group that has historically taken a back seat on ecological issues is now coming to the forefront of environmental advocacy. Starting with the formation of the Evangelical Environmental Network in 1995, evangelical Christians have supported a variety of environmental initiatives from the renewal the Endangered Species Act to the “What Would Jesus Drive” campaign. But those proposals pale in comparison to the latest target of eco-spiritual concern: global warming. Just this month, eighty-five influential evangelicals met calling for the passage of legislation to reduce greenhouse emissions. They represent a growing number of Christians, like Christianity Today columnist Andy Crouch, who believe that global warming is a foregone fact and that man-generated gases are the reason. While no credible authority denies that greenhouse gases have an effect on temperature, there is considerable disagreement on 1) their contribution to the myriad of other known and unknown causes, 2) whether the effect is positive, negative, or neutral, and 3) the validity of long-term predictions. Nevertheless, the idea one receives from the media is that global-warming science is all but settled; and if big business lobbyists weren’t pumping corporate profits into the pockets of politicians, we could be well on our way to a solution. Over and against that notion, Dr. Richard Lindzen, MIT professor of meteorology and panelist for the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report says, "Our primary conclusion was that despite some knowledge and some agreement, the science is by no means settled. We are not in a position to confidently attribute past climate change to carbon dioxide or to forecast what the climate will be in the future." Dr. Lindzen is far from alone. In an open letter to Senator John McCain, co-sponsor of the Climate Stewardship Act, eleven climate scientists challenged the oft-cited Artic melt phenomenon as evidence of global warming. And there are countless other credentialed scientists who are just as skeptical of the problem....

Indicted Eco-Terror Teacher Has A History Of Arson Instruction

Animal-rights and environmental extremist Rodney Coronado, charged yesterday with teaching other activists how to build firebombs during an August 2003 speech, gave a similar tutorial at Washington, DC’s American University in January 2003. Today the nonprofit Center for Consumer Freedom announced that video B-roll of Coronado’s earlier bomb-making demonstration is available to the media. Center for Consumer Freedom Director of Research David Martosko said: “Federal agents should be congratulated for taking a dangerous animal-rights militant off the streets. Hopefully, the rest of the animal liberation movement’s violent underground will continue to get this sort of scrutiny from law enforcement. And that must include a close look at the ‘mainstream’ activist groups, including PETA, that have given people like Rod Coronado aid and comfort.” Coronado spent 57 months in prison during the 1990s for his role in an animal-rights arson that destroyed a research facility at Michigan State University. Court records show that People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) president Ingrid Newkirk “arranged … days before the MSU arson occurred” [emphasis in the original court documents] for Coronado to send her overnight packages containing stolen documents from inside the lab and a videotape of the arson fire being started. A copy of the U.S. Attorney’s Sentencing Memorandum in the MSU case is also available. PETA gave Coronado over $70,000 for his unsuccessful legal defense....

GRAND CANYON AIR TOURS MEET NATURAL QUIET RULES

A federal advisory group convened by the National Park Service (NPS) and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) meets today in Phoenix, Arizona, to discuss, among other issues, the substantial restoration of natural quiet at Grand Canyon National Park in the wake of a study last month that found that recreation air tour operators are in compliance with those agencies’ natural quiet rules. The U.S. Department of Transportation’s John A. Volpe National Transportation Systems Center, in a January 27, 2006, report, found that air tours operators comply with the requirement of natural quiet in more than half of the park 75 percent of the time. That finding will be presented to this week’s scoping meetings, which precede release of an environmental impact statement by the agencies. “That air tour providers, given all they have done and all the money they have invested over the years, are in full compliance with the natural quiet rules is no surprise to those familiar with this issue,” said William Perry Pendley of Mountain States Legal Foundation, which represented the air tour providers in federal court. “We hope common sense will prevail and those who provide such an indispensable service to people unable to see Grand Canyon in any other way will be allow to operate fully and economically.” In April 2000, the NPA and FAA issued regulations pursuant to the Overflights Act of 1987, which mandates restoration of natural quiet in Grand Canyon National Park while preserving recreational air tours. The U.S. Air Tour Association and some of its members challenged those rules alleging that they were based on “junk science,” were arbitrary and capricious, failed to comply with various federal laws, and violated the constitutional rights of individual operators. In August 2002, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia upheld the rules but also ordered the agencies to include all aircraft that over fly Grand Canyon, including military and commercial. Air tour providers continued to maintain that Grand Canyon air tours, which have been taking place for more than 70 years, have achieved natural quiet and that even greater reductions could be achieved by the use of quiet technology rules, which the NPS has yet to implement. The Volpe Center study vindicates that view....

Addicted To Corn?

