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Friday, September 16, 2005

 
NEWS ROUNDUP

U.S. needs domestic production, by responsible means Midland native Doug Burger began his presentation to the Permian Basin Petroleum Association Thursday by holding up a supermarket tabloid with a headline blaring "No More Oil! World to run out in six months!" As district manager for the Pecos district, Bureau of Land Management, Burger told his laughing audience, "I see a different picture." He reeled off several statistics: His district encompasses four counties in southeastern New Mexico: Chaves, Eddy, Lea and Roosevelt; these four counties produce 61 million barrels of crude annually, of which 45 percent is from federal leases and 568 billion cubic feet of gas, of which 48 percent is on federal lands; of the royalties the federal government collects, half is given to the state of New Mexico and Burger estimated that the federal government has recently given the state $1 million a day in royalties; approximately 95 percent of the state's entire production is from that four-county district, which holds 6,000 federal leases, 3 million leased acres total and 30,000 producing wells, of which 41 percent or 12,181 are on federal lands. The point of those statistics, Burger said, is that "We need domestic production." The key to developing that production, especially on federal lands, is to develop it under a multiple-use format and in an environmentally responsible way. Multiple-use means not only developing oil and natural gas production but allowing that land to be used by farmers, ranchers and for recreation, he said. And the key to maintaining multiple-use access to those federal lands is successful reclamation of those lands by producing companies....
Congressman, attorney general seek to block drilling on part of national forest in New Mexico A Democratic congressman and the state's attorney general are trying to block oil and natural gas drilling on 100,000 acres of federal land in northern New Mexico. Rep. Tom Udall of New Mexico introduced legislation Thursday to prohibit oil and gas development on the Valle Vidal unit of the Carson National Forest. Attorney General Patricia Madrid, in a separate move, warned the Forest Service that she would fight any attempts by the agency to allow oil and gas exploration and production on the Valle Vidal. The potential for natural gas drilling on the public land looms as a major political and environmental fight in New Mexico. Democratic Gov. Bill Richardson, who's running for re-election next year and is considered a potential candidate for president in 2008, opposes oil and gas leasing on the Valle Vidal. New Mexico Sen. Jeff Bingaman, the senior Democrat on the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, said Thursday that he's developing legislation to protect the Valle Vidal. Rep. Heather Wilson, R-N.M., has declared her opposition to drilling in the Valle Vidal — the first Republican in the state's congressional delegation to do so....
Conservation Groups File Appeal to Halt Oil Drilling Expansion in Los Padres National Forest Three conservation groups today filed an administrative appeal challenging a recent decision by the U.S. Forest Service to expand oil drilling in California’s Los Padres National Forest. The California Attorney General’s Office filed a separate appeal of the decision on Tuesday. In late July, the Forest Service approved a plan to allow oil drilling on an additional 52,075 acres of land in the Los Padres National Forest. The decision threatens popular recreation areas, wild lands, clean air and water, and habitat for several endangered species, including the California condor. “The Los Padres National Forest is already contributing its fair share of oil development to the nation. In fact, the Los Padres has the highest rate of oil drilling in California. Our communities should not have to sacrifice even more of our clean water, scenic vistas, and recreation opportunities for less than a day’s supply of oil,” said Jeff Kuyper, executive director of Los Padres ForestWatch....
Column: Readers vent over suicide I hope the federal Bureau of Land Management, the agency that oversees hundreds of millions of acres of public land – the vast majority of it in the West and Alaska – is listening. I hope that members of Congress are paying attention, and the Western governors with BLM holdings inside their states, and the assortment of varying stakeholders, and citizens who own those lands as part of their birthright. A few weeks ago, I penned a column about the suicide of Marlene Braun, the late manager of Carrizo Plain National Monument, a quarter-million-acre protected area administered by the BLM in California. Last May, Ms. Braun took her own life with a firearm in the wake of an ongoing dispute with her BLM boss. The incident has ignited a growing debate inside civil service ranks about the state of morale among public servants working for U.S. land management agencies. Could the BLM have prevented Braun’s death? Is the agency guilty of quashing dissent within its ranks? Was Braun punished for her overt support of a plan to reduce livestock grazing in order to protect native wildlife? Rarely have I witnessed a greater and more emotional response....
Forest ranger station and land sells for $1.3 million If all holds true, the Hungry Horse Ranger Station and several parcels of surrounding land will have sold for about $1.3 million, according to Linda Perry of the Forest Service. The Forest Service put the surplus land up for sale via an online auction in June. At first, the land appeared to be going at bargain basement prices. For example, the initial bid for the Hungry Horse Ranger Station and surrounding five acre tract was a paltry $4,500 back in June. That all changed, however, as the auction attracted some press and also came under what's known as a soft close status. A soft close happens when there are no bids on parcels for a 24 hour period. That's when the bidding actually heated up, Perry noted, with parcel prices jumping as much as $74,000 over a weekend. The sale includes not only the ranger station and surrounding land, but also about 92 acres of land in the townsite, most of which would make good housing lots. The bid price right now is about $14,100 an acre....
Column: The Ages-Old Beat Between Man and Beasts Goes On Katrina stories about pets have endeared and dismayed. But the story of man's relationship with the animal world has lately changed - principally because of (a) the reintroduction of certain species into areas where their ranks were running thin, and (b) suburbia becoming superb wildlife habitat. Perhaps the most widely perceived animal issue is posed by the white-tailed deer. Even with regular hunting seasons, many states in the East (such as Virginia) boast about as many as estimated at the Founding. We have removed many of their natural predators and feed them with our crops and milady's ornamentals. Some of our toniest neighborhoods have hired archers and sharpshooters to keep them out of back yards. Various programs direct the venison to, among others, the homeless. Urban parks wrestle with the deer question, too. Last year, motorists killed at least 39 whitetails in the 1,755-acre Rock Creek Park bordering pricey parcels in the nation's capitol - not counting the grazes, near-misses and unreported encounters. The National Park Service is wrestling with what to do. Coyotes across the landscape prey on livestock. Ditto gray wolves (a.k.a. timber wolves) reintroduced in places such as Wyoming, Montana and Idaho - and causing friction between ranchers in states that allow wolf culling and those in states that do not....
Better Endangered Species Incentives Needed Testifying today on behalf of AFBF, Bob Peterson, an Ohio grain and livestock farmer told a House subcommittee that farmers working cooperatively with government agencies would help make species recovery a positive benefit for all parties. “Farmers and ranchers enjoy the benefit of having wildlife on their land,” Peterson said. “Most farmers and ranchers are already taking measures on their own to protect listed species and habitat. They need the tools to be able to do it better.” Peterson explained that several programs are available to help animal species before they are listed as endangered, but once a species is listed, most of those opportunities disappear. “Farm Bureau has long supported the use of cooperative conservation as a way to implement the Endangered Species Act,” Peterson said. “We are convinced that cooperative conservation is the way to make the Endangered Species Act work for both landowners and for species, producing a win-win situation for both.”....
Drawing a bead on bison If the infamous hunts of the late 1980s and early 1990s are any indication as to how Montana’s latest experiment with a bison-hunting season will go, the state might want to get out the makeup and prepare for a whopper of a black eye. On Sept. 8 the state’s Fish, Wildlife and Parks Commission approved a plan to allow 50 hunters to kill bison as they leave Yellow-stone National Park, clearing the way for the first hunt of its kind in Montana in nearly 15 years to start Nov. 15. The state put an end to bison hunting in the early 1990s after graphic images of the hunts sparked international criticism and protests, including tourist boycotts. During those hunts, wardens led hunters into the field where some animals were shot at close range while grazing. Wildlife officials promise this year’s hunt won’t be anything like previous incarnations. Gov. Brian Schweitzer called off a 30-day bison hunt scheduled for Jan. 15 after commissioners said they wanted to ensure a fair-chase hunt and a longer season with broader hunting opportunities. The revised hunt plan includes more than 460,000 acres of wildlife habitat near the Yellowstone border. However, opponents say the hunt is anything but “fair chase.”....
Horses in Arizona forest: wild or domestic strays? The future of several hundred horses roaming across portions of the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest could hinge on their history and DNA. And their fate also depends on whether a federal judge finds that officials have taken all the steps required to protect the animals. U.S. District Judge Frederick Martone in Phoenix will decide at a hearing Sept. 23 whether to issue a preliminary injunction to keep the U.S. Forest Service from rounding up some 300 to 400 horses for slaughter. Last week, Martone granted a temporary restraining order to keep the service from awarding a contract for rounding up the animals. The government contends that most of the horses now on the forest strayed onto it during or after the Rodeo-Chediski forest fire in 2002. The fire, Arizona's largest-ever blaze, burned 469,000 acres, including miles of fencing separating the Apache-Sitgreaves and the White Mountain Apache Reservation....
Assault on pike is urged Eight years and more than $15 million after dumping chemicals into Lake Davis to eradicate northern pike, state Department of Fish and Game officials are proposing to do it again. Plans to be announced today by department Director Ryan Broddrick propose treating the Plumas County reservoir with liquid rotenone, the same chemical used in 1997 to kill the pike discovered in 1994. The 4,000-acre reservoir now harbors more than a million pike, a voracious Midwestern native species that feeds on trout and other fish. Armed with spines lining their mouths, pike have the potential to cause irreversible damage to the Feather River below Lake Davis and Sacramento River system farther downstream, Broddrick said. "It's time to evaluate treating the lake in a way that will eliminate northern pike for the long-term benefit of the ecosystem and the community," he said....
Man Who Shot Hunters Says He Feared For His Life A Hmong man accused of killing six hunters and wounding two others said Thursday that he feared for his life as he was confronted for trespassing. Chai Soua Vang, who came to the United States from Laos more than 20 years ago, said he began shooting after he thought one of the hunters had shot at him and the others were going for more guns. As he stood on the witness stand, Vang pretended he had a rifle in his arms and detailed the order in which he shot at them. He said he reloaded his gun twice. Two survivors of the shooting testified that no shots were fired at Vang before he started shooting. The truck driver from St. Paul, Minn., is charged with six counts of first-degree murder and three counts of attempted murder. If convicted, he could face mandatory life in prison. On Thursday, Vang, 36, said he was lost in the isolated Sawyer County woods on Nov. 21, found a tree stand he thought was on public property and climbed into it to get the lay of the land. He said Terry Willers approached him and told him he was on private property and should climb down....
Conservation study places GarCo on endangered list Garfield County has been identified as one of 12 places where threat of development and inability to preserve open space are greatest in Colorado. A study by the nonprofit Colorado Conservation Trust said Garfield County's soaring population will gobble about 18,660 of its 1.8 million acres between 2000 and 2030. While other counties, mostly in the Front Range, will see more growth, they also have more groups with more financial resources working on preservation of open space. When development threat is combined with funds available to buy and protect open space, Garfield County ranked as one of Colorado's 12 endangered counties. The study estimated $8.5 million is needed to buy and preserve about 10,000 of the most endangered acres in Garfield County....
Editorial: Time for Skico to make a bold statement The time has come for the Aspen Skiing Co. to make the ultimate environmental statement - it must abandon its plan to expand further onto Burnt Mountain. The Skico has deservedly earned a reputation over the last decade as an environmental leader in the ski industry. We believe the efforts headed by Director of Environmental Affairs Auden Schendler and guided by Chief Executive Officer Pat O'Donnell are sincere and enlightened. Corporations of any and all types would do well to follow the Skico's example. But to reach full credibility, the company must end an expansion plan that raises legitimate and grave concerns in its own back yard. The Skico wants to add about 500 acres of terrain in the trees of Burnt Mountain. It currently has one trail there called Long Shot. Skiers and riders must hike to the trail; it isn't served by a chairlift. Like Long Shot, the other proposed trails would guide skiers and riders through glades on ungroomed terrain....
Campers have fewer places to pitch tents Your tax dollars are only partially at work at U.S. Forest Service campgrounds near Aspen this fall. Three major campgrounds east of Aspen closed right after Labor Day weekend even though September is one of the most scenic times of the year. Lost Man, Lincoln Gulch and Weller campgrounds, which provide 26 sites easily accessible off Highway 82, are locked up for the season. Difficult Campground, the largest and closest to town, remains open until Sept. 25. It offers 47 sites. A concessionaire, One Thousand Trails, operates all four of those sites. The White River National Forest hired the national company five years ago to administer several of its campgrounds. The company collects the $15 camping fees, gives the Forest Service its cut, plows a certain amount of revenues back into improvements and maintenance, and keeps the remainder as profit. Its key to turning a profit is reducing costs, so One Thousands Trails is reluctant to stay open when cooler weather eliminates all but the heartiest campers with good sleeping bags....
Bill Would Let E.P.A. Relax Rules for Cleanup The Environmental Protection Agency could suspend any law governing air, water or land in responding to Hurricane Katrina under a measure introduced Thursday by the chairman of the Senate environment committee. The legislation, which drew immediate criticism from environmental groups, would create a 120-day period in which the agency's administrator, Stephen L. Johnson, could waive or modify laws if it became "necessary to respond in a timely and effective manner" to a situation created by the storm. The proposal would allow changes in law at the discretion of the Bush administrator in consultation with the governor of "any affected state." "This legislation is purely about providing E.P.A. the clarity and certainty it will need down the road to ensure a timely and effective response," said Bill Holbrook, a spokesman for the chairman, Senator James M. Inhofe of Oklahoma. Mr. Holbrook added, "As Administrator Johnson indicated yesterday, there are a number of uncertainties remaining, and we, as well as the administration, do not want those uncertainties to delay actions that affect people's health."....
Provision blocks Interior from moving on waste site Utah officials and the Bureau of Land Management say a key piece of a plan to build a nuclear waste storage facility on the Skull Valley Goshute Indian Reservation is blocked -- at least for now. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission last week approved a license for Private Fuel Storage to build and operate the facility, which would temporarily store 44,000 tons of spent nuclear fuel about 45 miles southwest of Salt Lake City. The commission's OK was a major move forward for the company. Private Fuel Storage, a group of utilities, now wants permission to build a rail spur to the Union Pacific Railroad main line so it can haul the enormous waste containers to their resting spot on the Goshute Reservation. But the Bureau of Land Management says it can't consider a right of way for the spur because five years ago, then Rep. Jim Hansen, R-Utah, inserted language into a defense bill that prohibits it. Hansen's language prevents the BLM from amending any land-use plans until the Pentagon studies how wilderness areas on the Utah Test and Training Range would affect training readiness....
8 companies apply for BLM oil shale leases The Colorado office of the Bureau of Land Management has received 10 applications from eight companies for its new oil shale leasing program. The small-scale leasing program will allow groups to test oil-shale extraction technology in the public lands of Colorado. The lease program allows companies to explore the resource, which could produce as much as 2.6 trillion barrels of oil, by granting 160-acre tracts of land and 10 years time to worthy applicants. “There are some bigger companies like Shell that have applied, and some of the companies are really small,” said Karen Zurek, acting head of the BLM’s solid minerals division....
Warning Of Spread Of Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever An infectious disease expert at Johns Hopkins who has spent nearly three decades studying the life-threatening, tick-borne infection known as Rocky Mountain spotted fever warns that the first widespread outbreak of the bacterial disease in Arizona is a growing and dangerous sign of how humans can inadvertently help spread infectious organisms beyond traditional state boundaries. In an article to be published in The New England Journal of Medicine, the Hopkins pathologist and microbiologist J. Stephen Dumler, M.D., a professor at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, highlights the importance of the recent outbreak in Arizona as the first confirmed cases that could be traced back to ticks carried into to the state on feral dogs, an animal group whose population has markedly increased. And, as the number of dogs has increased, so have the number of ticks. A detailed study of this latest outbreak by the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is featured in the same edition of the NEJM online Aug. 11. According to Dumler, the disease, most often marked by a telltale spotty rash that appears five to 10 days after the first signs of infection, has been largely confined to the South Central and Southeastern United States, although sporadic cases have been reported in all 48 continental states, mostly North Carolina. (Hopkins’ home state of Maryland is among the top 10 states for the disease, with at least 79 cases reported in 2004, up from 19 in 2000.) The scientist also reports that the number of people infected with Rocky Mountain spotted fever, which is fatal in up to 10 percent of those who contract it, has peaked for the third known time this century, with more than 1,800 cases reported nationally in 2003 and 2004. However, scientists believe the number of unreported cases is much greater....
Anthrax kills 37 cattle on montana ranch Anthrax has killed 37 cattle on a ranch in northeast Montana, and additional cases wouldn't be surprising, the state veterinarian said Thursday. The ranch, northwest of Culbertson, is under quarantine and has been since Monday, when the state Department of Livestock first learned that anthrax was suspected, Tom Linfield said. It has since been confirmed. Hundreds of remaining cattle were moved to a different pasture, and animals deemed susceptible or possibly exposed were given antibiotics and vaccinations, he said. A second round of vaccinations is due in about a week, and the property will be under quarantine for about 40 days, the department said. Ranchers in the area have been notified, and vigilance is being encouraged. Linfield said it's reasonable to expect more local cases following an outbreak. Anthrax was last confirmed in the state in 1999, the department said. Hundreds of cases have been reported this year in North Dakota and South Dakota....
Early price tag: $1 billion in agriculture damage The early price tag for Hurricane Katrina's damage to Louisiana agriculture is $1 billion — but the eventual total will be much higher, a state expert said Monday. Figures compiled so far by the Louisiana State University AgCenter cover only lost revenue and increased production costs. They do not include damage to fences, equipment and buildings, trashed pasture land and other infrastructure losses, said AgCenter economist Kirk Guidry. "The numbers are getting bigger every day as we get more information," Guidry said. Although the vast majority of farmers were not affected by Katrina, the storm still had a devastating effect on southeastern Louisiana, an area better known for its cities than its agriculture. For example, 10,000 to 11,000 head of cattle south of Lake Pontchartrain are dead or missing, particularly in the flooded-out parishes of St. Bernard and Plaquemines, Guidry said. "The ones that are alive, the problem is getting them feed and water," Guidry said. "We could see these number grow."....
USDA plan would close 665 local offices More than one-fourth of the nation's Farm Service Agency offices would close under a plan being pushed by the Agriculture Department, according to an agency document obtained by The Associated Press. As outlined in the document, the department would shutter an estimated 665 of the 2,353 offices nationwide. J.B. Penn, undersecretary for the Agriculture Department's Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services, said that he had not seen the document obtained by the AP but that the numbers cited were inaccurate. Penn discussed the plan to modernize FSA offices in briefings this week with chairmen of the Senate Agriculture Committee and House Agriculture Appropriations Subcommittee. More congressional briefings were planned. State FSA directors are coming to Washington next week for a briefing on the plan....
Canadian mad cow recovery plan aims for 800,000 tonnes of annual exports by 2015 Canada's beef industry is working on an ambitious mad cow recovery plan that would ramp up exports sharply over the next decade while reducing reliance on the U.S. market. Ted Haney of the Canada Beef Export Federation says his members want exports of processed beef increased to 800,000 tonnes by 2015. The key is reducing trade dependency on the United States from what's currently about 90 per cent down to 50 per cent in a defined period, said Haney. How to reach those targets will be the focus of an industry strategy session on Saturday that will include input from producers, processors, exporters and governments....
Legacy Reaches for Restoration In 1859 five families settled along the Virgin River, about one mile downstream from modern-day Grafton. They built homes and a school as the town slowly began to grow. Friendly Paiute Indians even helped the settlers become established. The homes of those early settlers were washed away in a raging flood in 1862. Distraught but not defeated, the settlers moved their town one mile upstream to form Grafton. However, due to common flooding of the Virgin River, the settlers were destined to endure flood after flood, filling irrigation ditches with sand and requiring constant attention. Despite the problems in settling the town, residents remained optimistic and hopeful. The crops and fruit trees grew and produced food for the town. By 1886 the town had grown to 28 families, and a two-story schoolhouse was constructed, which attracted people from settlements all up and down the Virgin River for dances and plays....
102-year-old Mildred Wolters reflects on the people and places she's encountered over the last century On September 9, 1903, during President Theodore Roosevelt's first term in office, Mildred Pintler was born in a small wood-frame house near Providence, R.I. Last Friday, exactly 102 years later, Mildred Pintler Wolters celebrated her birthday with family and friends at Discovery Care Centre, where she's lived for the past two years. Sitting with 105 years of family history in the scrapbook next to her bed, Wolters recounted a few of the twists and turns on the long and sometimes dusty trail that brought her from the country's smallest state to the wide open frontier of Montana. The oldest of five children born to George and Hilda Pintler, Mildred moved several times with her family before arriving in Montana in 1917....
North Dakota rodeo star Dean Armstrong, 75, dies Dean Armstrong, one of the first rodeo cowboys to be inducted into the North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame, has died at his ranch near here. He was 75. “I think his heart just gave out,” said Fran Armstrong, his wife of 14 years. Armstrong, who died Tuesday, was a member of a group called the North Dakota “six-pack.” The Fort Berthold-area rodeo team was known for riding tough bucking horses during the 1950s. Armstrong also competed professionally in steer wrestling and calf roping and won 11 state titles from 1954 to 1962. His rodeo career ended in 1963, after a horse fell backward and dragged and kicked him, leaving him unconscious for weeks. Armstrong then trained and raced horses in Canada and Arizona for about 30 years, his wife said. Fran, a retired Beulah teacher, wrote several books of poetry about her husband and other cowboys and ranchers....

