Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Environmentalists: make it 'Hallowgreen' The most frightening part of Halloween is what it is doing to our planet, according to some environmental experts. When you think of Halloween, the environment may not be the first thing that comes to mind. However, the Nature Conservancy is out to make Halloween eco-friendly by publishing a segment on their Web site called "Green Your Halloween." "Green Your Halloween" warns against buying "chocolate that's unsustainably harvested, prepackaged costumes made of non-recyclable materials, lighted decorations that suck energy like a vampire and pumpkins trucked in from thousands of miles away." Melanie Lenart, research associate for the Institute for the Study of Planet Earth, said too much waste is generated on Halloween, and people should take the time to reduce their purchasing of disposable items. And if you want to take the extra step to raise awareness about environmental issues with your costume this year, Suite101.com suggests "10 eco-friendly costume ideas," such as dressing up like a compact fluorescent light bulb or even "global warming."....
DOW kills bear that attacked woman State and federal wildlife officers on Saturday killed a male bear that attacked and injured an Aspen woman on Oct. 17. According to a statement from the Colorado Division of Wildlife, officers located the bear using a GPS tracking collar placed on it earlier this year as part of a wildlife research project monitoring black bear behavior. They killed the bear about a mile east of Aspen around 3 p.m. Saturday. “By verifying collar tracking data, officers are sure that they have eliminated the bear responsible for the earlier incident,” Wildlife Division spokesman Randy Hampton said in the statement. “Tracking equipment had enabled wildlife officers to get close to the bear on several previous attempts, but nearby homes made it impossible to safely shoot the bear on those occasions.” On Oct. 17 the bear, which weighed approximately 450 pounds and was likely 5 to 10 years old, opened a sliding glass door and entered a Judith Garrison’s Aspen condo at about 1:30 a.m. The woman surprised the bear in the kitchen, and the bear clawed her in the face, causing serious injuries....
Wind farms generate bird worries The rapid expansion of wind energy farms in the Columbia River Gorge's shrub steppes could put hawks, eagles and other raptors on a collision course with fields of giant turbines and their 150-foot blades. By year's end, more than 1,500 turbines will be churning out electricity in the gorge, a windy corridor at the forefront of a nationwide effort to produce cleaner energy. Until now, most of the projects have gone up in wheat fields -- cultivated land that long ago drove away the rodents that raptors hunt. But as wind energy developers move into wilder areas along the gorge's ridge lines, near canyons and amid shrub-covered rangeland, the potential for conflict rises. If bird studies confirm the fears of Oregon and Washington state wildlife biologists, the green-minded Northwest might be forced to weigh its pursuit of pollution-free energy against the toll on raptors and other birds. The numbers sound small: Nationwide, collisions kill about 2.3 birds of all varieties per turbine per year, studies show. In the Northwest, it's about 1.9 birds per turbine. That could mean more than 3,000 bird deaths a year in the gorge. But birders say those numbers are meaningless because the totals make no distinction between abundant and rare species....
Environmental groups sue over 'mothball fleet' pollution Several environmental groups announced plans Monday to sue the federal government over toxic pollution caused by a fleet of mothballed warships floating near San Francisco Bay. The groups accuse the U.S. Maritime Administration of violating state and federal environmental regulations as dozens of decaying ships linger well past a congressional deadline ordering their removal. The suit was set to be filed Monday afternoon in U.S. District Court in Sacramento. More than 70 ships comprise the Suisun Bay Reserve Fleet, some dating back to World War II. The old ships were once kept afloat in case of war, but many have fallen into disrepair, overtaken by rust and rot. The suit asks the court to order the federal agency to prepare an official review of the environmental impact caused by the ships and to remove hazardous wastes – including paint, discarded oil and asbestos – from the vessels....
Mercury emitters rush to meet new U.S. rules The big power plant that hugs the shoreline of the winding James River just south of Richmond is getting bigger. Construction of a sprawling pollution-control project will almost double the size of Dominion Resources' Chesterfield plant, which supplies electricity to about 300,000 homes and businesses in central Virginia. When it's all over, the complex — including metal towers, a tile-lined wet scrubber and a towering new chimney — will cut the plant's emissions of mercury and other pollutants by an estimated 90%. Just six years ago, the coal-burning plant was one of the nation's largest mercury polluters, releasing 1,300 pounds of the metal into the air. But even before the new pollution controls could be installed, the plant's mercury output was cut to 360 pounds in 2005. While the plant is now burning coal that is lower in mercury content, part of the reduction is explained by more accurate emissions estimates. The work is part of a $2 billion investment that Dominion committed to after reaching a settlement in 2003 with the Environmental Protection Agency, which threatened to sue the company over emissions. That decision put Dominion in front of the rest of the industry, now rushing to install similar pollution-control equipment to meet federal and state regulations....
Powerful cattleman accepts fine for letting manure into river A prominent cattleman accepted a $40,000 fine for leaking manure into the Snake River, ending a standoff that has kept regulators from resolving how they will keep cattle waste out of Idaho's waterways. Eric Davis, owner of the Bruneau Cattle Co. feedlot in Owyhee County, acknowledged he allowed manure from his 4,000-head feedlot to flow into a canal running into the Snake River during heavy rains in 2005. Davis, a former president of the National Cattle Association, is one of the most politically powerful cattlemen in Idaho. After Environmental Protection Agency inspectors made a surprise visit to his ranch in February 2006, Idaho's governor, its congressional delegation and others wrote EPA Administrator Steve Johnson, urging him to intercede in Davis' case. But Johnson stayed out of the issue and the agency issued notices of violation against Davis last fall. EPA said Davis had repeatedly violated the Clean Water Act by allowing waste to run into the South Side Canal, which runs into C.J. Strike Reservoir on the Snake River....
Take the Federal Out of Farming Here's how the American free enterprise system works. You have an idea for a business. You find the money to start it up. You try to give customers something they want at a price low enough to keep them happy but high enough to earn a profit. Either your plan works, allowing you to make a living, or it doesn't, indicating you should find a different line of work. Unless, of course, you are a farmer, in which case all this may sound unfamiliar. A lot of American agriculture operates in an environment where none of the usual rules apply—where the important thing is not catering to the consumer, but tapping the Treasury. It's a sector that, ever since the Great Depression, has been a ward of the government, both coddled and controlled. By any reasonable standard, federal agriculture policy is past due for a major overhaul. But judging from the latest farm legislation moving through Congress, not much is going to change. Back in the 1930s, when the economy was a wreck, the survival of capitalism was in doubt and Oklahoma was blowing away, you could understand the impulse for Washington to intervene on behalf of farmers. But the days when agriculture meant a lifetime of toil for a meager living are just a memory. Today, farmers monitor soil conditions by computer, drive air-conditioned tractors and have a higher average income than nonfarmers....

