Border affairs & Bison bucks
Biden “waives”
We have a 2,000 mile border with Mexico, with many
American farm and ranch families located on or near that border, on government
owned and private land. We all received a big surprise because Biden just announced
he’ll build twenty more miles of border wall. Not only that, his administration
will invoke their authority to waive 26 different environmentally-oriented laws
to see the wall will be built without delay!
This has raised several questions. One reader on my
blog commented: “Since when does an official have the authority to waive laws??
Since Congress passed a law allowing it.
It all began when a law was passed to build a
structure in the San Diego area, but by the mid-nineties nothing had been done.
The California Coastal Commission and other enviros
kept the project delayed through appeals and court cases. The waiver language
had its beginning and was inserted in an immigration law. It has been amended
several times and exists today as Section 102 of the Illegal Immigration Reform
and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996. That is why Homeland Secretary Mayorcas
writes in his federal register notice, “Finally, in section 102(c) of IIRIRA, Congress granted to the
Secretary of Homeland Security the authority to waive all legal requirements
that I, in my sole discretion, determine necessary to ensure the expeditious
construction of barriers and roads authorized by section 102 of IIRIRA. “
He then lists the twenty-six laws he is waiving. They
include endangered species, clean water, clean air, migratory bird treaty, and
of course, the national environmental policy act. The average NEPA document now
takes four years to complete. The
Endangered Species Act is important for this area, which is home to the Lower
Rio Grande Valley National Wildlife Refuge and several endangered species. Lawfare writes that, in addition to being an
immigration hotspot, the Lower Rio Grande Valley represents a “transition between temperate and tropical
conditions and contains an exceptionally high diversity of plants and
animals—some of them found in few, or no other places in the United States.”
This includes the northern ocelot leopard and northern aplomado falcon—both
listed as endangered species by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
This tells us first that if Congress really wants
something they will do whatever it takes to get it. In this case they have
delegated their authority to amend or revoke a statute. Secondly it
demonstrates they are aware of the damage done by these statutes, but are
unable or unwilling to do anything about it. They have special waivers for
their projects, but none for ours.
Bison
bucks
Various federal and state officials recently met on
the Rocky Mountain Arsenal
National Wildlife Refuge to celebrate the $2.6 million they have been awarded from the Inflation Reduction Act and
Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. These funds will be used to manage bison, and to
expand their range in the refuge from 6,500 acres to 10,000 acres. These funds will also go towards
acquiring fencing and cattle guards to help this project, as well as to drill
wells at the edges of the project.
Deputy refuge manager
Megan Klosterman calls bison “ecosystem engineers,” and says allowing them to
roam more freely across the refuge will help native plants grow better and
increase species diversity in the grasslands ecosystem.
They evolved with the
native plants, so their feeding on vegetation actually helps it grow back
stronger, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service deputy director Siva Sundaresan said.
The weight of their footsteps (males can weigh up to 2,000 pounds, females
1,000) mixes nutrients in the soil, and their hoof prints create wet microclimates
for new plants to grow.
Do you believe that
spending money on fencing, cattle guards and water wells will reduce
inflation?
I do.
And I also believe there are buffalo
chips the size of houses floating down the Rio Grande today.
And let’s start calling
our livestock “ecosystem engineers” and I hope they are making wet “microclimates”
all over your country.
Until next time, be a
nuisance to the devil and don’t forget to check that cinch.
Frank DuBois was the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003, is the author of a blog: The Westerner (www.thewesterner.blogspot.com) and is the founder of The DuBois Rodeo Scholarship and The DuBois Western Heritage Foundation
4 comments:
Frank,
I got a laugh out of the new species you came up with - the "northern ocelot leopard". I have been studying, trapping, and shooting wild cats for decades but haven't had a chance to go after one of them yet.
Cheers!
Dexter Oliver
Are you justifying killing wild cats by saying you study them?
Hey anonymous, get your head out of rear
Dexter. glad you got a laugh out of it, but i rcan't take credit...that description is right out of the article
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