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Thursday, September 15, 2005

 
FLE

Point Reyes pepper-spray incident ends in settlement

Two West Marin teens who sued the federal government after a pepper spray incident involving two park rangers have settled the case for $50,000, their attorney said. Chris Miller of Inverness Park, who was pepper-sprayed along with his sister, Jessica, have accepted a settlement of $25,000 each in the civil-rights suit, said their attorney, Gordon Kaupp of San Francisco. Kaupp said that under federal guidelines, $25,000 was the most the government's lawyers could pay each plaintiff without getting special approval from Attorney General Alberto Gonzales. If the attorney general rejected the request, the Millers would have had to go through the ordeal of a trial. "I would've really liked to press a jury for punitive damages, (but) the family's been through a lot," Kaupp said. "The decision was to resolve this and move on." Owen Martikan, one of the government's attorneys, declined to comment. The incident occurred in July 2004 after Roger Mayo and Angelina Gregorio, two rangers at the Point Reyes National Seashore, were dropping off a pair of 18-year-old residents they had detained and cited in a prior incident. As Mayo and Gregorio were preparing to release the residents, Chris Miller, then 18 years old, and Jessica Miller, then 17, pulled up in another car and approached to find out why the suspects, who are friends of theirs, were being arrested. The Millers were then pepper-sprayed as a crowd of witnesses began to gather. The Millers were treated at the scene by county firefighters....