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

EPA urges nuclear licensing authority to consider terrorism in decision on NY power plants The Environmental Protection Agency, in a break from the federal nuclear authority, says the potential impact of terrorism should be considered in deciding whether to relicense the Indian Point nuclear power plants north of New York City. In a letter to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission issued Oct. 10 and made public Monday, the EPA requested that eight issues, including terrorism, "be discussed in the environmental impact statement for these license renewals." The plants' owner, Entergy Nuclear, has applied for new licenses that would keep the two plants running until 2033 and 2035. Opponents of the plants, which have drawn increased public scrutiny since the terrorist attacks of 2001, have focused on the relicensing as a chance to shut the plants down in the next decade. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission, which has just begun the lengthy relicensing process, has turned away demands from the public and politicians that terrorism be considered, saying that is beyond the scope of relicensing....
Pair of endangered wolves to be removed from wild Two endangered Mexican gray wolves have been targeted for removal from the Gila National Forest in southwestern New Mexico. The U.S Fish and Wildlife Service authorized the trapping of the wolves, both part of the Aspen Pack, because the pack has killed a horse and five cows since the beginning of the year. “One of the reasons we’re trying to bring them in is to disrupt the behavior of the pack,” Elizabeth Slown, a spokeswoman for the Fish and Wildlife Service in Albuquerque, said Monday. Slown noted the order approved late Friday is unlike ones issued for other wolves, which called for the animals to be shot if trapping efforts failed. Some partners of the wolf reintroduction program did not agree with a lethal take order in the case of the Aspen alpha male and his yearling, she said. Ranchers have consistently complained about depredation of their livestock, while conservationists have criticized the program’s management — specifically a policy calling for the removal or killing of any wolf linked to three livestock killings within a year. Michael Robinson of the Center for Biological Diversity took issue Monday with the latest removal order, saying the Aspen pair is genetically vital to the reintroduction program....
On the Prowl Imperial saguaro cactuses embrace the Arizona sky with thorn-studded limbs, presiding over a realm of spiny ocotillos, prickly pear, cat's-claw and all manner of skin-shredding brush. Halfway up a rock-strewn trail, a young wildlife biologist named Emil McCain kneels next to a metal box affixed to a gnarled oak. The box was designed to thwart the errant curiosity of wandering bears, but McCain has found it stands up equally well to wandering humans. The box houses a digital camera equipped with a heat and motion sensor that snaps photographs of whatever moves on the trail; the camera has taken 26 shots since McCain last checked it a month ago. Viewing them, he scrolls through a veritable catalog of local wildlife: jack rabbit, white-tailed deer, rock squirrel, javelina (a sort of wild boar), coyote, bobcat, a woman in hiking boots. Suddenly, he looks up, an impish grin spreading across his face. "Hey, you guys, you wanna see a jaguar?" This jaguar is one of four that have been documented in the United States over the past decade. Some think that others live undetected in the wilds of Arizona and New Mexico....
'04 Calif. report urged better cooperation with military in fires Three years ago, a panel appointed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said finding ways to quickly get military helicopters and planes airborne to battle out of control wildfires should be a "high priority." Yet, last week, delays launching aircraft revealed a system still suffering from communication and planning shortfalls. The Gov.'s Blue Ribbon Fire Commission, formed after 2003 wildfires destroyed more than 3,600 homes, urged the state to "clarify and improve" policies and regulations for using military aircraft in firefighting. The report also recommended a host of other changes, including buying new helicopters and fire engines. Schwarzenegger said as far back as September 2004 that his administration was working with the federal government to make sure plans to use military helicopters and airplanes were "efficient and effective." However, when the latest fires flamed out of control on Oct. 21, not all available military aircraft were quickly pressed into service. The Associated Press reported last week that Marine, Navy and National Guard helicopters were grounded because state personnel required to be on board weren't immediately available....
New era of wildfires requires new rules Southern California on fire is not a pretty sight: Images of inflamed ridgelines, smoldering churches, gutted Jaguars, and burning homes; along with an arsenal of firefighting equipment and yellow-coated, grime-stained firefighters cutting fire breaks, have been the staple of evening news for the past week. But what those flickering images cannot capture is the scale: The flames stretch more than 200 miles from Santa Barbara to northern Baja, Mexico. The costs: San Diego alone has suffered damages topping $1 billion. Or the extent of loss: To date, hundreds of thousands of people have been displaced, 500,000 acres have been burned, and 2,000 homes have been consumed. Neither can they convey that the air tastes like charcoal and leaves an acrid residue on tongue and throat. Some days the smoke has been so thick that the sun has been well-nigh blotted out; day has become night. Yet most confounding has been the response to the fires. No one questions that Southern California has always burned. But many anguished homeowners are convinced that once these fires are extinguished, life will go back to normal....
Logging plan cuts fuel for a Sierra wildfire The buzz of the chain saw cuts cleanly through the quiet as it slices a pine tree marked for removal by foresters. Next comes the cracking sound as the 60-foot tree begins to fall, picking up speed before smacking the ground with an earth-shaking WHOOMPF. This logging project near a small community a few miles northeast of Oakhurst will benefit thousands of acres of national forestlands, as well as a nearby grove of giant sequoias. It and dozens of similar efforts scheduled in the coming years are designed to prevent a small blaze from becoming a massive firestorm similar to those that devastated Southern California last week. The project is aimed at removing "ladder fuels," the thick undergrowth of immature or fallen trees, thickly piled needles and other combustibles that have built up for decades throughout forestlands....
How Environmental Laws Serve Hidden Agendas Few would doubt the sincerity of those who worked to obtain passage of the Endangered Species Act (ESA). Certainly Congress intended the act be applied to each species on the merits of the case for preservation. Congress said in 1973 the act was intended "to provide a means whereby the eco-systems upon which an endangered species and threatened species depend may be conserved, to provide a program, for the conservation of such endangered species and threatened species." Evidently no one foresaw how easily the act could be perverted to achieve hidden agendas of special-interest groups. There is no longer any question that the act has been applied in a manner far beyond what any of us envisioned when it was written more than 30 years ago. The northern spotted owl was the species used to prevent logging of old-growth forests in the Pacific Northwest. Fully $22.5 million was spent to protect the owl in the early years when environmentalists claimed it could breed only in old-growth forests. In fact, northern spotted owls were found in large numbers in many private forests where old growth was not present. The owls adapted to second-growth forests extremely well. Whether or not old-growth forests should be preserved is not the question; the question is whether an act to protect species should be perverted to protect forests. n the 1990s the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) filed a lawsuit on behalf of the spotted owl. As a result, the Forest Service reduced timber harvesting by 50 percent in 10 California national forests, thereby achieving the goals of the NRDC in one fell swoop....
Taser time on America's public lands At about the same time University of Florida student Andrew Meyer was getting tasered by overly heated campus security guards during an appearance by Sen. John Kerry, TASER International Inc. announced that it had received an order from the United States Forest Service for 700 TASER (r) X26 electronic control devices and related accessories. John C. Twiss, director of the service's law-enforcement branch, said that after years of studying the devices, it would give its 700 officers, who police 153 national forests, "an option other than deadly force in certain law-enforcement situations." "The Forest Service will likely justify this order by saying that the forests are a dangerous place filled with marijuana growers, meth lab workers and illegal aliens," Scott Silver, the executive director of Wild Wilderness, an Oregon-based grassroots environmental organization, said in an e-mail interview. "I'd say that the Forest Service is simply looking to further build up its police capabilities and to be better positioned to act violently, albeit non-lethally, when it feels justified in so doing," Silver pointed out....
Proposed land use measure raises debate Ballot Measure 49, one of two that Oregon voters will be deciding on in the Nov. 6 election, is as controversial as the measure it is supposed to clarify — Ballot Measure 37 — regarding land owners’ rights to develop and protect some types of land use. According to the summary statement of the new measure, Ballot Measure 49 would, if approved, give land owners with Measure 37 claims the right to build homes as compensation for land use restrictions imposed after they acquired their properties. Land owners would be able to build up to three homes, according to the measure, when they acquired their properties, four to 10 homes if owners can document reductions in property values that justify additional homes, but they may not build more than three homes on high-value farmlands, forest land or groundwater-restricted lands. The ballot measure has split the agriculture industry across the state, as different county Farm Bureau Chapters have staked opposite positions. The Oregon State Farm Bureau has come out in support of Ballot Measure 49 as protection for family farms and ranchers, while the Oregon Cattlemen’s Association is opposed to the measure, saying it would allow Oregon’s state, regional and local governments to take private property with zero compensation....
U.S. ranchers group goes to court again in bid to block Canadian cows A U.S. ranchers group has gone to court again in a bid to block older Canadian cattle and beef products from crossing the border next month. But this time, R-CALF U.S.A. has been joined by 10 critics of the cattle trade: four individual cattle producers and six groups, including the Consumer Federation of America, which has millions of members. The Montana-based ranching group, which has spearheaded several court cases since Canada's first mad cow case in May 2003, has filed a complaint against the U.S. Department of Agriculture in a South Dakota district court. It was unclear what impact the lawsuit might have on the resumption of imports, scheduled for Nov. 19. R-CALF, as it has in the past, argues that resuming trade increases the risk of infection of the U.S. cattle herd with bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE. Other groups who have signed on to the complaint include Food and Water Watch, Public Citizen, the Center for Food Safety, the South Dakota Stockgroers Association and the Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Foundation....
K-State Seeks True Cost and Benefit of Animal ID Systems K-State researchers have received a $499,462 grant from USDA to determine the benefits and costs of electronic animal identification systems, including the impact of these systems on livestock disease management. Though the United States has had limited exposure to any severe livestock disease, an increasingly global society and heightened bioterrorism threat make an outbreak more probable. Over the past couple of years alone, foot-and-mouth disease has broken out in 17 countries, according to Ted Schroeder, a K-State professor of agricultural economics and principal investigator on the project. The animal identification systems study is an outgrowth of prior work by Schroeder and a team of agricultural economists that predicted as much as a $945 million economic impact in Kansas if foot-and-mouth disease was intentionally introduced into a handful of large-scale cattle operations in the state. Schroeder predicts that widespread implementation of an animal ID system would substantially reduce those losses. "If animal trace-backs were 90% successful within 24 hours, total producer and consumer welfare losses would be expected to be nearly 40% less than with current animal identification methods," Schroeder says....So, being a lackey for the USDA is worth half a million.
Ranchers voice concerns over proposed split-state status Montana cattlemen have a choice to make - to pursue a split-state status in the case of another brucellosis outbreak around the Yellow-stone National Park - or not. “The governor is leaving it up to the cattle industry,” said Jan French, Board of Livestock member from Hobson, Mont., during a recent meeting discussing split-state status in Lewistown, Mont. “I'm pretty sure we will lose our brucellosis class-free status at one time or another, but this is an option.” Montana's Gov. Brian Schweitzer asked an official from the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) what the state could do to mitigate the risk of losing its brucellosis class-free status while a hotbed of brucellosis reservoirs is roaming free in the Yellowstone National Park. The answer given was 11 points of criteria to fill for split-state status. The split-state status would require the Montana Board of Livestock to use wildlife movement, disease management and landscapes to determine a concrete well-defined area which would be considered in a Class A status, if another case of brucellosis were discovered within that area, while the remainder of the state retained its class-free status. This method could divide counties but not a person's property, said French....
Churchill barn quarantined due to herpes virus The Kentucky Department of Agriculture quarantined barn 47 at Churchill Downs on Friday after a horse trained by David Carroll tested positive for equine herpesvirus (EHV1), a contagious, potentially fatal disease that can cause upper respiratory problems and loss of coordination. Carroll said the horse, a 3-year-old he declined to identify, began showing neurological problems Thursday and was shipped to Hagyard Equine Medical Institute in Lexington. Tests taken revealed the presence of the virus Thursday evening. He said the horse is "going to be fine, make a complete recovery." The quarantine order - which confines horses stabled in barn 47 and prohibits them from being shipped, trained, or raced - affects approximately 35 horses, split between two trainers, Carroll and Al Stall Jr. A separate division of Carroll-trained horses at Churchill Downs Trackside are not under quarantine....
Country Star Porter Wagoner Dies at 80 Porter Wagoner was known for a string of country hits in the '60s, perennial appearances at the Grand Ole Opry in his trademark rhinestone suits, and for launching the career of Dolly Parton. Like many older performers, his star had faded in recent years. But his death from lung cancer Sunday, at 80, came only after a remarkable late-career revival that won him a new generation of fans. The Missouri-born Wagoner signed with RCA Records in 1955 and joined the Opry in 1957, "the greatest place in the world to have a career in country music," he said in 1997. His showmanship, suits and pompadoured hair made him famous. He had his own syndicated TV show, "The Porter Wagoner Show," for 21 years, beginning in 1960. It was one of the first syndicated shows to come out of Nashville and set a pattern for many others. Among his hits, many of which he wrote or co-wrote, were "Carroll County Accident," "A Satisfied Mind," "Company's Comin'," "Skid Row Joe," "Misery Loves Company" and "Green Green Grass of Home."....