With President Bush reaffirming his belief that America is “addicted to oil” in a speech yesterday in Milwaukee, it is worth while to look at the feasibility of some of his proposals, such as this one: We're also supporting the development of advanced fuels that can replace regular gasoline. Here again I'm talking to folks who know what I'm talking about -- I'm talking about ethanol. You've got a lot of it here in Wisconsin because you've got corn. Ethanol is produced -- primarily produced from corn; it's blended with gasoline to produce clean and efficient fuel. What are the chances that ethanol can replace gasoline? According to Iowa Corn, one bushel of corn can produce 2.7 gallons of ethanol. Let’s assume that all the bushels of corn that the U.S. produced—about 11.8 billion in 2004—were used to produce ethanol. Doing a little math, it means that we could produce about 31.8 billion gallons of ethanol. According to the Energy Information Agency, the U.S. consumed about 139.9 billion gallons of gasoline in 2004 (a barrel is 42 gallons). Doing some more math (31.8 billion divided by 139.9 billion), we can see that we would have just enough ethanol to replace just under 23% of the amount of gasoline consumed by the U.S. That assumes, however, that every bushel of corn is used to produce ethanol....

Weak Energy Week

This has been “Energy Week” for President Bush as he barnstormed around the country in follow-up to his State of the Union message that we need to break our so-called “addiction” to oil. But the habit that really needs breaking is his apparent addiction to the notion that government, rather than free markets, will solve our energy problems. The president proclaimed in the State of the Union that, “We will also fund additional research in cutting-edge methods of producing ethanol, not just from corn but from wood chips and stalks or switch grass. Our goal is to make this new kind of ethanol practical and competitive within six years.” He echoed that theme in Milwaukee this week stating, “We must diversify away from oil for national and economic security. The more ethanol we use, the less crude oil we consume.” Touting ethanol is certainly good politics—particularly in Midwestern corn-growing states that already welcome significant taxpayer subsidies and regulatory mandates for ethanol. But ethanol isn’t necessarily good economics. Researchers from Cornell University and the University of California-Berkeley analyzed energy input-yield ratios and reported last July that producing ethanol from corn requires 29 percent more energy than can be derived from the resulting fuel—the switch grass and wood chips ratios are worse (45 percent and 57 percent, respectively). It’s no wonder that subsidies and mandates are the lifeblood of the ethanol industry. It would be terrific if President Bush’s goal of making ethanol “competitive” in six years could be achieved, but that’s unlikely....

Deer, trout, and children

How many of us have complained about the way that our state fish and wildlife agency has been managing (or not managing) our fish and wildlife? Our fees go up and up, and the bag and creel limits shrink. Fish and game habitat produces less and less sporting species in the countryside, while urban (and generally unavailable) deer herds run rampant. Elected officials and state bureaucrats are less and less in evidence, as hunting, trapping, and fishing are attacked by groups committed to their extinction. The negative effects of reduced logging on public lands, and disappearing wildlife management techniques, like predator management and single game species management planning, go unmentioned and unexplained. Introductions of harmful species by federal bureaucracies go unchallenged, and are often covertly abetted by state bureaucrats and "too-busy-to-pay-attention" state elected officials. All the while, we watch our state fish and wildlife agency assembling all manner of information on non-game species for a federal agency to obtain federal funds from Congress to share with the state agency ("strings" anyone?). We watch agency employees working on endangered species, invasive species, and native ecosystems, utilizing hunting and fishing funds, with total disregard for state resident desires, private property, and access to and use of public lands in the state....

Uncle Sam: Louisiana's Next Real Estate Baron?

Given the furor over the federal government's response to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, you'd think that any plan to give the feds ultimate control over the rebuilding effort would be laughed off the table. Unfortunately, Rep. Richard Baker (R-LA) is pushing just that — a federal land grab of massive proportions that would jeopardize Louisiana's economic recovery. A Baker-sponsored bill, H.R. 4100, would create a new federal agency — the Louisiana Recovery Corporation (LRC) — that would purchase up to 200,000 homes and commercial properties throughout the state that were damaged or destroyed by the 2004 hurricanes. The acquisitions would be funded by the issuance of $30 billion in U.S. Treasury bonds. The LRC would compensate owners at 60 percent of their home or business's pre-hurricane value, and banks would receive 60 percent of each property's remaining mortgage. The LRC would then make infrastructure improvements to prepare these properties for redevelopment and auction them off to private developers for rebuilding and resale, with previous owners having right of first refusal. Baker's proposal is backed by the entire Louisiana legislative delegation and has a great deal of popular support. But, there are several glaring downsides to the plan. First, history is littered with examples of the government's poor track record in large-scale property development....