High Desert man who threatened park rangers with gun sentenced to federal prison

A Newberry Springs(sic)who admitted pointing a loaded .30-caliber M-1 carbine at federal law enforcement officers who were investigating possibly unlawful digging on national parkland was sentenced this afternoon to eight months in federal prison. Leo H. Spatziani, 62, was sentenced by United States District Judge R. Gary Klausner in federal court in Los Angeles. Spatziani previously pleaded guilty to one felony count of assaulting, resisting, intimidating and impeding federal law enforcement officers during an incident on February 12. In sentencing Spatziani and rejecting the defendant's plea for probation, Judge Klausner said the high desert was "not the wild west" and all citizens have a responsibility to respect the law. Judge Klausner, who also imposed a $2,000 fine, ordered Spatziani to begin serving his prison term within 30 days. Spatziani is the friend of another man who owns a small parcel of private property within the Mojave National Preserve. The friend had recently constructed a small cabin on Park Service land near a desert spring, which was outside of his private property line. In early February, the friend was observed operating a trenching machine at the spring. In addition to being on federal land, the area around the cabin is documented as containing archeological and cultural resources. On February 12, two uniformed National Park Service Rangers contacted Spatziani and his friend regarding the trenching activity. While one of the Rangers was photographing the trenching activity, Spatziani removed the M-1 carbine from a vehicle. He placed a magazine in the weapon and chambered a round. He then pointed the weapon at the Ranger who was taking pictures and began advancing on him. Despite repeated commands to drop the weapon, Spatziani continued to advance with his weapon in the ready firing position. The threatened officer was forced to take defensive cover behind one corner of the cabin and draw his service weapon....

The morning after the night before

It was literally the morning after the night when Hurricane Katrina had made a totally unpredicted sweep past The Everglades Institute's site in the Everglades. A 25-foot red bay tree was being cleared from where it had fallen across Dill Road in front of the Institute. As we worked, a National Park Service full size SUV pulled up, rolled down the window, then the window went up, and the parkperson drove off, without a word. Not one word to ask if my neighbor was OK, no question about whether anyone was in need of any help, nothing. Dill Road is a limerock single-lane road, more a rutted, pot-hole-filled pair of ruts than a road. It is what you would expect of a Park Service owned and maintained access road to private property: all ruts, no maintenence. And, at the end of that road is where my neighbor lives. He is retired, and has Parkinson's disease. But, the parkperson didn't ask about him, nor did he offer to help clear the road. Let's just call him Ranger Randy. Ranger Randy wasn't about to get out of the air conditioned cab, and do any work clearing the trees he had to know were blocking the only road to my neighbor's simple home. Ranger Randy is a law enforcement officer. Law enforcement types have more important things to do, like look for criminals stalking the parks and preserves. Never mind that the Everglades, and the rest of America's parks and preserves, are super-low crime rate areas. And, just forget about the fact that most of the "crimes" the Ranger Randys of America write tickets for, or arrest people for, are violations of Park Service's multitude of "regulations to protect the environment." As I worked, I couldn't help wondering why I was doing the job of Ranger Randy and his ilk. What has happened to America? Why have we gradually seen the replacement of the helpful man in a uniform of the past with the cold, pseudo-military uber-cops so common today? Or, was it done so subltly that we just didn't notice?....

Federal DNA database of anyone detained by police advances in Senate

The Senate Judiciary Committee held a mark-up of the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) reauthorization today. The bill, which expires on September 30, passed out of committee, but an amendment was added that could prevent or delay its passage by the full Senate. The amendment, introduced by Senator John Cornyn (R-TX), on behalf of Senator Jon Kyl (R-AZ), would create a national registry of DNA taken from any person who has been detained by the police, even if the person is not arrested or convicted. Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) tried to include a secondary amendment to link the DNA index only to violent felonies, but it was defeated on a straight party-line vote. Senator Joe Biden (D-DE), the primary sponsor of VAWA in the Senate, said that he feared the DNA amendment could cause a firestorm on the Senate floor that would delay passage of VAWA. Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT) said that he feared it was a poison pill. Senator Leahy said that he is worried that whole classes of people, such as Latinos or Muslims, will be rounded up and their DNA will be recorded in the registry. Senators Arlen Specter (R-PA), chair of the Judiciary Committee, and
Orrin Hatch (R-UT) pledged to try to work out a compromise on the amendment before the bill reaches the floor, which is expected before the end of the month....

Cell phone tracking rejected

What: In the first case of its kind, a federal judge chastises the U.S. Department of Justice for trying to constantly track a cell phone user's location without providing any proof of criminal behavior. When: Decided Aug. 25 by U.S. Magistrate Judge James Orenstein in Central Islip, N.Y. Outcome: Justice Department's Patriot Act surveillance request was denied. What happened: Burton T. Ryan Jr., an assistant U.S. attorney, sought a court order that would permit federal agents to track a suspect though his cell phone--but he couldn't offer any evidence of actual criminal activity. Ryan asked Orenstein to sign an order requiring the unnamed cellular provider to divulge the information, which would reveal the suspect's location whenever his cell phone was in use. (Cell phones must provide this information because of potential 911 emergencies, the Federal Communications Commission has ruled.) Such location-tracking was permitted under the 2001 Patriot Act, which amended the definition of a "pen register," Ryan argued. A pen register records phone numbers that are dialed. Orenstein disagreed. Location information amounts to a wiretap, he said, and therefore requires prosecutors to show "probable cause"--that is, at least some evidence of criminal behavior. Such an order "would effectively allow the installation of a tracking device without the showing of probable cause normally required for a warrant." Citing congressional testimony by former FBI Director Louis Freeh, Orenstein rejected the request and told the Justice Department to appeal if it wanted further clarification. Freeh had assured Congress that "the authority for pen registers and trap and trace devices cannot be used to obtain tracking or location information."....

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ESA REFORM

According to the Center For Biological Diversity this summary was prepared by Pombo's staff and was leaked today.


POMBO'S OWN SECTION-BY-SECTION ANALYSIS
H.R. ___

SECTION 1- Short Title
This bill is to be cited as the “Threatened and Endangered Species Recovery Act of 2005.”

SECTION 2- Amendment References
In this bill, whenever an amendment or repeal is expressed, it refers to a provision of the Endangered Species Act of 1973.

SECTION 3- Definitions
“Best Available Scientific Data” is added to the list of definitions as “scientific data, regardless of source, that are available to the Secretary at the time of a decision or action in implementation of this act. Within one year of the enactment of the Act, the Secretary is to issue regulations to establish necessary criteria which determine the best available scientific data. In addition, the Secretary will undertake all necessary measures to comply with such criteria and guidance.

“Jeopardize the Continued Existence” means, “with respect to action, that the action reasonably would be expected to significantly impede, directly or indirectly, the conservation in the long-term of the species in the wild.”

SECTION 4- Determinations of Endangered Species and Threatened Species
The Secretary determines whether a species is an endangered species or threatened based on a series of factors. These include: destruction of habitat due to human activities or catastrophic natural causes; overutilization of the species for commercial, recreational, scientific or educational purposes. Also included: disease or predation; unable to maintain life with existing way or other natural or manmade factors which affect its existence.

Language clarifies that the determination of any distinct population of a species as endangered or threatened is only to be done sparingly.

In order to determine a species as threatened or endangered, the Secretary must use the “best available scientific data”.

The Secretary shall conduct a review of all species in the list every 5 years. The Secretary will consider whether a species should be removed from the list, be changed in status from and endangered to a threatened species or vice-versa.

SECTION 5- Repeal of Critical Habitat Requirements
This is a provision which repeals the critical habitat requirements currently under law.

SECTION 6- Petitions and Procedures for Determinations and Revisions
In order for a petitioned action to be warranted, the petitioner must provide a copy of all information cited in the petition, presenting substantial scientific or commercial information. The Secretary must make publicly accessible, on the internet, all information it has concerning species determination or revisions. This maintains emergency authority of the Secretary and includes the Governor in addition to the agency of the affected state in the consultation process.

SECTION 7- Reviews of Listings and Determinations
If no recovery plan is established or if none exists for the species, the factors for determination are set forth in previous subsections. A determination that the species is no longer an endangered species or in danger of extinction is based on an analysis of factors that are used to determine threatened or endangered status.

SECTION 8- Protective Regulations
When the Secretary lists a species as threatened, the Secretary may publish a rule outlining prohibited regulations with respect to that listing of a species. A regulation must be accompanied by a statement by the Secretary of the reason for applying any prohibition on a species. A regulation issued under this subsection may apply to more than one threatened species only if the specific threats to, and specific biological conditions and needs of, the species are identical, or sufficiently similar, to warrant the application of identical prohibitions.

SECTION 10- Secretarial Guidelines; State Comments
Amendments to this section add the Governor of a State to the provisions of the Act. This is an addition to state agencies included in current law.

SECTION 12- Recovery Plans
* Note: include species recovery agreements* (see in last paragraph)
The Secretary shall develop and implement a plan for the recovery of species determined to be an endangered species or threatened species, unless the Secretary dins that such a plan will not promote the conservation and survival of the species.

The Secretary must give priority to those endangered or threatened species, without regard to taxonomic classification, that are most likely to benefit from such plans. In particular, this includes species that are in conflict with construction or other development projects or other forms of economic activity.

Any species determined to be endangered or threatened after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall publish a final recovery plan for a species within 2 years after the date the species is listed. In regard to the species currently listed as endangered or threatened, the Secretary shall publish in the Federal Register a priority ranking system for preparing or revising recovery plans within one year on the date of enactment of this Act. This must take the scientifically-based needs of the species.

A recovery plan is based on the best available scientific data and shall include “objective, measurable criteria that, when met, would result in determination, that the species to which the recovery plan applies be removed from the list published to be reclassified from endangered species to threatened species.” Also, should include a description of such site-specific or other measures that would achieve criteria established under the clause; and, estimates of the time required and the costs to carry out those measures. The recovery plan will also provide an identification of those specific areas that are of special value to the conservation of the species.