Monday, October 29, 2007

NEWS ROUNDUP

Hunter charging grizzly Sitting on his butt and aiming a 30-06 rifle with one arm, Carl Haggar of East Glacier fired the shot of his life — and maybe saved it. The 350-pound grizzly that was closing in on him hit the ground — dead — just five feet away. "It was an amazing sound," said Haggar, recalling the bear's heavy collapse, "because it was a lifeless sound." Haggar, who was hunting elk, said he felt terrible after killing the bear, which happened late Tuesday morning near the South Fork of the Two Medicine River in the Lewis and Clark National Forest southwest of East Glacier. But, he figured, it was the bear or him. "I would have been killed if I hadn't had a killing blow," he said. The hunter-grizzly run-in was the second in 10 days along the Rocky Mountain Front. Brian Grand of Stevensville was seriously injured after being mauled by a young male bear while hunting pheasants east of Dupuyer on Oct. 15. He got off one shot at the bear but missed. Haggar hit the mark, just above the left eye, and didn't receive a scratch. He considers himself lucky, but added he kept his cool....
Nature center volunteer bitten by brown bear A volunteer at the Eagle River Nature Center is recovering after being bitten by a brown bear sow. Alaska Department of Fish and Game officials say Sarah Wallmer was bitten on the buttocks on the Crow Pass Trail, about a mile from the nature center. The attack happened Thursday as Wallmer was traveling to the Rapids camp yurt. She was running with her dog, about 10 minutes ahead of another volunteer. Officials say she was making noise on the trail to announce her presence, but the blowing wind probably obscured her voice. The bear charged her, and she dropped her dog’s leash and turned her back to the sow. The bear bit her once. The bear roared and left, presumably to chase the dog. The dog came back about 10 minutes later with the other volunteer on a four-wheeler....
Editorial - Fowl play Nobody knows the Gunnison sage grouse better than folks in Gunnison County. But the professional litigants at the Center for Biological Diversity (CBD), based in Tucson, presume to know better. The group is suing to force federal protection of this prairie chicken subspecies, despite extraordinary local efforts to keep the birds off the endangered species list dating back to 1997. In fact, what’s been occurring in the Gunnison area should serve as a model for how voluntary efforts, led by private landowners and local officials, can help protect threatened or endangered species without the need for the kind of regulatory overkill and trampling of property rights that normally accompany federal intervention. It’s been a good example of cooperative conservation in action, in other words, something the Bush administration has tried to adopt in lieu of the standard, old, heavy-handed approach. And that probably helps explain why extremists are trying to monkey-wrench things. “Gunnison County has not and will not sign onto that lawsuit,” Jim Cochran, the county’s sagebrush conservation coordinator, told a local newspaper. “We believe that a locally led program, not listing it under endangered species, is more effective in preserving the grouse. If it becomes listed, it would come under (U.S.) Fish and Wildlife, and we feel like we have a good program.” But no local program could ever be as “good” — meaning as inflexible and Draconian — as a federal program, at least in the eyes of eco-authoritarians, which is why the CBD is attempting to pre-empt Gunnison County’s program in the courts....
Valles Caldera issues stir passions Standing outside a Valles Caldera public meeting, Tracy Hephner, a Trustee, mused aloud: "I thought that water rights issues drew out passions, but nothing compares with this place," she said. Indeed, for the past seven years of its existence and for many decades prior, the preserve has inspired an unusual degree of ardor. With an area of around 89,000 acres, the Valles Caldera National Preserve represents only about a tenth of one percent of the state's land area. However, it has attracted the interest, curiosity, labor and enthusiasm of hundreds of individuals and scores of organizations all working in some way to support the preserve or to fashion it according to their own visions. The Northern New Mexico Stockman's Association, a 20-year-old organization representing around 15,000 families, has initiated political efforts to significantly change how the preserve is managed, particularly with respect to elk hunting, cattle grazing and public access. Dave Sanchez, an association board member and cattle-grazing permitee said that there is growing frustration and impatience with the Valles Caldera Trust and management. "The preserve is clearly not living up to the legislative goals to enhance the economic well being of the surrounding area," he stated....
Ranchers pitch land planA group of ranchers opposed to creating federally designated wilderness in Doña Ana County has released its own version of a land-protection plan. The draft proposal would place some 302,000 acres of U.S. Bureau of Land Management land into special preservation areas and rangeland preservation areas — two new categories being proposed by the group. Ranchers say it will leave their operations intact. The plan wouldn't create federally designated wilderness in Doña Ana County, and wilderness backers say it would lead to less protection of land than currently exists. Frank DuBois, a member of the group People for Preserving Our Western Heritage, said the proposal addresses the major concern of the community — keeping land free from development — but is less restrictive than an all-out wilderness designation. The lands "can never be sold, they can never be exchanged, and all of the areas are withdrawn from mining or the mineral leasing laws, so there could never be any oil or gas leasing," he said. "These lands would be just like wilderness; the difference is we're more tolerant of the general public having access to these lands."....
3 States Compete for Water From Shrinking Lake Lanier No gauges are necessary at Lake Lanier to measure the ravages of the Southeast's drought. Wooden fishing docks tower 10 feet over dried mud that used to be squishy lake bottom. Boat ramps begin at the parking lot and end in sand. New islands emerge from shallows. The waters of Lake Lanier, funneled through federal dams along the Chattahoochee River, sustain about 2.8 million people in the Atlanta metropolitan area, a nuclear power plant that lights up much of Alabama, and the marine life in Florida's Apalachicola River and Bay. Now, amid one of the worst droughts on record, all three places feel uncomfortably close to running dry. That has prompted a three-state fight that has simmered for years to erupt into testy exchanges over which one has the right to the lake's dwindling water supply and which one is or is not doing its share to conserve it. In court papers, Florida's principal leverage in forcing a larger flow has been the fact that three federally protected species -- two types of mussel and the Gulf sturgeon -- are believed to need fresh water to maintain their habitat. The demands of the little-known species has led Georgia officials to characterize the debate as a contest of "man versus mussel" -- suggesting that Georgians should get the water before mussels do....
Rethinking Fire Policy in the Tinderbox Zone As Californians sift through the cinders of this week’s deadly wildfires, there is a growing consensus that the state’s war against such disasters — as it is currently being fought — cannot be won. “California has lost 1.5 million acres in the last four years,” said Richard A. Minnich, a professor of earth sciences who teaches fire ecology at the University of California, Riverside. “When do we declare the policy a failure?” Fire-management experts like Professor Minnich, who has compared fire histories in San Diego County and Baja California in Mexico, say the message is clear: Mexico has smaller fires that burn out naturally, regularly clearing out combustible underbrush and causing relatively little destruction because the cycle is still natural. California has giant ones because its longtime policies of fire suppression — in which the government has kept fires from their normal cycle — has created huge pockets of fuel that erupt into conflagrations that must be fought. “We’re on all year round,” said Brett Chapman, a firefighter with the United States Forest Service who worked 15-hour shifts this week in the Lake Arrowhead area east of Los Angeles....
Wolves at the door There’s a moment in William Campbell’s new documentary when a Paradise Valley rancher looks across the pasture and says, “Wolves and cows don’t mix.” Over the next hour, Campbell, an award-winning photographer with Time Magazine and a journalist with CNN, explores the strange waltz taking place between environmentalists and ranchers when it comes to living with wolves in Montana. “Wolves are emblematic of the future of the West in a lot of ways,” Campbell said. “You can use the wolf issue to get in touch with the development issue and the land issue, because they affect the landscape in such a dramatic way.” Filmed in southwest Montana, “Wolves in Paradise” follows the wolves from their release in Yellowstone Park during reintroduction in 1995. It tracks the animals as they expand outward, challenging the adaptability of humans when coping with their presence....
Wolf shot; animal had killed cattle A young male wolf whose pack was suspected of killing cattle west of Kalispell was shot this week by federal wildlife agents, a situation that is becoming more common as wolf populations expand dramatically in northwest Montana. “Livestock depredations are still low,” said Kent Laudon, “but it's been a busy year, busier than we've seen in a long time.” Laudon is a wolf management specialist for the state Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks, and his territory ranges across miles of northwest Montana, from Canada to Interstate 90, and from Idaho to the Rocky Mountain Front. Wolf numbers, he said, are exploding there, as new packs pop up faster than biologists can keep count. With a pack home range of 200 square miles or more, and individual dispersers traveling upward of 500 miles, it wasn't long before the Glacier wolves began to repopulate the region - crossing, in the process, considerable private acres, including acres thick with livestock. In 1980, one Montana wolf was documented. In 1986, 16 wolves. By 1993, 55 wolves. More than 70 were counted in northwest Montana by 1996. And last year, a whopping 316 wolves roamed the region....
Wolves in N. Idaho wilderness elude officials An attempt by the Idaho Department of Fish and Game to attach radio collars to wolves in the Selway-Bitteroot Wilderness Area in northern Idaho has failed. But officials said they learned the wolves’ habits over the summer, including the rendezvous sites of several packs, and are optimistic of success next year. “If you can focus efforts where you know wolves are coming to, as opposed to just randomly trapping a wolf, your success rates are radically different,” said Steve Nadeau, large carnivore coordinator for the department. The department wants to place a radio collar on at least one wolf in each wolf pack in Idaho so the state can have a better understanding of wolf populations and their movements when it takes over management of wolves from the federal government. Wyoming, Montana and Idaho are seeking to end federal oversight of wolves by each state taking over management of the animals within their borders. Each state would be required to maintain a minimum of 100 wolves including 10 breeding pairs. Idaho has an estimated 788 wolves, up from 673 last year....
Old trees, new plan Once again, the big trees of Western Oregon are at the center of a battle. The basic question is simple: Should the old, federally owned trees be left standing, or should a sizable number be logged? Many people thought the fight over old growth was settled in 1994 when the federal government adopted the Northwest Forest Plan, which drastically curtailed logging and set aside reserves for northern spotted owls and other species at risk of extinction. But the timber industry and the Bush administration are in the midst of a major push against those restrictions. The new logging war still rouses the passions of the old one, which dominated headlines from the late 1980s through 1994. It’s the same fight with some challenging new dynamics....
Fingerpointing ensues over copters grounded during California wildfires
State and federal officials on Saturday blamed each other for allowing nearly two dozen water-dropping helicopters to sit idle while deadly wildfires ravaged Southern California, and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger pledged to improve the state's response to battling wildfires. The head of the state's firefighting agency lashed out at the Marines and U.S. Forest Service, saying the military had failed to commit to the training necessary to launch helicopters more quickly. The Forest Service had neglected to provide enough helicopter managers to launch the aircrafts when they became available, he said. "We're getting all of this criticism and I don't want to get into saying it should have been the Forest Service, should have been the Marines," said Ruben Grijalva, chief of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. "But that's why I'm talking today because it's affecting the morale of this organization." The Forest Service disputed Grijalva's claim, saying that providing fire spotters for Marines wasn't solely a federal responsibility. Forest Service officials also cast doubt on assertions by members of the military and several members of California's Congressional delegation that the Marine helicopters were ready days before they were called into action. Dennis Hulbert, Regional Aviation Officer for the U.S. Forest Service in California, said the Marines were primarily responsible for the delay....
Red Tape Hampers Firefighting Capabilities Reporters covering the wildfires in California have been effusive about the capacities of the converted DC-10 airliner that has been dropping retardant on the blazes around Lake Arrowhead, and the enthusiasm is warranted. Sometimes called the Tanker 910, and sometimes the 10 Tanker Air Carrier, the plane can carry 12,000 gallons of fire retardant or water in tanks attached under its belly. That’s 10 times as much liquid as the other available California air tankers, and four times the capacity of the largest-available tankers operated by the federal government. It can create a fire line three-quarters of a mile long — or drop water over a mile-long, 300-foot-wide swath — in eight seconds. It can be refilled in eight minutes. And it would be nice to have more such planes available, don’t you think? If the federal government had had its way, Tanker 910 almost certainly wouldn’t have been flying this week. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger cut through some red tape a few months ago to make this one available. And, as useful as the Tanker 910 has shown itself to be, the U.S. Forest Service still hasn’t certified this plane for use over federal lands....
Environmentalist informant pleads guilty to arson The informant who helped convict many of the 10 radical environmentalists known as "the Family" pleaded guilty in federal court today to arson and attempted arson. Thirty-five-year-old Jacob Ferguson admitted setting fire to the U.S Forest Service Ranger Station in Detroit, Ore., and a government pickup in 1996. Ferguson turned informant three years ago as investigators were closing in on the group who had set 20 fires across the West from 1996 to 2001, causing more than $40 million in damage. All 10 were sentenced this year after pleading guilty to arson and other charges. Sentencing for Ferguson was set for Jan. 10.
History, management of park horses being debated
The grace and beauty of the wild horses roaming in Theodore Roosevelt National Park are not in dispute, but there is disagreement about where they came from, and how to manage them. A roundup, called off earlier this month after a helicopter crash that injured two people, was to cull 75 of the park's herd of about 125 horses for auction to bring the herd down to 50, a size park officials consider more manageable. The National Park Service, unlike the Bureau of Land Management, does not maintain a large number of wild horses. The BLM has about 31,000 wild horses and burros in 10 Western states that are protected by federal law. The National Park Service has fewer than 700 wild horses, in five national parks. Minnesota horse breeders Nola and Dave Robson and Bob and Deb Fjetland are among those who believe the horses in Theodore Roosevelt National Park are descendants of horses owned by the Plains Indians. They call the breed Nokota, and are dedicated to its preservation.....
Texas senators block energy bill Texas' two senators have blocked Congress' ambitious energy legislation from moving forward, arguing the ethanol-friendly bill would hurt dominant industries in their home state. The massive energy bill has provisions that have attracted the scrutiny of virtually every special interest group. But Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, who last week placed a procedural hold on the bill, argues that it would be particularly bad for Texas' oil and gas and agriculture sectors. Oil companies are fighting the bill's attempt to repeal tax incentives that were intended to spur domestic oil production. Texas' agriculture interests worry that a proposed doubling of the mandated use of ethanol, which mostly comes from corn, would make commodity prices skyrocket and hurt ranchers and feedlots....
BLM scraps historic Chicken dredge A rich piece of Alaska’s gold mining history is sitting in a dump in Tok after being demolished because the Bureau of Land Management deemed it dangerous. The Jack Wade Dredge at Mile 86 of the Taylor Highway was dismantled last month. The abandoned dredge sat on the bank of Jack Wade Creek for 72 years and was a popular tourist attraction on the 160-mile road from Tok to Eagle. “People loved to camp at it and to pan for gold there,” said Robin Hammond, the postmaster in the small mining town of Chicken a few miles south of where the dredge sat. One of the first bucket-line dredges in the famed Fortymile mining country, the Jack Wade Dredge was freighted up the Fortymile River from Dawson in the winter of 1906-07....
Cattle movement across Canadian border expected to be slow When the U.S. border opens to Canadian cattle older than 30 months on Nov. 19, the influx of older cattle coming south will be minimal, ranchers in Alberta and Saskatchewan say. Age verification requirements, currency parity and transportation costs will limit movement. Nevertheless, Montana cattlemen argue that the timing of the opening is poor for the U.S. cull market and is premature in that age limitations on U.S. cattle/beef exports should first be resolved with Japan and South Korea. Also, the risk of bovine spongiform encephalopathy contamination from Canadian cattle is too great, some say. The specters of congressional intervention or judicial injunction are hovering just offstage, too. The mid-November deadline is the latest chapter in a saga that began in 2003 with the discovery of BSE in cattle on both sides of the border. Since that time, 10 Canadian animals have been verified with BSE; three animals in the United States have been confirmed, the first being an import from Canada....
Nevada's great cloud-rustling controversy About 30 miles south of Gardnerville is an unremarkable patch of land that was once the center of a hurricane of controversy involving the right to claim water in rain clouds. In December 1947, Nevada rancher Dick Haman and partner Freeman Fairfield filed a claim to all the water clouds passing over their 12,300-acre spread near Topaz Lake (located adjacent to the Holbrook Junction). At the time, the 35-year-old Haman was manager of Fairfield's Rocking F Ranch. A former University of Nevada football star, Haman had worked as a Hollywood studio artist and a professional boxer before returning to Nevada. Haman helped Fairfield purchase the Rocking F Ranch in 1946 and agreed to manage the property. Immediately, he was confronted with the fact that the property had no water....
On the edge of common sense: Regeneration, like life, doesn't always play fair Every time I see a moose head mounted on somebody's wall, I marvel at the size of their horns. They must weigh 40 pounds. It would be the equivalent of me wearing a cowboy hat made of cinder blocks. Night and day for months in a row. What is even more amazing is that they shed these giant racks annually, take a few weeks off and then spend the next year growing them back. The same thing applies to deer and elk, but for sheer mass of bone, the moose puts them to shame. Why is it that longhorn steers, wildebeest and pronghorn antelope don't shed their horns? Are they shy? Is it a fashion consideration, a long-term commitment. ... Do they need them year round to fight, dig roots, or write their name in the bark? If you want to salute the king of regeneration, look at the lizard. He has the ability to lose his tail, have it broken off, and grow a new one back. Talk about commitment. That would be comparable to an elephant shedding his trunk and growing a new one....