If a recovery plan does not contain the criteria and measures, the criteria team should review the plan at intervals of no greater than 5 years and determine if the plan can be revised to contain the criteria and measures required. A recovery plan must then be implemented within 2 years after the date of determination.

This section establishes species recovery agreements. The amendments provide for species conservation by creating a species recovery agreement. The Secretary and private landowners can make agreements that would protect and restore habitat for a species, contribute to the recovery for a species or implement a management plan for a species.

SECTION 13- Cooperation with States
Provides that the Secretary enters into a cooperation agreement with the States. Following a consultation of the agreement, “any incidental take statement issued on the agreement shall apply to any such species, and to the State and any landowners enrolled in ay program under the agreement, without further consultation if the species is subsequently determined to be an endangered or threatened species and the program remains adequate and active for the conservation of the said species.” Any cooperation agreement also may provide for monitoring or assistance in monitoring the status of the candidate species or recovered species. This also reaffirms that the cooperation agreement is voluntary of private land owners. Furthermore, the Secretary has the authority to suspend any cooperative agreement after consulting with the Governor of the affected State, if the Secretary finds that agreement no longer provides adequate conservation for endangered species and threatened species affected. The Secretary may then terminate any cooperative agreement.

SECTION 14- Interagency Cooperation and Consultation
Provides for a consultation requirement in which the Secretary may identify specific agency action or categories of agency actions that may be determined to meet the standards by alternative procedures other than procedures set forth in previous subsections. Procedures to implement this section will be promulgated by regulation.

The “Secretary shall consider any comment from the Federal agency and the permit or license applicant, if any, prior to the issuance of the final written statement of the Secretary’s opinion.” If jeopardy is found, the Secretary shall suggest reasonable and prudent alternatives in a final written statement that would not violate the Act in order to implement the agency action. The Secretary shall cooperate with the Federal agency and any permit or license applicant in the preparation of any suggested reasonable and prudent alternatives.

Biological Assessments are to be based on the “best available scientific data” to determine a species to be an endangered or a threatened species. Amendment terminates the Endangered Species Committee Process, aka “godsquad.”

SECTION 15- Exceptions to Prohibitions
Provides that Incidental Take Permits to be “objective, measurable biological goals to be achieved for species covered by the plan and specific measures for achieving such goals; measures the applicant will take to monitor impacts of the plan on covered species and the effectiveness of the plan’s measures in achieving the plan’s biological goals; and, adaptive management provisions necessary to respond to all reasonably foreseeable changes in circumstances that could appreciably reduce the likelihood of the survival and recovery of any species covered by the plan.” The term of the permit is reasonable, taking into consideration the period in which the applicant can be expected to diligently complete the principal actions covered by the plan, the extent to which the plan will enhance the conservation of covered species, the adequacy of information underlying the plan, the length of time necessary to implement the plan and the scope of the plan’s adaptive management strategy. Any terms and conditions offered by the Secretary are roughly proportional to the impact of the incidental taking specified in the conservation plan and are capable of successful implementation. If the holder of a permit issued under this subsection for other than scientific purposes is in compliance with the terms and conditions of the permit and any conservation plan or agreement incorporated by reference, the Secretary may not require the holder to adopt any new minimization, mitigation or other measure.

For any changed circumstance identified in the permit or incorporated document, the Secretary may require only such additional minimization, mitigation, or other measures, in the absence of consent of the permit holder.

For any changed circumstance not identified in the permit or incorporated document, the Secretary may, in the absence of the permit holder, require only such additional minimization, mitigation, or other measures to address such changed circumstance that do not involve the commitment of any additional land, water or financial compensation not other committed, or the imposition of additional restrictions on the use.

The Secretary shall have the burden of proof in demonstrating and documenting, with the “best available scientific data”, the occurrence of any changed circumstances.

Any permit issued before the date of enactment of this Act that contains provisions that do not materially differ in effect from the terms of this paragraph shall be governed by this paragraph. Any regulations promulgated prior to such date that do not materially differ in effect from the terms of this paragraph shall remain in effect unless and until they are amended. The Secretary shall revoke a permit issued if the Secretary finds that the permittee is not complying with the terms and conditions of the permit. Any permit may be revoked due to changed circumstances only if the Secretary determines that continuation of the activities to which the permit applies would be inconsistent, Secretary provides 60 days notice of revocation to the permittee and the Secretary is unable to remedy the condition causing such inconsistency. The Secretary is not required to identify of analyze the impacts and potential minimization and mitigation measures related to any alternative other than the alternative presented by the permit applicant in the conservation plan or other permit application document and the no-action alternative.

Public review is extended from 30 to 45 days.

Experimental population provides language amending using “scientific data” instead of “information.”

Written determination of compliance allows for a property to request a written determination by the Secretary that a proposed use on the owner’s property will comply with Section 9(a) prohibition against taking a species by submitting a written description of the proposed action to the Secretary. The written description is sufficient if the descriptions includes the “nature, the specific location, and the anticipated schedule and duration of the proposed action,” and any incidental take of a species that is included on the list that the requestor reasonably expects to occur as a result of the proposed action.

Within 90 days, the Secretary must provide to the requestor a written determination of whether the proposed action would comply. If the Secretary fails to provide a written determination by 90 days, the proposed use will be deemed to comply. Any action the property owner takes in reasonable reliance on a determination that the proposed use complies shall not be treated as a violation of Section 9(a).

SECTION 16- Private Property Conservation
Establishes conservation aid to reduce conservation burdens imposed on landowners and conservation grants to promote conservation of endangered and threatened species. Aid is to be provided to property owners who forgo use of their property following a written determination by the Secretary that a proposed use would not comply with Section 9’s take prohibition. The amount of the Aid is to be no less than the fair market value of the forgone use of the affected portion of the property. The property owner is to establish the fair market value and ambiguities regarding fair market value are to be resolved in favor of the property owner.

In cases where the fair market value is agreed upon, aid is to be provided with 180 days of the request. If an agreed upon fair market value cannot be arrived at within this timeframe, the Secretary has must within in 90 days make a best and final offer.

Grants to promote the voluntary conservation efforts to benefit endangered and threatened species by owners of private property that are supported by the property owner on whose lands the activities will occur, are designed to increase the distribution or numbers of the species and may not be used for the purchase of private property or leases or easements of more than 50 years.

Conservation grants are to be paid on the last day of the fiscal year after conservation aid has been awarded.

SECTION 17- Public Accessibility and Accountability
Requires that the Secretary maintain a publicly accessible website that includes endangered and threatened species lists, all final and proposed endangered and threatened species regulations, draft and final recovery plans, the results of five year reviews conducted pursuant to Section 4, the Report to Congress required under what would be Section 5 and the Annual Cost Analysis under Section 18. Requires the Secretary to provide the information in a format that it may be searched by the variables contained within the Report to Congress and Annual Cost Analysis reports.

Currently much of the information that would be required by this language to be included on a publicly accessible website is provided by the USFWS on its Threatened and Endangered Species System database, TESS. This language would codify the requirement to provide this information and require that selected information, much of which is already collected in database format, be presented in such a manner that it may be searched as a database rather than be provided only as a lengthy file. The requirement would substantially increase the value of the data the USFWS already collects and reports. For example, users would be easily able to determine expenditures made for a species, the agencies that reported expenditures on the species and what the current status of the species is increasing transparency and public knowledge about the program.

SECTION 18- Annual Cost Analyses
Requires the Secretary to produce an annual report detailing the expenditures made by Federal agencies and the States primary for the conservation of endangered and threatened species and those expenditures voluntarily reported by local government and requires the Secretary to provide a means whereby local governments may electronically submit such data. Requires that to be eligible for receipt of funds under Section 6 states submit endangered and threatened species expenditure data.

Current law requires the Secretary to produce an annual expenditure report on expenditures for the conservation of endangered species by Federal agencies and states that reports those funds that may be attributed to a specific endangered or threatened species. As a matter of practice, many expenditures by federal and states agencies for the purpose of conserving endangered and threatened species are directed to more than one species and therefore are difficult to attribute to kind of endangered or threatened species. As a result, the USFWS has included in its most recent reports expenditures that cannot be attributed to a particular species as “other” endangered species expenditures. To ensure consistent and comprehensive reporting from year to year the language will require that both expenditures attributable on a species by species basis and those that are not attributable to a specific species be reported.

Expenditures for the conservation of endangered and threatened species are also made by local governments by not trapped by existing expenditure reports. The language would require the Secretary to provide a mean whereby local governments could, electronically, voluntarily submit and attest to the accuracy of expenditures on endangered and threatened species. The language provides the means for more comprehensive reporting without burdening local governments with mandated reporting.

The language also requires that to be eligible to receive funds under Section 6, Cooperation with States, States must submit their reported expenditures on endangered and threatened species.

SECTION 19- Authorization of Appropriations
Authorizes sums as necessary for Fiscal Year 2006 to 2010 for Secretary of Interior. Authorizes sums as necessary for Fiscal Year 2006 and 2010 for Secretary of Agriculture to carry out functions and responsibility of the Department of Interior with respect to the enforcement of this Act and the convention which pertain the importation of plants.

SECTION 21- Clerical Amendment to Table of Contents
Establishes titles to Sections of the Act.

SECTION 22- Miscellaneous Technical Corrections
International Cooperation
Management Authority and Scientific Authority
Prohibited Acts
Hardship Exemptions
Permit and Exemption Policy
Pre-Act Parts and Scrimshaw
Burden of Proof of Seeking Exemption or Permit
Antique Articles
Penalties and Enforcements
Substitution of Gender-Neutral References

If you are interested in CBD's analysis, go here.