Sunday, October 28, 2007

The sustenance of rural living
Cowgirl Sass And Savvy

By Julie Carter

If ever, even for one short minute, you doubted why you live in a small community where everybody knows your business, what you eat for lunch, where and with whom, what you drive and when you last washed it, what your real hair color is and how you look before 6 a.m., stop wondering.

The heart of a close-knit hamlet is as big as the countryside around it. Sometimes you don't see it until you, or someone you know, needs it.

You may not even know you need it until the community pours its understanding, sentiment, prayers, ideas, suggestions, and even a few casseroles, upon you.

It happened this week; it has happened often in the many years before.

A death in the family, tragedy of any kind, accident or something that affected a child happens and the people put down their causes, their differences and their issues and rally around for support.

"Let me know if there is something I can do," echoes through the air day and night and comes from the deepest sincerity.

Phone calls, emails and chats on the sidewalk, in cafés, offices and at the post office supersede any mass-media attempts to offer information, condolences or support.

When the saints pray, heaven moves. When the community rallies, walls fall.

This time, it was one of our kids who pulled back the curtain and exposed the power of caring people.

As teenagers will do, he got almost grown up, he thought, and decided he didn't have to live at home, be in school and all that "stuff" that requires meeting standards and following rules.

So he walked away from school and left his mother, dad and hundreds of people looking for him, praying for him, sharing information about what they might know and seeking to find resolution in something that could happen to any of us.

Right now, he thinks it is all about him and what he wants. He has no idea the things his emotional decision set in motion behind him.

However, his family does. His friends do. His school friends, his teachers, his church and pastors, neighbors, and friends and associates of his parents do.

Within 24 hours people in half-a-dozen states were sending prayers and support to the appropriate places.

There is a long list of teen runaway statistics.

Between 1.3 and 2.8 million runaway and homeless youth live on the streets of America each year.

One in seven youths will run away from home before the age of 18.

This incident became a statistic in the big picture. But locally, he is one of ours. He has a name, a face, a personality, and he belongs to us.

For us, he is not a statistic. He is one of ours.

His peers have watched this unfold. There is a lesson here for the teens that he passed in the halls every day at the high school. A lesson they need to grab ahold of and remember always.

Life gets hard, life seems unfair and sometimes, life, right at the heart of where you live, seems unbearable.

The remedy for that is not being somewhere else out of reach of the people who can help you. The antidote is right where you stand with the people who know you, love you and are willing to help you without ulterior motives.

What I want them to understand is, if they run, they only take the pain with them. They also leave plenty of it behind with a community who will take it on until things are made right again.

Then, and only then, will we return to the normalcy of small-town living in the endless blur of small talk, local politics and weather predictions.

Meet Julie on her Web site at www.julie-carter.com



It’s The Pitts: Wasted Wisdom

Darol and I were sitting around commenting on the condition of our country when a rare and highly improbable thing happened: Darol got a great idea.

It may never happen again in our lifetime.

Darol thinks that Congress and the President might cut down on their expensive errors and idiotic ideas if they had an advisory council of old folks to warn them when they were about to do something really stupid.

I like the idea. Advisory councils are cheaper than consultants and use smaller words than economists and professors. Admittedly, some advisory councils are largely ceremonial but what Darol has in mind is an active advisory council made up of really ancient people. Since the government likes long names, which they can then abbreviate, we thought we’d call the advisory council the United States OLD Council of Obviously Terminal Seniors or, USOLDCOOTS for short. A lot of wisdom is just going to waste in this country and our politicians could benefit from the advice of people who have seen and done everything. For example, before going to war our politicians might ask the advice of someone who had actually been in one before.

An advisory council would provide a continuity to our government that we don’t have now. For example, how many Secretaries of Agriculture have we had under this administration? I lost count. They don’t seem to last as long as a bunch of bananas in a monkey house. Which seems an apt description, don’t you think? With USOLDCOOTS on the job our government might not keep repeating the same old mistakes.

As for the makeup of USOLDCOOTS Darol and I would like to see it composed of an octogenarian rancher, a retired grunt from the military and a school teacher wife who has raised at least three kids and supported her farmer/husband for a minimum of 35 years. Here’s an example of the type of person we’d want on USOLDCOOTS.

Lester Wilshire, Darol’s grandfather, received a visitor from the USDA who wanted to count his cows. It was during the Depression and USDA was giving farmers about 35 cents for every cow they killed. It was like the dairy buyout only with bullets.

When the USDA official got out of his official USDA car he handed Lester his impressive business card. It shone with a bright luster and had his name and USDA logo embossed on it with a six-line Washington DC address and all sorts of big words. The USDA man was quite full of himself and puffed up bigger than a bloated bull. You could just tell he was a real expert, the kind of guy who could look at any animal and tell you instantly if it was a male or a female and be right about half the time.

The USDA official stated his business with a great degree of confidence as he put on some rubber booties over his shiny soft shoes and explained to Lester that he was going to go into his pasture and count his cows. Lester offered to gather the cattle and place them in a holding corral but the USDA official would have none of it. He wanted to make sure that there’d be no cheating the government out of 35 cents.

Lester tried to warn the USDA man that there were dangers lurking in the tall grass but the USDA man paid him no heed and went off tiptoeing through the cow pies. Lester was not at all surprised when, in less than five minutes, here came the USDA official running faster than Jesse Owens with Lester’s Jersey bull breathing right down his trailer hitch. I think you get the picture. The USDA official looked to be in considerable distress as he passed Lester going 40 miles per hour and was begging Lester for either help and/or advice on how to deal with his present pursuer. Because the USDA official and the Jersey bull were rapidly getting out of hearing range Lester yelled at the top of his voice, “Show him your card. Show him your card.”

Now that’s the kind of person I’d put on the old persons advisory council.
FLE

Terror watch list swells to more than 755,000 The government's terrorist watch list has swelled to more than 755,000 names, according to a new government report that has raised worries about the list's effectiveness. The size of the list, typically used to check people entering the country through land border crossings, airports and sea ports, has been growing by 200,000 names a year since 2004. Some lawmakers, security experts and civil rights advocates warn that it will become useless if it includes too many people. "It undermines the authority of the list," says Lisa Graves of the Center for National Security Studies. "There's just no rational, reasonable estimate that there's anywhere close to that many suspected terrorists." The exact number of people on the list, compiled after 9/11 to help government agents keep terrorists out of the country, is unclear, according to the report by the Government Accountability Office (GAO). Some people may be on the list more than once because they are listed under multiple spellings. About 53,000 people on the list were questioned since 2004, according to the GAO, which says the Homeland Security Department doesn't keep records on how many were denied entry or allowed into the country after questioning. Most were apparently released and allowed to enter, the GAO says....
Panel to See Papers on Agency’s Eavesdropping The White House on Thursday offered to share secret documents on the National Security Agency’s domestic surveillance program with the Senate Judiciary Committee, a step toward possible compromise on eavesdropping legislation. Fred F. Fielding, the White House counsel, offered to show the documents to Senator Patrick J. Leahy, Democrat of Vermont, the committee’s chairman; Senator Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, the ranking Republican on the committee; and staff members with the necessary security clearances, said Tony Fratto, a White House spokesman. Mr. Fratto said that if Mr. Leahy and Mr. Specter so wished, other committee members would be granted clearances for the N.S.A. program and permitted to see the documents. A spokeswoman for Mr. Leahy, Erica Chabot, said he would make sure the entire committee had access. Only Senate Intelligence Committee members and their staffs have seen the documents. Last week, the committee approved a bill that would step up court oversight of N.S.A. eavesdropping while granting legal immunity to telecommunications companies. The companies face class-action lawsuits for giving the agency access to customers’ phone calls and e-mail messages....
FEMA scolded for staging phony news conference The White House scolded the Federal Emergency Management Agency yesterday for staging a phony news conference about assistance to victims of wildfires in Southern California. The agency, much criticized for its response after Hurricane Katrina more than two years ago, arranged to have FEMA employees play the part of independent reporters Tuesday and ask questions of Vice Admiral Harvey E. Johnson, the agency's deputy director. The questions were predictably soft and gratuitous. FEMA gave reporters only 15 minutes' notice about Tuesday's news conference. No reporter attended the news conference in person, agency spokesman Aaron Walker said. The agency made available an 800 number so reporters could call in and listen to the news conference, but not ask questions....

Friday, October 26, 2007

Howling for wolves in Albuquerque

During “Wolf Awareness Week” you could ride a bicycle through a gigantic balloon of a red and white wolf. If you entered at the back, you emerged through the beast’s fangs, just like the UNM football team taking the field. Earnest students distributed flyers outside the UNM Student Union Building. Organizers promised to exhibit a live wolf—safely restrained, of course. You could catch film and lecture presentations on the “spirit” of the wolf. You could practice howling any time the spirit moved you. One reason for the festivities, organizers explained, was to confront the caricature of wolves in modern society. But “Wolf Awareness Week” itself came close to caricature, a burlesque of ineffectual environmental activism. It was easy money for enviros. They were guaranteed receptive audiences in the liberal heart of the Albuquerque metropolis. It was a happy frolic for anyone who likes the idea of wolves running around Southwestern New Mexico but doesn’t actually live where the wild things are. Real wolf awareness means facing the fact that reintroduction is not working. After 10 years and 15 million federal dollars—and no telling how many dollars spent by environmental groups—only about 50 wolves roam the Gila National Forest and Arizona borderlands. Wolf hatred has deepened. Steve Pearce, the area’s congressman and perhaps our next U.S. senator, has committed himself to driving wolves out of his district. By now we’ve learned support for wolves increases the farther away you get from them. Opposition builds as you approach ground zero. The wolf whoop-dee-doo took place far from the fires of the controversy. Like the nearest free-roaming wild wolf, the nearest den of wolf haters is 220 miles away in Reserve, the Catron County seat. None of the groups pamphleting the UNM campus distributed literature on the streets of that angry village during Wolf Awareness Week. They didn’t need to. The residents of Catron County are well aware of wolves. They’re walking around scared half the time. A 14-year-old boy reported being backed against a tree by a pack of wolves. Horses and dogs have been killed in front yards. Graphic, although unsubstantiated, accounts of how wolves recently hunted and ate a Canadian man have made their way to local cafés and kitchen tables....
House Votes to Create Six New 'Heritage' Areas The House on Wednesday passed the Celebrating America's Heritage Act (H.R. 1483), which would create new National Heritage Areas, but some critics say the bill "tramples" on personal liberties and property rights. The bill would establish six national heritage areas (NHAs), which are non-federal lands and communities managed privately in conjunction with the National Park Service. It would also provide funding for nine existing NHAs. The six new projects include the Journey Through Hallowed Ground NHA in Maryland and Virginia; Niagara Falls NHA in New York; Muscle Shoals NHA in Alabama; Freedom's Way NHA in Massachusetts and New Hampshire; Abraham Lincoln NHA in Illinois; and Santa Cruz Valley NHA in Arizona. Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Ariz.), lead sponsor of the Santa Cruz Valley NHA, said that NHA designation provides federal recognition and financial support. Through annual congressional appropriations administered by local National Park unit partners, up to $10 million in 50-percent match funding is available to each National Heritage Area over a period of 15 years. But Rep. Roscoe Bartlett (R-Md.), who opposes the bill and in particular the Journey Through Hallowed Ground NHA that runs through his district, said, "All of our nation's founders knew of the intimate connection between personal liberty, taxpayers' interests and property rights. H.R. 1483 tramples over rather than honors these hallowed principles."....
Coast Guard Plans to Set Up Arctic Base A Coast Guard reconnaissance team is heading to the far north this week to scope out a final frontier that is opening up to ship traffic in a warming Arctic climate. The Coast Guard plans to set up an operations base in Barrow as early as next spring to monitor waters now free of ice for longer periods. Weather permitting, a scouting crew on Thursday will fly the 1,183-mile trek from the northernmost U.S. town to the North Pole. "This is a new area for us to do surveillance," said Rear Adm. Arthur E. Brooks, commander of the Coast Guard's Alaska district. "We're going primarily to see what's there, what ships, if any, are up there." Thinning ice has made travel along the northern coast increasingly attractive, said Brooks, who plans to accompany the crew in the C-130 flight. Tankers and even cruise ships are beginning to venture into the domain once traveled only by indigenous hunters and research vessels such as the Coast Guard ice-cutter Healy....
Man told to pay $15K for eagles' deaths The unintentional killing of three eagles will cost a Terry rancher $15,000. U.S. Magistrate Judge Carolyn Ostby on Thursday sentenced Ronald Eugene Tibbetts, 61, to six months of unsupervised probation and ordered him to pay $15,000 restitution. There was no fine. "I made a mistake," Tibbetts told the judge. "I never really thought the whole picture through." Tibbetts asked the judge to consider a smaller restitution amount based on Montana law. "I feel $15,000 is fairly high. I realize this is a federal court issue, but we are in Montana," he said. Tibbetts pleaded guilty in July to one misdemeanor count of illegally killing a migratory bird. Tibbetts admitted that he went after skunks and raccoons with meatballs laced with Furidan, a poison, in 2004 and 2005. The animals ate the meatballs and died. The coyotes ate their carcasses and died. And one mature bald eagle and two immature golden eagles that fed on the coyotes also died. Ostby followed sentencing recommendations in a plea agreement and heard testimony about the value of eagles from Doug Goessman, a special agent with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Goessman said the agency uses restitution amounts based on information from private organizations on what it costs to rehabilitate sick or injured raptors. An organization the agency has used for years places the value of one immature bald or golden eagle at $5,000; a mature eagle is valued at $10,000 because it is able to reproduce....
Barrasso brings bill to protect Wyoming Range Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., on Thursday introduced long-anticipated legislation that would put 1.2 million acres of the Wyoming Range off limits to any new energy development and allow existing leases there to be retired. "Today is Wyoming's day, literally," he said in a speech on the Senate floor. "It's a long-awaited day. A day that is special, a day that is as special as the mountain range that this day centers on." The late Sen. Craig Thomas, R-Wyo., had planned to introduce similar legislation the week that he died. Under the Wyoming Range Legacy Act of 2007, no additional mining patents or geothermal or mineral leasing, including oil and gas, would be allowed in the 100-mile-long area of the range in western Wyoming....
Grizzlies die at unusually high rates Grizzly bears in the region in and around Yellowstone National Park have suffered unusually high mortality rates so far this year, likely because of a dearth of natural food sources, a researcher said. Chuck Schwartz, leader of the Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team, said officials tallied 25 known and probable grizzly mortalities. Twenty-two of those mortalities were human-caused, two of the deaths resulted from natural causes, and the cause of one death was undetermined. For every bear that was reported dead, two more deaths likely went unreported, Schwartz said. "This is not a good year for bears, as far as mortality is concerned," Schwartz told a group of wildlife managers and conservationists at the annual meeting of the Yellowstone Grizzly Coordinating Committee on Wednesday. The Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team is a group of researchers who have monitored grizzlies in Yellowstone since the bears were put on the endangered-species list. It is funded by the U.S. Geological Survey....