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NEWS ROUNDUP

Coal companies ad campaign refuted by enviros, Forest Service North Fork Valley coal companies have banded together to launch a public relations campaign against recent changes to plans for the Grand Mesa, Uncompahgre and Gunnison National Forests. The campaign, which began Wednesday with a full-page ad in The Daily Sentinel, is an attempt to raise awareness about changes to the plan that coal companies say “restrict activities on public lands,” according to Kathy Welt, spokeswoman for Gunnison Energy Corporation, a member of the Oxbow Group. “If the U.S. Forest Service continues to be influenced only by environmental special interest groups, our future could be more like this picture,” the ad reads below a photograph of a lone man in a cowboy hat, walking a deserted street lined with desolate store fronts. Oxbow’s ad claims the Forest Service “didn’t hear from you,” adding the service only heard from environmental special interest groups....
Feds: Pilot error led to Glacier crash The pilot of an airplane that crashed while ferrying four Forest Service workers into a Montana wilderness last year lacked experience in backcountry flying and flew up the wrong drainage, the National Transportation Safety Board concluded in a report released Wednesday. The NTSB's findings of the Sept. 20 crash are similar to those of a separate, preliminary investigation by the U.S. Forest Service that was released earlier this year. That report also concluded that pilot Jim Long apparently had become confused about his location, possibly because of weather. Long, along with two of the four Forest Service workers, died in the crash near Glacier National Park, in northwest Montana. Two other employees, initially thought to have also been killed, survived and emerged from the wilderness two days later....
Marina Point suit nearing end of line The trial phase of the case against the Marina Point Development Association has ended in a Los Angeles courtroom. All that's left is opposing counsel's written briefs, possible oral arguments and the judge's decision. Construction was halted at the Marina Point project January 2004 when two environmental groups-Friends of Fawnskin and the Center for Biological Diversity- sought an injunction, accusing developers of violating the Endangered Species Protection Act. At issue is the threat construction may have on nearby bald eagle habitat. A temporary injunction was granted delaying construction at the site for more than a year. The case was heard Aug. 23 in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, lasting five days, including four days of testimony by the plaintiffs and one day by defendants. Judge Manuel L. Real was on the bench, asking lawyers for both sides to submit written briefs as closing arguments....
Hammond trespass issue simmers Conflict simmers between Hammond Ranch property owners and county residents who say they have accessed US Forest Service lands beyond the development for years along roads now designated as "private." Residents along one of the main roads in the subdivision, Dale Creek Road, have posted "No Trespassing" signs. Property owners further along and just beyond the development have posted signs, hung chains and erected gates across the road and, most recently, mounted video surveillance cameras to keep people from trespassing along what they say is a private road. Siskiyou County sheriff Rick Riggins said his department's research showed that neither the USFS nor the county takes responsibility for Dale Creek Road. "As of now that's a private road and we have to go by law. Until county counsel or a judge says differently, we have to treat it as a private and privately maintained road," he said....
Big Sur ranch events opposed Federal plans for Allen Funt's old Big Sur ranch have become a source of contention pitting neighbors and the county against the U.S. Forest Service. The issue will come to a head today in Eureka, where the state Coastal Commission will be asked to determine whether Forest Service plans for the 1,255-acre ranch meet policies that regulate coastline development in California. The property is just south of Bixby Creek Bridge, off Highway 1, and has been used as a cattle and horse ranch since the mid-1800s. Funt, of Candid Camera fame, bought the ranch almost 30 years ago but his estate sold it after his death in 1999. The new owners offered the rustic buildings for social gatherings and business meetings. The Forest Service acquired the ranch two years ago for $17.6 million and is also offering it as a gathering spot for special events for up to 400 people....
Column: Stockgrowers wrong with sage grouse plan. Hunting, grazing help birds What were the Montana Stockgrowers thinking? Were they just muscle-flexing? Perhaps throwing a little gasoline on some flames? Or were they just showing their ignorance regarding sage grouse? Whatever the thought process, the Montana Stockgrowers Association (MSGA) made a big splash last week in calling for a cutback in what they termed Montana's "liberal" hunting season on sage grouse. The MSGA should have done its homework. It should have looked at the numbers. And it should have learned a little about sage grouse management - what actually helps this bird and what hurts it - before running its mouth. The truth is that wildlife biologists and researchers have found hunting at Montana's level - two birds per day in a Sept. 1 through Nov. 1 season - has little or no effect on sage grouse populations....
Rare tortiose puzzles animal shelter staff A rare tortoise found "running" lose near hear last week is posing more than one puzzling question for workers at the Ogden Animal Shelter. They don't know what to feed it, nor if its even legal to house it in the shelter. The rare gopher tortoise is an endangered species normally found in Florida and along the Gulf Coast -- but no one thinks it got blown to Utah by Hurricane Katrina. Shelter director Bob Geier says his staff has been trying to figure out what to do with the dinner-plate sized reptile....
Federal judge halts killing of wolves in Wisconsin, Michigan A federal judge has blocked Michigan and Wisconsin, at least temporarily, from killing wolves that attack livestock or pets. The Humane Society of the United States and 18 other environmental groups filed a lawsuit last month. It accused the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service of issuing lethal-control permits to the two states without giving the public an opportunity to comment, as required by the Endangered Species Act. The permits authorized state officials to kill 20 wolves in Michigan and 34 in Wisconsin this year. The suit demanded the agency withdraw the permits and go through the correct procedure for considering them. U.S. District Judge Ellen Segal Huvelle voided the permits Tuesday during a hearing in Washington, D.C....
U.S. Acts to Finish Divisive Border Fence In a rebuff to California officials and environmentalists, the Bush administration cleared the way Wednesday for completion of a 14-mile-long border fence that will run through coastal wetlands to the Pacific Ocean near San Diego. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff waived environmental laws for the first time since Congress gave him that authority in May. Finishing the last 3.5 miles of fence is expected to cost about $32 million. Combined with older existing fencing along the Mexican border, Chertoff said, the newly completed fence will form a security corridor — including two new roads, additional fencing, stadium-style lighting and surveillance cameras — for U.S. Border Patrol agents. In a statement issued by his office, Chertoff promised to "act in an environmentally responsible manner consistent with the security needs of the nation." Environmentalists doubt that promise, citing government plans to use soil from a nearby mesa to fill in a canyon, dubbed Smuggler Gulch. "This will cause a tremendous amount of damage to the Tijuana Estuary, particularly downstream," said Jim Peugh, chairman of the conservation committee for the San Diego Audubon Society. "The waiver means they don't have to respect water quality or endangered species or labor or child safety laws. It's a very chilling precedent."....
Oregon State Univ, EPA Researchers Say Current Salmon Policies Don't Work Current efforts to save wild salmon in the Pacific Northwest and California almost certainly will fail. This appears to be the grim conclusion of 30 salmon scientists, policy analysts and wild salmon advocates participating in a year-long initiative to create policy options that would sustain wild runs of salmon in the West. While agreeing that a new approach is needed, participants differ widely on what it will take to save wild salmon. Many of the suggested remedies - from reducing the population of the Northwest to removing major dams from rivers to advocating significant lifestyle changes - would likely be politically or culturally unpalatable. Yet their proponents say success would require that level of commitment. Many of the prescriptions for sustaining wild salmon runs will get an opportunity to be presented and defended at a special symposium Sept. 15 in Anchorage, Alaska, on the final day of the annual meeting of the American Fisheries Society. About 2,000 fisheries scientists, managers, and other professionals are expected to attend the meeting....
Water board blasts U.S. on refuge care Water managers accused the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Wednesday of fumbling efforts to keep exotic plants from overwhelming an Everglades wildlife preserve. And they reminded the agency, manager of the 147,000-acre Arthur R. Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge in western Palm Beach County, that they could take back that wilderness if the problem remained out of control. Dishing out sharp criticism, the South Florida Water Management District said the wildlife service has made mistakes and little progress in recent years eradicating spreading invasive exotic plants. If the problem grows too far out of hand "then we need to take this refuge back," said board Chairwoman Irela Bagué....
Feds move to blacklist black carp but face a backlash If there were a social fish ladder, the slimy carp, which thrive in pollution-filled waters, would surely occupy the bottom rung. But when federal officials moved to put one variety on the list of invasive species, they opened a can of worms. The effort had the potential to restrict sales of the carp. The Asian black carp has been used on fish farms for more than two decades — not because it tastes good but because it has a taste for snails, which carry parasites that can kill or otherwise hurt their crop like a boll weevil damages cotton. Without another option to control the snail population in their ponds, fish farmers feared the worst for their industry, which is one of the few economic success stories in the otherwise poor Mississippi Delta....
Drawing Our Own Environmental Conclusions Where Mountains Are Nameless: Passion and Politics in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge by Jonathan Waterman W. W. Norton, 2005 280 pages, $24.95 People do strange things in the Arctic wilderness. Jonathan Waterman, for example, has chased a herd of caribou like a wolf, accidentally discharged bear spray onto sensitive parts of his anatomy, and poked through "wondrous" piles of scat. But, as he can attest, the far north also inspires powerful emotions, whether it's a sense of awe or a hunger for profit. Waterman made 18 trips to the Arctic between 1983 and 2002, trekking through the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and kayaking down rivers, along the coastline, and past Prudhoe Bay. In his latest book, Where Mountains Are Nameless, Waterman draws on these experiences to add his voice to the clamor surrounding the fate of ANWR. The topic may be familiar, but Waterman does succeed, at least in part, in making an original contribution to the discussion. In the first half of each chapter, Waterman recounts his excursions to the Arctic, describing in detail the landscape and wildlife. In the second, he tells the story of Olaus and Mardy Murie. The Muries may not be household names, but they did perhaps more than anyone else to create the refuge. By reviewing their struggle and eventual success, Waterman hopes to find lessons to apply to today's environmental battles....
Park's bison numbers swell The Yellowstone National Park bison population has reached an estimated 4,900 animals -- hundreds more than last winter and the highest level documented, a park spokeswoman said Wednesday. The population growth is renewing concerns about how federal and state officials manage the bison, some of which carry the disease brucellosis. Jake Cummins, executive vice president of the Montana Farm Bureau Federation, said Wednesday the population is three times greater than the park's carrying capacity -- what the landscape can successfully sustain -- and that it poses a serious risk to a livestock industry fearful that wandering bison will transmit brucellosis to cattle in Montana....
Rock Climbers Chafe at Park Service Restraints Christopher Paik has been climbing the steep rock face of Mather Gorge at Great Falls Park for 10 years. Like many other rock climbers, he believed injury was just about the only thing that could keep him from the sport. But that was before the National Park Service announced a plan that could restrict climbing in the park to preserve the landscape and restore such rare plant species as the Nantucket shadbush and flattened spikerush. Now Paik and other climbers say the use of the popular cliffs and ledges that attract hundreds of rock climbers to the Virginia side of the river each week is in jeopardy....
E.P.A. Struggles to Determine Extent of Hazards in Sludge The magnitude and geographic sweep of the pollution left by Hurricane Katrina is so enormous that the Environmental Protection Agency is struggling to determine what the worst hazards are, where they are and what can be done about them, the agency's administrator said Wednesday. The difficulties could cast doubt on plans of the New Orleans mayor and other city officials to reopen drier neighborhoods within days. At a Congressional briefing and at a separate news conference, the E.P.A. administrator, Stephen L. Johnson, described for the first time the wide variety of problems the agency was confronting, including the difficulty of determining the extent and toxicity of the sludge left by the floodwaters. Mr. Johnson said the agency was using aircraft to test for air pollution and taking daily samples of floodwaters and the sludge. The sampling is concentrated in residential areas. The agency has not completed or released details about specific strategies and the scientific protocols it is using as it tries to analyze the hazards posed by what Mr. Johnson called "the largest national disaster that we at E.P.A., or we believe, that the nation has faced."....
Floods' Pollutants Within the Norm Early tests on the floodwater that covered most of this city do not suggest it will leave a permanent toxic residue or render residential areas uninhabitable for more than a short time, officials of both state and federal environmental agencies said yesterday. The pollution consists primarily of fecal matter and slightly elevated concentrations of metals such as lead and chromium that were in the city's soil before Hurricane Katrina. There are also trace amounts of many petroleum-based chemicals and some pesticides. Despite descriptions of the floodwater as a "toxic soup" and a "witch's brew" of contaminants, the preliminary tests reveal it contains little that is different from what has been seen after past floods in other cities and here....this is from the Washington Post article, the one above is from the NY Times....
Indian woman leads multibillion fight against U.S When Elouise Cobell became treasurer of the Blackfeet Tribe in 1976, she began to investigate U.S. government payments to Native Americans for the rights to mine, farm and graze on Indian land. Three decades later the banker is in her ninth year of a $27.5 billion lawsuit against the U.S. government, alleging that officials have cheated Indians for more than a century. The complex dispute dates back to 1887, when the United States allotted lands to Indians but held them in trust for them. Under the arrangement, the government collects fees from ranchers, timber and oil companies or others using the land and distributes the money back tax free to individual Indians. "This is our money; they collected the money from 1887 forward. We know they used the money for other purposes," said Cobell, 59, who is the executive director of the Native American Community Development Bank in Browning, Montana....
Case of stuffed owl fetching trafficking charges oddly reminiscent of Monty Python A British man who put a stuffed snowy owl he found in the attic up for sale on the Internet was accused of trafficking in an endangered species. Steven Harper, 44, from Merseyside, northern England, had hoped to raise money to buy a holiday home in France. Instead he found himself in court, charged with trying to sell the long-dead bird without a certificate. A Merseyside Police wildlife officer said the legislation offered protection "whether an animal is alive or dead." Michael Brahams, Mr. Harper's lawyer, described the case as bureaucracy gone mad. "Rather like John Cleese's parrot, the owl was dead, deceased, moribund and in fact, it no longer existed. It had expired," he told the BBC.
Artist, writer best of the West The annual National Cowboy Symposium is finished in Lubbock. Hundreds of poets, chuck-wagon cooks, Western artists and working cowboys gathered last weekend to display their wares, recite their works and honor one another for promoting the Western way of life. Two of those honorees are familiar names in North Texas. Artist Chuck DeHaan of Graford, near Possum Kingdom Lake, received an American Cowboy Culture Award in the Western art category. Author Phil Livingston of Weatherford garnered a special award for his ongoing work chronicling some of the country's finest horses and their riders and trainers....

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Wednesday, September 14, 2005

 
KELO

New London Development Corporation Breaks Eminent Domain Moratorium Pledge

Some Fort Trumbull Residents Ordered to Vacate Homes in 90 Days And Pay NLDC Rent

WEB RELEASE: September 13, 2005
CONTACT:
John Kramer or Lisa Knepper
(202) 955-1300

Washington, D.C.—Breaking its word and defying both Governor M. Jodi Rell and the Connecticut legislature, the New London Development Corporation (NLDC) has apparently decided not to abide by a moratorium called for by both the governor and legislature. At least two residents in so-called Parcel 3 of the Fort Trumbull area on Monday, September 12, 2005, received notices (dated September 9, 2005) that they must vacate the properties in 90 days and must start paying rent to the NLDC during that period.

“The NLDC’s actions are breathtaking in their arrogance and defiance of the wishes of Governor Rell and Connecticut’s legislature,” said Scott Bullock, a senior attorney at the Washington, D.C.-based Institute for Justice, which represents the Fort Trumbull homeowners. “The NLDC is an unelected, unaccountable body that has been given the government’s eminent domain power and is out of control. It is time Connecticut’s political leaders at the state and local levels reel in this group that has been abusing the rights of New London property owners,” he added.

Less than two months ago, on July 26, 2005, the NLDC agreed to honor a moratorium called for by the Connecticut legislature and agreed not to seek to take possession of the homes while the legislature considered changing its eminent domain laws.

“Virtually the entire country is against the abuse of eminent domain by the NLDC, but its actions demonstrate that it could not care less what it has done to the rights of the citizenry and reputation of New London,” added Dana Berliner, another Institute senior attorney.

Berliner added that unless the NLDC agrees again to abide by the moratorium, Connecticut political leaders at either the state or local level must formally pass one to force the NLDC not to let anything happen to the homeowners while the Connecticut legislature considers changing its eminent domain laws.

Judge rules landowners don't have to sell to Tempe

In a stunning decision, a Phoenix judge ruled that 13 Tempe property owners don't have to fork over their land to help make way for a $200 million Tempe shopping mall. "It's a big victory for anybody who owns property," said Troy Valentine, a cabinet shop owner whose life has been on hold since after Tempe voted to condemn his property. If Valentine lost the case, the mall developer planned to put a movie theater about where his 12-year-old shop sits. The ruling caps a legal struggle that pitted Tempe and mall developers against a cadre of property owners and small businesses, and the case was closely watched in legal circles. The East Valley already is home to Mesa's Bailey brake shop case, a 2003 decision that became a rallying cry for property rights groups. In June, a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that could give the government more power to take private property rattled those advocates. Judge Fields sided with the landowners and gave little weight to Tempe's assertions that the area was an environmental time bomb. While the judge agreed that the area should be cleaned up, Fields noted that the state's sole risk assessment of the area concluded that it wasn't a health hazard. The city's documentation about methane hot spots was at least 15 years old, and the methane had probably degraded since then, the judge wrote. Plus, a developer testified that unstable soil, not environmental hazards, were the biggest problem on the site. Tempe failed to show that the mall project constituted a "public use," Fields said. "The private developer Mira Vista Holdings and its principals are the driving forces behind the project not the Plaintiff, City of Tempe." Fields wrote. "Profit, not the public improvement, is the motivating force for this redevelopment," he continued. Field's ruling will toss cold water on cities that may have been emboldened by the U.S. Supreme Court's recent ruling against New London, Conn. property owners, said Tim Keller executive director of the Institute for Justice's Arizona chapter....