The Western Inferno The 2007 forest fire season is ending with a costly bang in Southern California, and it is another record breaker. This year much of the American West was under smoky skies for most of the summer. Even before the California catastrophe, as of October 1st approximately 65,000 fires had burned 8.2 million acres nationwide, destroying 409 homes burned. Seven firefighters lost their lives, to make a total of 113 for the last five years. The United States Forest Service (USFS) has spent roughly $1 billion to fight these fires. Large blazes burned in the South this year, especially in Florida and Georgia, but the majority of these scorched acres were on the Western public lands. The continuing lethal combinations of drought, bark beetle infestations, and heavy fuel loads due to decades of zealous fire suppression and less logging -along with a brutally hot summer-have produced a fire season not unlike the extreme examples seen periodically since the late 1990s, with burned-acreage totals routinely running five to ten million per summer. Six out of the last eight summers are among the ten worst fire seasons recorded since 1960. Forest health also means logging, at least the thinning of crowded tracts that have too many trees per acre. In the last two decades attempts to log national forest lands has brought on much bad behavior from the Green Left and their -- surprise! -- attorneys. Thousands of harassing lawsuits filed over timber sales have produced in the USFS a self described "analysis paralysis", as environmentalists using litigation clog up an already slow bureaucratic process....
The Basics of Wildland Firefighting Using chainsaws, shovels, and Pulaskis, firefighters generally work shifts of 12 to a maximum of 16 hours constructing breaks in the fire's fuel, or "fireline". A fireline is cleared of vegetation down to the mineral soil. Pulaskis were developed by a Forest Service Ranger Ed Pulaski that saved 30 men at the risk of his personal safety in the fires of 1910. The tool named for Ranger Pulaski is an ax on one side and digging hoe on the other. In some suitable areas, bulldozers are used to build fireline with the same purpose of eliminating burnable fuels from the path of the fire. All fireline must be rehabilitated to allow for future vegetation growth. Firefighters also slow the spread of fires using portable pumps leading from water bodies such as streams and lakes to wet down fuels, helicopters to pinpoint drop water on hot spots, airtankers to lay down a line of retardant that slows the fire allowing firefighters to proceed more effectively. Watertenders are tanker trucks that transport water to various parts of the fire. They will water down dusty roads to improve travel safety, refill engines, and add water to portable holding bags called 'pumpkins' because of their orange color that serve as dipping facilities for helicopters. Engines are small trucks equipped with water, pumps, water hose and tools to respond to and support ongoing fire suppression activities....
Study: National forests generally meet sustainable standards A new study says national forests generally meet "green certification" standards for sustainable management to ensure they remain healthy but balancing the demands for logging, recreation and conservation remain a challenge. The 2-year study was conducted to help the U.S. Forest Service decide whether to join private timber companies seeking independent certification of sustainable management practices to boost forest product sales to gren-minded consumers. The Washington, D.C.-based Pinchot Institute for Conservation studied five national forests, including the Mount Hood National Forest in Oregon. Overall, the forests rated well for planning, community involvement and for identifying threatened or endangered species. But the study indicated improvement was needed in various areas, including old growth timber management and a backlog of road maintenance.
Federal Government Killing Record Number of Carnivores The federal government is killing record numbers of warm-blooded animals, particularly carnivores, according to agency statistics compiled by Sinapu and Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). In addition, the number of federally protected wolves killed has been steadily rising - up six-fold over the past decade - with nearly 300 wolves dispatched last year alone. Wildlife Services, a euphemistically named arm of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, spent $108 million in 2006 to kill more than 1.6 million animals deemed a "nuisance" to ranchers, farmers, and others. That total includes a record number of mammals (207,341) up more than 21% over the previous year, including a record number of animals protected under the federal Endangered Species Act. "We have one arm of the federal government trying to protect wildlife while a different arm is doing its best to eradicate the same animals - how much sense does that make?" asked PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch. "Our federal government does not have a coherent let alone coordinated wildlife policy." The 2006 Wildlife Service kill totals for mammals were up sharply from previous years:...
Provision in farm bill would shorten time meatpackers own cows The farm bill approved Thursday by the Senate Agriculture Committee would ban meatpackers from owning cattle more than two weeks before slaughter, legislation advocated by Montana and Wyoming lawmakers. The legislation is a priority for High Plains ranchers who own smaller operations and are hoping to stem competition from larger companies. Supporters of the ban have long pushed for the law to prevent large meatpacking companies from having control over cattle for a long period of time. That way, the companies would be forced to pay current market prices for meat. Advocates say meatpackers can manipulate the prices they pay for cattle with “captive supplies,” or stock they own or control through contracts and marketing agreements. They argue that such control lets meatpackers time their purchases, allowing them to save money but also depress prices. Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., may offer an additional amendment on the Senate floor that would require packers to have a fixed base price in their contracts and to put contracts up for bid in the open market. Enzi maintains this would prevent the large meatpacking companies from manipulating the base price after the point of sale....
Authorities concerned about mutilation of bulls in E. Idaho
Authorities in eastern Idaho are investigating the deaths of two bulls they say apparently died after first being tranquilized and then having their sexual organs removed. "We come across stuff like this every now and then," said Clark County Sheriff Craig King. "But when they're this close together, it's a concern." Monteview rancher Kyle Stoddard reported the first bull, valued at $2,000, killed on Oct. 16. "I don't know what's going on in the world," Stoddard told the Post Register. "It's really sick that someone would do this." On Sunday, a second sexually mutilated bull was reported at a ranch in Dubois owned by Jim Thomas. King said it appeared both animals were tranquilized first and afterward died of shock, though neither animal was examined by a veterinarian. He said he did not know the reason behind the mutilations, but suspected some type of ritual. Area ranchers are being informed of the incidents....
Mad cattlemen seek compensation for BSE A University of Calgary professor is fighting on behalf of a group of Canadian cattlemen who were adversely affected by the closure of the American border to Canadian beef following a case of BSE on an Alberta ranch May 2003. U of C faculty of law professor Todd Grierson-Weiler, is a leading expert on the North American Free Trade Agreement and international arbitration, is among a team of lawyers who are attempting to use the NAFTA as a mechanism to compensate a group of 120 cattlemen to the tune of no less than $300 million. Within hours of the official announcement that the Alberta cow had tested positive for Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy, or Mad Cow disease, the American border was sealed to all Canadian beef exports. While studies--including a Harvard University BSE Risk Assessment--suggested that the risk to humans was minimal and recommended that the border be reopened, it would be two years before live cattle started moving south again. The provincial government estimated that BSE had cost the cattle industry $7 billion. The CCFT originally formed from a group of Alberta feedlot owners but has grown into a Canada-wide organization. According to their website, the CCFT's two goals are to ensure that the Canada/United States border remains open and to obtain compensation for its members as a result of the arbitrary nature of the border closure....

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Extinctions Linked to Hotter Temperatures Whenever the world's tropical seas warm several degrees, Earth has experienced mass extinctions over millions of years, according to a first-of-its-kind statistical study of fossil records. And scientists fear it may be about to happen again — but in a matter of several decades, not tens of millions of years. Four of the five major extinctions over 520 million years of Earth history have been linked to warmer tropical seas, something that indicates a warmer world overall, according to the new study published Wednesday. "We found that over the fossil record as a whole, the higher the temperatures have been, the higher the extinctions have been," said University of York ecologist Peter Mayhew, the co-author of the peer-reviewed research published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, a British journal. Earth is on track to hit that same level of extinction-connected warming in about 100 years, unless greenhouse gas emissions are curbed, according to top scientists. A second study, to be presented at a scientific convention Sunday, links high carbon dioxide levels, the chief man-made gas responsible for global warming, to past extinctions....
Global warming to blame for fires, says Harry Reid Is there a political angle to the wildfires raging through Southern California? You betcha – at least according to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who said global warming is at least partly responsible for the blazes. "One reason why we have the fires in California is global warming," the Nevada Democrat told reporters, emphasizing the need to pass the Democrats' comprehensive energy package. Pressed by astonished reporters on whether he really believed global warming caused the fires, he appeared to back away from his comments, saying there are many factors that contributed to the disaster....
Rush Limbaugh: 'Bring the firefighters home' Using irreverent humor to blast the politicizing of California's wildfires, radio giant Rush Limbaugh today adopted some anti-war logic to call for the firefighters to be brought home. "I think it's time to bring the firefighters home. I think it's time to bring the firefighters out of there – it's just too dangerous," Limbaugh said on his top-rated program, noting the front-line responders were in grave danger. "They're in there on a false premise anyway, that they can put out the fire. We can't win against the fire, folks, just like we can't win in Iraq. So if the liberals want to politicize this, then I ask them to be consistent and admit defeat to the fire, admit we can't beat the fire and get these brave firefighters out of there ... ." Limbaugh's comments come a day after Senate Majority Leader said global warming is at least partly responsible for the blazes....
Officials: Arson Behind Santiago Fire CBS News has learned a task force of agencies, including the FBI, ATF, the Orange County Fire Authority and the California Department of Forestry will announce shortly that the massive Santiago Canyon Fire -- which has caused an estimated $10 million in damage -- is being officially declared an arson, and a $70,000 reward is being offered to find the arsonist. Investigators have identified two separate "points of origin" where they believe the fire was set, CBS News has learned. FBI agents secured the scene to "maintain its integrity." The Santiago Fire has burned about 19,200 acres east of Irvine, officials said, and it is around 30 percent contained. Six homes and eight outbuildings have been destroyed, with another eight homes and 12 outbuildings damaged. Four firefighters have been injured fighting the blaze and about 3,000 people evacuated....
San Bernardino authorities arrest biker for alleged arson A motorcyclist who allegedly set a small fire in a rural foothill area of the San Bernardino Mountains has been booked for investigation of arson. Forty-eight-year-old John Alfred Rund of Hesperia was arrested late Tuesday after authorities followed him to an address on State Route 173. San Bernardino County sheriff's spokeswoman Cindy Beavers says it's not known if Rund is connected to any of the wildfires that have ravaged Southern California since Sunday. Witnesses allegedly spotted Rund start a fire in brush on State Route 173 south of Arrowhead Lake Road, then leave on a Honda motorcycle. A California Highway Patrol helicopter followed the motorcycle and Rund was arrested.
Arson suspect killed, another arrested Amid worries of new blazes adding to the firestorm already afflicting the region, a man in Hesperia has been arrested on suspicion of arson, and police reported shooting and killing another arson suspect after chasing him out of scrub behind Cal State San Bernardino. Law enforcement officials said today that they didn't know whether either of the men had started any of the more than a dozen large fires that have devastated Southern California in recent days, including the nearby Lake Arrowhead blaze. The brush fire in Hesperia was quickly extinguished by residents. Investigators have said that at least two of the huge wildfires, one in Orange County and the other in Temecula, were the work of arsonists. The confrontation that ended in the shooting death started about 6 p.m. Tuesday when San Bernardino university police spotted a man in a rural area of flood channels and scrub near the campus. University police tried to detain the man, but he got into his car and fled, authorities said. When he began to ram officers' vehicle, they shot him....
Smarter ways to handle fire When the Spanish explorer Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo first approached the coast of Southern California one fine but breezy October day in 1542, he noted plumes of dense smoke rising from the hills and concluded -- correctly as it turned out -- that the land was inhabited. California's Native Americans regularly set fire to the hills above what is now Los Angeles to renew the fresh vegetation they depended on, to clear the land for better hunting and to reduce the chances of being ambushed by enemies in chaparral-cloaked canyons. Once the fires were started, they sat back and watched them burn toward the sea. If Cabrillo had approached the Southern California coast this week, he would have seen the same kinds of plumes of smoke, but he would have found that the current inhabitants have a very different attitude toward fire. When the Spanish took California from its native inhabitants, they at first tried to end the practice of setting land-clearing fires. But eventually they, as well as the Mexican and American ranchers who succeeded them, found that fire filled a useful and in fact necessary role in the oak savannas and on the brushy hillsides....
NASA's Unmanned Aircraft To Aid Firefighting Efforts In Southern California In a bid to help fire fighters battling blaze across Southern California, NASA is flying an unmanned aircraft Wednesday that will provide images of fires from Lake Arrrowhead to as far south as San Diego County near the Mexican border. Equipped with sophisticated infrared imaging equipment, the Ikhana aircraft, a Predator B modified for civil science and research missions, took off from Edwards Air Force Base north of Los Angeles Wednesday morning on a 10-hour mission. Pilots at NASA Dryden Flight Research Center will remotely control the aircraft, which carries a thermal-infrared imaging system capable of seeing through thick smoke to locate fire locations. Incident commanders on the ground can view satellite-transmitted images on real time and allocate firefighting resources accordingly, according to a NASA press release....
BLM halts horse roundups; gov slams funding shift Federal spending restrictions and poor range conditions in Nevada have halted wild horse roundups in Wyoming, drawing the ire of Gov. Dave Freudenthal. The governor sent a letter to BLM officials this week blasting the decision to shift funding for wild horse roundups from Wyoming to Nevada. The BLM notified Freudenthal's office last week it needed to redirect funding from Wyoming to Nevada, as horses there were in danger because of drought and wildfires. "... (W)hile the situation in Nevada may warrant additional resource allocations for horse gathers there, I am hard pressed to see how Wyoming's funding for horse gathers must be sacrificed to address conditions in Nevada," Freudenthal wrote in his letter to Wyoming BLM Director Bob Bennett. "Clearly the 'emergency situation' in Nevada, when read together with the difficult range conditions in Wyoming, lends itself to new dollars being added to the budget instead of shuffling dollars to Nevada, which will, in turn, exacerbate problems in Wyoming."....
Utility agrees to pay rent on riverbeds A Spokane-based utility has agreed to pay Montana $4 million a year in rent to use the state-owned riverbed to generate electricity at its northwest Montana dam and reservoir — a move that narrowly avoided a trial over the matter. Avista Corp., which owns the Noxon Rapids Dam on the Clark Fork River and the Cabinet Gorge Dam just across the border in Idaho, agreed to the settlement Friday, the last business day before a trial began here Monday over the dispute. The agreement means just one company— PPL Montana, the state’s largest private owner of hydroelectric dams — remains a defendant in the ongoing trial. Another dam-owner, PacifiCorp, of Portland, Ore., earlier agreed to pay the state $50,000 in rent for its Bigfork Dam on the Swan River. At issue is whether private owners of dams should pay rent for the state-owned land underneath their hydroelectric dams and the rivers that generate electricity. Attorney General Mike McGrath has argued that utilities are no different from ranchers who use state-owned land to graze cattle. Ranchers pay the state rent for the land and so should the utilities, he has said....
Fugitive Tre Arrow loses bid for review of Canadian extradition order A Canadian appeals court has decided to return Tre Arrow, 1 of the FBI's most-wanted fugitives, to Oregon to face charges related to the firebombing of logging and cement trucks in 2001. The Canadian court determined that evidence against Arrow would convict him in Canada. However, Arrow could appeal and the date of his return is not determined. Arrow, born Michael Scarpitti, contended that guilty pleas by his accused coconspirators came through plea agreements and are unreliable. Arrow was arrested in Canada in 2004 on charges of shoplifting, assault and obstructing a police officer....
Forest Service chief: More blazes like California's on the way U.S. Forest Service chief Gail Kimbell says the nation can expect more wildfires like the ones raging through Southern California as global climate change heats up the world's forests. “Fires are burning hotter and bigger, becoming more damaging and dangerous to people and to property,” Kimbell said Wednesday. “Each year the fire season comes earlier and lasts longer.” Kimbell also warned in a speech to the Society of American Foresters of other effects of global warming on the forests. The meeting drew about 2,000 of the nation's leading natural resource managers and scientists to talk about issues such as ways to balance logging, recreation and conservation. Drier, hotter forests are more vulnerable to invasive species, such as plants like knapweed and kudzu and insects like the mountain pine beetle, Kimbell said....
Feds to hire contractor and new experts to fine-tune owl recovery The Bush administration's plan for saving the northern spotted owl from extinction, which flunked a review by independent scientists, will be turned over to an independent contractor and independent experts for fine-tuning. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced today that it will hire an independent contractor to handle the large volume of public comments about the draft plan, and convene three groups of experts to amend it. The team that drew up the plan has been disbanded. The Society for Conservation Biology and the American Ornithologists' Union found that the government did not consider all the best available science, a requirement of the Endangered Species Act, before making room for more logging in old-growth forests. The recovery plan is a lynchpin of plans by the U.S. Bureau of Land management to greatly increase logging in Western Oregon.
Dry days ahead, NMSU study says Researchers at New Mexico State University and the University of New Mexico released a new study finding climate change will result in decreased water availability in New Mexico's Rio Grande Basin, cutting the state's water supply and hurting its economy and agriculture. The two researchers, NMSU Agricultural Economics Professor Brian Hurd and UNM Civil Engineering Professor Julie Coonrod, note a wide range of climate models predict warmer weather and a change in precipitation patterns in New Mexico, changes the new study finds will lead to a decrease in water supply ranging from a few percent to one-third in the Rio Grande Basin. Such water supply reductions will have a significant impact on New Mexico's economy. The study used a middle scenario of greenhouse gas emissions growth over the 21st century and examined a wide range of potential changes in temperature and precipitation. "Direct and indirect economic losses are projected to range from $13 million to $115 million by 2030 in the state of New Mexico, and from $21 million to over $300 million by 2080," said Hurd, who has studied climate change and its economic effects for more than a decade. "Traditional agricultural systems and rural communities are most at risk, and may need transitional assistance."....
Senate Asked To Place Moratorium On Further Premise Registration Efforts, Defund NAIS In a letter to the Senate Agriculture Committee, R-CALF USA has requested a moratorium on any further premise registration efforts, and also has requested that the National Animal Identification System (NAIS), or any other similar systems under any other name, be defunded at once. “There are just so many questions and issues that must be addressed before reasonable consideration could be given as to whether funding of NAIS should continue at all,” said R-CALF USA President/Region VI Director Max Thornsberry, a Missouri veterinarian who also chairs the group’s animal health committee. “Does USDA (U.S. Department of Agriculture) truly have the authority to mandate NAIS under the Animal Health Protection Act,” Thornsberry asked. “We want a thorough study on the legitimate authority and legal ramifications of the program, as well as a complete financial audit of NAIS thus far.” R-CALF USA believes that USDA has used improper and questionable tactics to garner NAIS premise registration numbers....
Schizophrenic U.S. Farm Policy With the 2007 farm bill temporarily stalled in the Senate, this is a good time to reconsider America’s schizophrenic agriculture programs and how they often work at cross-purposes. Consider government subsidies. Under the current farm bill, enacted in 2002, government payments to farmers averaged about $17.5 billion annually from 2003 to 2006. The House-passed 2007 farm bill would cost an additional $286 billion over five years, including both direct payments and other provisions. Politicians claim to be friends of the small “family farmer” but most government payments go to large farms. Half of all U.S. farms receive nothing at all because they don’t grow corn, wheat, cotton and other major crops that qualify for commodity payments. Because most payments are based on a farm’s past production history, they likely have little effect on current commodity prices. But they do cause land prices to be bid up, meaning those who own the most land receive the most benefits. Escalating land prices, in turn, raise the cost of entry into farming, hurting the little guy again. The government responds by offering subsidized farm credit, which provides $3 billion annually in ownership and operating loans to farmers and ranchers who don’t qualify for private loans. These subsidies increase the profitability of farming. This, in turn, encourages more production and results in lower crop and livestock prices....