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NEWS ROUNDUP

Eminent-Domain Battle Flares in Connecticut A group that won a Supreme Court victory allowing it to seize property for private development is telling some residents to vacate their homes in the latest flash point in a nationwide controversy. Representatives of the homeowners accused the quasi-public New London Development Corp. on Tuesday of reneging on a promise not to seize the properties while lawmakers considered changing the state's eminent-domain laws. State House Minority Leader Robert M. Ward (R) called for a special session to enact a moratorium on property seizures, and homeowners vowed to continue fighting. "They're going to have to pry my cold fingers from the house," said Michael Cristofaro, who received one of several vacate notices sent this week. Gov. M. Jodi Rell (R) and state lawmakers had urged local governments to refrain from seizing property for development. Rell also favors a special session on the issue, a spokesman said....
Judge halts FEMA program to protect endangered species A federal judge has ordered the Federal Emergency Management Agency to stop issuing flood insurance for new development in areas populated by endangered species in the Florida Keys. U.S. District Court Judge Michael Moore's decision Tuesday means FEMA can't grant new flood insurance policies in endangered habitats until the agency complies with requirements of the Endangered Species Act. "It's a first-ever ruling that prevents the federal government from subsidizing new development in an endangered species habitat with flood insurance," said John Kostyack, senior counsel for the National Wildlife Federation, and lead attorney for the three conservation groups that sued....
Wake Up, Republicans: Endangered Species Act Reforms Should Protect Property Rights and Species, Not Harm Both Today, the National Center for Public Policy Research joined over 80 major national and state public policy organizations in a coalition letter expressing disappointment with Republican efforts to reauthorize the Endangered Species Act. Specifically, the letter charges Rep. Richard Pombo (R-CA), Chairman of the House Resources Committee, with putting forth a weak reform effort that falls woefully short of fixing the ESA or preventing the ESA from abusing landowners. "Property owners have long suffered under the Endangered Species Act's onerous restrictions and outright disdain for property rights," said National Center Vice President David Ridenour, "And from what we've seen, Rep. Pombo's bill would ensure that this suffering continues largely unchecked." The letter was signed by a broad coalition of influential national policy organizations, including: Coalitions for America, Eagle Forum, the American Conservative Union, the National Taxpayers Union, Liberty Matters, and the Christian Coalition....go here(pdf) to view the letter....
Gator encounters triple in Florida The number of alligator sightings and attacks in Florida has nearly tripled in recent decades, according to a paper being published today in the journal Wilderness & Environmental Medicine. As more Americans move to coastal communities and the country's alligator population continues to rebound, humans are increasingly encountering the once-endangered species. In Florida alone, the number of alligator attacks has risen from an annual average of five between 1948 and 1986 to an average of 14 between 1986 and 2005, said Ricky Langley, a medical epidemiologist at North Carolina's Department of Health and Human Services. The number of ``nuisance complaints'' or sightings in Florida increased from 5,000 in 1978 to nearly 15,000 in 1998. "It's pretty much a straight line going up,'' Langley said in an interview, adding that Americans "just have to be more careful, and be on the lookout when they're on the water or on golf courses.'' Florida leads the nation in alligator sightings; Louisiana reported 4,000 alligator encounters last year while Georgia and Texas each had about 450. Alabama followed with almost 250, and Arkansas reported just under 100 alligators in 2004....
Conservation, industry groups agree on methane plan A conservation group and energy development firm have reached an agreement to let coal-bed methane production in a southeast Montana project continue but with limits on land disturbance and the disposal of water tied to the development. The agreement between the Northern Plains Resource Council and Fidelity Exploration & Production Co. alters an order U.S. Magistrate Judge Richard Anderson issued earlier that halted the Tongue River-Badger Hills Project near Decker, pending further environmental study. Under terms of the agreement, which Anderson has approved, production from 86 wells on federal leases could continue but water from the wells could not be used for "managed" irrigation or put into as-yet-unbuilt pits approved by BLM. There would also be no new disturbance of lands over the federal leases in the project area unless a landowner requested it, the BLM required it or safety, environmental or cultural protections required it....
Katrina turned lush forests into wastelands The sound of chain saws has replaced the song of the cicadas on Judd Brooke's 4,000-acre timber ranch. Devastation is widespread since Katrina roared through. Broad swaths of longleaf pines, which grow so tall and straight they're often used for utility poles, lie uprooted, snapped in half or bent. The wreckage is a business and personal catastrophe for Brooke, 57. His parents bought the first 140 acres of this spread half a century ago, and as a 4-year-old, he sometimes slept in a tent they pitched among these pines during weekend getaways. Timber growers such as Brooke will count their losses. Katrina took about 70% of his timber ready for harvest; trees worth at least $2 million before the storm. That tale of woe is echoing across Mississippi as the hurricane's damage is assessed. The Mississippi Forestry Commission says Katrina caused $2.4 billion of tree damage, more than half in commercial timber spread across 1.3 million acres. In the worst-hit areas, the coastal counties like Brooke's, almost half the timber may be damaged....
County joins appeal of prairie dog plan The Pennington County Commission voted on Tuesday to join other counties in an appeal of the U.S. Forest Service's plan to manage prairie dogs on federal grasslands. The plan, released Aug. 12, outlines management strategies for the Fort Pierre, Buffalo Gap and Oglala national grasslands. The commission voted to contribute $1,000 toward the appeal. Though the plan authorizes the poisoning and recreational shooting of prairie dogs as well as nonlethal management practices, Fall River County State's Attorney Lance Russell told commissioners that the plan doesn't go far enough. The plan allows poisoning prairie dogs outside areas where the black-footed ferret has been introduced on the national grasslands and establishes a half-mile, prairie-dog-free buffer zone around federal land. Russell said Fall River and ranchers from Crawford, Neb., to Wall are concerned about the impact of uncontrolled prairie dog populations in the interior of the national grasslands — particularly the effect prairie dog towns have on soil erosion — and that the buffer zones are too small to prevent encroachment onto private land. They are seeking to increase the buffer zones to a full mile....
Column: Ultimate Environmentalism How to save the environment? Not just from mankind, but ultimately from nature itself? Those are tough questions, but we have to start somewhere, and where better than with cute cats? And after we've cloned these cute critters, we have many more technologies to use to save nature. Yes, technologies to save nature. It's the forward-looking technos, not the backward-looking greens, who will literally immortalize the environment. Scientists have already demonstrated, pretty much, that any life can be extended into seeming perpetuity. It's already a thriving business, in fact; a company called Genetic Savings & Clone offers a "repet" service. And if pets can be cloned, it's only a matter of time before other crawlers and creepers can be replicated, too. And there's more good news on the using-technology-to-save-and-revive-nature front. Last month the Audubon Society of New Orleans reported that its researchers had been able to breed African wildcat clones. That is, biologists have now demonstrated that clones of wild animals can successfully reproduce themselves through natural sexual conjugation; fears that clones would be sexually sterile, or would produce only deformed freaks, have been proven wrong....
Tree-sitting environmentalists duck arrow attacks Claims have been made by some environmentalists who say some tree sitters protesting the Sten Timber sale have been attacked with a high powered bow and arrow. The area is about 60 miles east of Eugene. And the claim is that someone shot at a protester who was in a tree on Saturday. The arrow grazed the protester's hand. Another arrow punctured a hole in a water jug in the tree. Forest Service police officer Joe Flecher says he was called on Sunday, more than 24 hours after the incident occurred, and not much could be done....
Protection for frogs proposed by feds Federal wildlife officials on Tuesday proposed designating more than 8,000 acres of streams in Southern California mountains as land critical for the survival of one of the Inland region's most endangered species. With only 100 mountain yellow-legged frogs known to exist, an Inland environmental group filed a lawsuit last year seeking the critical habitat designation. Such a move can lead to stricter restrictions of activities on land that provides habitat for an endangered species. Officials with the San Bernardino National Forest said the designation by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, should it go into effect, will have little impact on the public. Most of the areas are too remote, and a campground at Dark Canyon and a picnic area at Fuller Mill Creek have already been altered to accommodate protections for the frog, said Ruth Wenstrom, a forest spokeswoman. The biggest potential impact, she said, would be filing more paperwork with the federal wildlife agency when forest officials plan fuel treatments to prevent fires....
Federal help sought to protect squirrel Saying that state protection has not prevented the Mohave ground squirrel from sliding closer to extinction, an Inland university professor and an environmental group filed a petition Tuesday asking the federal government to list the animal under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. Federal protection, if granted, would give more clout to the squirrel's imperiled status as the suburbs of Victorville and Hesperia continue their sprawl into the animal's habitat and as the Army expands its tank-training center north of Barstow into land known to harbor a core population of the squirrel, environmentalists said. Representatives for the Army and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service did not return telephone calls seeking comment. Generally, such petitions to the federal wildlife agency can take a couple years to process if an initial 90-day review deems them to have merit. The squirrel, which lives about half the year underground in burrows, is about 9 inches long and was listed as threatened by the state in 1971....
Park Service moves ripped County resident Jim Walker accused the National Park Service of carelessness and negligence in the wildfire that burned more than 70,000 acres in the Mojave National Preserve in June. "You talk about public preparedness," Walker said Tuesday after the Board of Supervisors meeting. "Where was ours? Why did they let my ranch burn?" The National Park Service has a history of tense relationships with landowners and ranchers, many of whom preceded the 1994 arrival of the federal agency. Before the land was designated a national preserve, it was under the jurisdiction of the Bureau of Land Management. Walker said he had planned to retire next year in one of the "inholdings" private land at the national preserve. The Park Service wants to rid the preserve of homes to enhance the area's tourism appeal, he said. "They just wanted to get us out of their land," he said. "They decided to let (the fire) burn us out."....
Editorial - Roads and Wilderness: Counties shouldn't assert dubious claims to prevent wilderness Last week, a federal appeals court changed the rules of the road for determining whether county claims to old rights of way across federal land are valid. Utah's counties, backed by the state, won a limited victory in their long battle with the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance and the Sierra Club over disputed county roads on federal lands. If this victory helps the counties to establish clear title to roads that no reasonable person would dispute, that would be good. If, however, it emboldens counties to assert dubious claims to little-used dirt tracks as a pretext to remove from potential wilderness designation lands that otherwise would qualify, that would be bad. Only lands that comprise at least 5,000 contiguous acres and are roadless qualify as potential federal wilderness. Of course, how one answers these questions, in the case of a particular road, is the heart of the argument. What everyone agrees on is that there is much at stake, including economic development in rural Utah, how federal lands are used by different groups of people (ATV riders or hikers, for example) and whether certain lands will remain open to mining, drilling, ranching and logging, or will be set aside for wilderness protection....
Court backs Park Service closure of Salt Creek Road A U.S. district judge has affirmed the right of the National Park Service to close an old Jeep road in Canyonlands National Park because of damage caused by off-highway vehicle use. Judge Dale Kimball on Tuesday issued a decision that upholds the closure of the Salt Creek Road in the Needles District of the park, ruling that the park service acted within its administrative rights as established by Congress. The Utah Shared Access Alliance, a consortium of OHV organizations, had opposed the closure. The group argued that the park service had been "arbitrary and capricious" in prohibiting motorized access on the road - which runs in and out of a stream bed for about 10 miles on the way to Angel Arch, a popular destination for four-wheelers....
Congress clears Wind Cave National Park expansion The House of Representatives has passed legislation to authorize expansion of Wind Cave National Park, moving the bill to President Bush's desk. Rep. Stephanie Herseth, D-S.D., hailed Tuesday's passage of the bill, but the transfer still faces complications: The family that owns most of the additional land has shown no sign of wanting to sell it to the government. Brendan Casey has said his family will not sell the 5,550 acre property for the amount the government has offered. Milliron Ranches, owned by Casey's Rapid City family, is now on the market for $14 million. The government has appraised the land at less than half that. "There is more money in the private sector to do this, and nowhere near as many complications," Casey said in July....
Study on removal of dam released A Sonora-based group leading the effort to remove O'Shaughnessy Dam and restore the Hetch Hetchy Valley claims it is possible to remove the dam within 16 years. An 86-page feasibility study released today in Sacramento by Restore Hetch Hetchy says the draining of Yosemite's eight-mile-long mountain reservoir could begin in about 10 years. In doing so, the study claims, thousands of jobs will be created. Millions of dollars also will be spent in Tuolumne County if the valley is restored, the report said. Entitled "Finding the Way Back to Hetch Hetchy Valley," the study proposes enlarging Don Pedro Reservoir or Calaveras Reservoir in the Bay Area to replace storage lost by the draining of Hetch Hetchy Reservoir. "Yosemite is the jewel of the National Park Service and its crown jewel is sitting under 300 feet of water waiting to be restored," said Ron Good, executive director of Restore Hetch Hetchy. "If the American people get behind the idea, it will happen."....
Aging Nuclear Power Plants May Affect Emissions Pact A proposed agreement among nine Northeast states to cap greenhouse gas emissions from power plants casts a new light on arguments in New Jersey and Vermont about whether the licenses of two aging nuclear plants should be extended. Community groups in both states are opposing the extensions of the licenses beyond their 40-year terms, but environmentalists are generally supportive of the proposed agreement among the governors to reduce these greenhouse gases, which contribute to global climate change. Shutting down the two reactors would mean immediate, substantial increases in the emissions, because it would increase reliance on fossil fuel plants, probably tripling emissions in Vermont and doubling them in New Jersey. "I think the environmental community is confused right now in terms of where they want to go," said Richard A. Valentinetti, director of Vermont's air quality program, who has been deeply involved in drafting the nine-state agreement. "Obviously there's some real polarization."....
Engineers Say a Key Levee Won't Be Set for Months Hurricane Katrina washed away a 17-foot-tall earthen levee that had protected St. Bernard Parish, east of New Orleans, from the waters of a shipping canal, and the Army Corps of Engineers said Tuesday that the ravaged parish would be left defenseless against even small storms at least until early next year because replacing the structure would take months. In a conference call with reporters, Col. Duane P. Gapinski of the corps acknowledged that the levee might not be rebuilt even by the start of next year's hurricane season. On the other hand, Colonel Gapinski and other corps officials said, at this point there is little for the levee to protect. "St. Bernard Parish is complete destruction," he said. Local authorities have ordered the parish evacuated and have said no one will be allowed to return for four months....
Senate defeats bid to change mercury rules The Senate on Tuesday narrowly turned back a challenge to the Bush administration’s strategy on mercury pollution, leaving intact federal rules that give power plants flexibility in how they reduce emissions of the dangerous toxin. With a 51-47 vote, the Senate defeated a resolution to void Environmental Protection Agency rules finalized last March. The Democrats and nine Republicans who supported the repeal contended the EPA approach was too slow and too weak in dealing with a pollutant that can cause serious neurological damage to newborn and young children. The White House insisted that its market-based approach to curtailing mercury pollution is effective and founded on sound science, and warned that the president would veto any legislation that overturned the EPA rules....
Migration policies adversely affect environment, other species The United States-Mexico border is a physically imposing and beautiful area. It is a distinctive habitat, and one of the most fragile wilderness areas in the country. Soaring summer temperatures and freezing winters make it a deadly place to travel, distinctly inhospitable to humans who do not have the resources to handle the climatic extremes. In the past 10 years, thousands of people, forced by tightened U.S. immigration policies into these dangerous regions, have died due to exposure and dehydration. Undocumented migrants, however, are not the only group negatively affected by U.S. border policy: the increased militarization of the southern border threatens jaguars, owls, pronghorn sheep, and many other local species, and greatly intensifies stress on soil and water systems that cannot adjust to human use. Ecological damage to the area is likely to increase. The U.S. Border Patrol has numerous proposals on the table to increase infrastructure and patrols in the area to deter migration. Many of these projects aim to fortify isolated stretches of desert that include some of the most pristine wild areas in the nation. Recent passage of the REAL ID act could exempt the Border Patrol from conducting appropriate Environmental Impact Studies of the area. In addition to pushing migrant flows into even more inhospitable terrain, these construction projects could cause devastating damage to the fragile ecosystem in the borderlands....
Cattlemen's Group Wrangles With Its Former Allies In a cramped office sandwiched between cattle auction yards and the looming white tanks of an oil refinery is the headquarters of a growing cowboy rebellion against federal trade policies and the large beef-packing companies they once regarded as allies. It is the office of the Ranchers-Cattlemen Action Legal Fund, United Stockgrowers of America, or R-Calf USA, an organization of ranchers founded in 1999 that says its membership has doubled to 18,000 in the last year. The organization has found an ally in Montana's governor, a former rancher who last month called the Agriculture Department "stooges" of the meatpacking industry. And it has drawn the ire of a rival beef group and Canadian ranchers by managing to keep the border closed to Canadian cattle for several months this year. Staking its ground against the Bush administration and meatpackers, who depend on a steady supply of cattle, R-Calf contends that the threat of mad cow disease is still too great to allow Canadian cattle into the United States....
Self-Made Cowboy When he’s talking about his cattle, he’s prideful and open, a little boastful of all the hard work he’s put in and the success he’s earned. When he has to talk about himself and his past, growing up penniless in the tiny Azore village of Faial, he’s suddenly a shy schoolboy again. He won’t make eye contact. He rubs his hands over his eyes and the back of his neck, up and down his arms, hugging himself, waiting for it to be over. And now, at 58, he has the wife - and the life - he wanted since he was a boy, when he tramped around Portugal broke and barefoot, the youngest of five children abandoned by their father. All his life, Vargas wanted to be a cowboy, and after decades of punching a clock and working odd jobs, he is running cattle in the San Joaquin Valley and the hills behind Gavilan College. Spending every day with the two loves of his life - his cows, and Kathy....

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Tuesday, September 13, 2005

 
NEWS ROUNDUP

Judge blocks Sequoia forest logging A federal judge halted the Bush administration's bid to keep logging 2,000 acres in Giant Sequoia National Monument, saying he "called into question" the scientific analysis used to justify cutting in a preserve that houses two-thirds of the world's largest trees. U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer, ruling in a lawsuit brought by environmentalists, also questioned whether fire control was the government's real motive for allowing commercial logging in the monument. The so-called "Saddle Project" was approved years ago, but cutting only commenced this summer, when timber prices were high. The government, Breyer wrote late Friday in issuing a preliminary injunction barring further logging, "waited five years to execute this contract because of unfavorable timber prices."....
Pine seeds saved for new trees Workers are collecting a bumper crop of pine cones in San Bernardino and Riverside counties and extracting seeds in an effort to boost reforestation. The San Bernardino National Forest pine cone crop, described as the best in two decades because of heavy winter rain, comes after millions of trees have been killed by wildfires, drought and bark beetle infestation. The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection and the U.S. Forest Service store the seeds for use statewide. Poor pine cone crops during the past 20 years have diminished reserves of seeds. "The need was huge," said Terri Griffis, who manages the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection's cone and seed processing facility in Davis. She said CDF has no sugar pine seed, has a very low level of ponderosa pine seed and needs Jeffrey pine seed. The agencies anticipate collecting up to 1,850 bushels of pine cones from Lake Arrowhead to Idyllwild. The pine cones are bagged and trucked to seed banks in Northern California for reforestation projects statewide.
1.6 million acres safeguarded A mish-mash of cities, counties, government agencies and nonprofit groups preserved 1.6 million acres in Colorado in the past 25 years, according to data collected by a land conservation group. The Colorado Conservation Trust announced the total figure Monday, the first time anyone has taken the laborious step of adding up the efforts of more than 80 public and private entities devoted to protecting the state's rugged vistas, alpine meadows, valley ranches and wildlife-thick forests from development. The 1.6 million acres amounts to 2.4 percent of Colorado's more than 66 million acres, an area about the size of Pueblo County or about five times the size of Rocky Mountain National Park, according to the trust. The organization's report, titled "Colorado Conservation at a Crossroads," also details another 2 million acres important to farming, wildlife and scenery that the organization believes should be a high priority for preservation over the next decade....
Boise Initiates Discussions on Company Policies With Environmental Groups Boise Cascade announced today that the company will proactively fund a scientific review by technical experts in forest restoration to determine the impact on forest health of salvage harvesting and replanting. Tom Stephens, Boise chairman and CEO, made the commitment at a meeting he initiated with the Rainforest Action Network (RAN) in San Francisco to get input on Boise's environmental policy. It is Stephens' philosophy to solicit feedback on how the company can improve its wood procurement and environmental methods from a variety of stakeholders. "One of our core values is to manage our businesses to sustain environmental resources for future generations," Stephens said. "To ensure we do so, we feel it is important to seek input from environmental organizations, government agencies, academia, and others on how to sustain and restore forest resources." "Our conversation with RAN made it clear that there is a need for more scientific facts about the impact on forest health of removing dead trees from forests destroyed by wildfires and replanting those forests," Stephens said....
Giving a Hoot for the Spotted Owl Research scientists studying spotted owls in the Pacific Northwest are using a host of technologies to stave off extinction of the birds, which many consider to be a poster child for the plight of the Western forests. Almost every night, researchers scour huge swaths of forest to create a detailed, real-time database of the owls' locations using radio telemetry, global positioning satellite and geographic information systems. Forest managers and agencies like the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management rely on the database for up-to-the-minute locations of spotted owls, said project leader Dennis Rock. "The Endangered Species Act says they can't cut a tree within 80 acres of a known spotted owl site, so they need to know on a close to real-time basis where the birds are, or may be, before they start thinning or harvesting timber," he said....
Teeny Phones for Tweety Birds Humans may not be the only animals using cell phones in the near future. Ornithologists and engineers at Oregon State University are planning to strap tiny mobile phones to songbirds and monitor the birds' migration with unprecedented accuracy. But the birds will not "phone home" like college kids calling from spring break destinations. Instead, the cellular devices will send simple codes to cell towers along migratory routes. The devices attached to the birds will share unique identification numbers with cell towers as they pass within range. Network service providers will record the ID numbers, the towers contacted and the times when contact was made....
Grouse projects get funding In the Big Horn Basin, they'll do some mosaic sagebrush mowing. In southwest Wyoming, they're concentrating on creating educational displays, including taxidermy mounts and restaurant placemats for youth. And in the Upper Green River Basin, they're going to partner with the oil and gas industry to link all past mapping, research and habitat treatments into a single, accessible database. All of these projects -- and 17 others -- will be funded this year with Wyoming Sage Grouse Conservation Fund money, state Game and Fish commissioners decided last week in Casper. The projects are part of the state's efforts to address the long-term declines of sage grouse numbers over the past 50 years. Gov. Dave Freudenthal and the Legislature appropriated $425,000 for sage grouse projects in Wyoming....
Piece by piece FOR years, hikers in the South Bay have treated Portuguese Bend, hiding on the far side of the Palos Verdes Peninsula near Donald Trump's Ocean Trails Golf Course, like their own wild, immutable backyard. Miles of unmarked trails, some of them hundreds of years old, wind through tilted fields of coastal sage scrub, up and down empty canyons and around the occasional endangered California gnatcatcher nest. Million-dollar views in this landslide-prone area overlook Abalone Cove, Catalina Island and the Pacific Ocean. But these trails cut through private property in an area that has long been a tug-of-war between conservationists and equally tenacious land developers. To preserve miles of hiking trails and earmark habitat for rare and endangered species, the nonprofit Palos Verdes Land Conservancy has been working to patch together what is poised to be L.A. County's newest nature preserve....
Trollers lose lawsuit but plan to appeal A judge ruled Thursday that salmon trollers in Oregon and California are stuck with the season they have. The Pacific Legal Foundation filed the lawsuit against the federal government in June in U.S. District Court on behalf of the Oregon Trollers Association, Siuslaw Fishermen's Association, and various other organizations, businesses and individuals. The lawsuit claimed the National Marine Fisheries Service violated federal law when managers gutted the salmon season, leaving trollers no opportunity to fish in June, July and August. Their argument centered around three issues: that record numbers of salmon are returning to West Coast rivers and managers ignored that fact; that managers didn't consider hatchery salmon along with wild populations; and that they disregarded the economic and safety impacts of the regulations. U.S. Magistrate Judge Thomas M. Coffin disagreed on all counts, completely denying the trollers any relief....
Company plans big drilling project A 184,000-acre area in southern Carbon and Sweetwater counties could become another battleground in the ongoing tussle between industry and environmentalists. The Bureau of Land Management has begun preparing an environmental impact statement on a proposal by Devon Energy Corp. to drill up to 1,250 natural gas wells about 40 miles southwest of Rawlins, the agency said last week. The wells would be drilled over 30 to 40 years from an estimated 1,000 well pads, according to the BLM. They are among a total of close to 9,000 new wells contemplated by the agency in its draft management plan for the Rawlins/Great Divide resource area....
Seismic exploration raises concerns The Bureau of Land Management has approved a seismic exploration project in northern Sweetwater County, raising concern from conservation groups about the level of study on these types of projects. The Pacific Creek three-dimensional geophysical project, which will use "thumper trucks" and helicopters to examine the energy potential of the area, was approved Friday. The BLM approved the project without a full environmental study, calling it a "finding of no significant impact." Darlene Horsey with the BLM Rock Springs field office said the agency determined there would be no "extreme disturbance or impact to the surface." "With the type of vibration trucks that are going to be used and the path they are going to be staying on," the impacts will not be significant, she said. And, the trucks will have single runs over the ground, not double, and will be in straight lines which won't have visual impacts....
Point May Be Oldest Idaho Human Artifact The discovery of a carved obsidian spear point indicates that the earliest humans in what is now Idaho apparently spent time in the area's mountains as well as its canyons. The spear point, believed to be 11,000 years old, was found last year just west of the Idaho-Montana border in the Beaverhead Mountains southeast of Salmon. If proved to be that age, it would be the oldest example of humans in that area, said Lane Allgood, a spokesman for North Wind, a company hired to help the Bureau of Land Management to investigate the cultural resources of the area. Denise Stark, an environmental planner and archaeological technician with North Wind, found the point just below the ridge line of the Continental Divide. Following protocol, she left it on the mountain, and North Wind retrieved it a year later only after analysis and authorization by the BLM....
Scientists study how to clean salty water Scientists from Sandia National Laboratories have started a study to investigate how to best clean salty water to make drinking water. Working with the Bureau of Reclamation and other groups they are hoping to find new ways to improve the water situation in the West. Scientists are trying to lower the costs of reverse osmosis. The costs already have declined from $14 per thousand gallons 15 years ago to about $2 per thousand gallons today. One promising idea is to create a new type of filter that mimics human cells. Such a membrane could selectively filter harmful particles from water while keeping healthy minerals intact. Human cells are about 1,000 times more effective than reverse osmosis filters in pumping water out of saline solution....
Sierra Club Gets Behind the Wheel This weekend, automaker and frequent foil of environmentalists Ford took the unlikely step of debuting an SUV at the Sierra Club's National Environmental Convention and Expo. The 2006 Mercury Mariner Hybrid offers 50 percent better fuel economy in the city than its gasoline-only counterpart (an increase from 22 to 33 miles per gallon) while enhancing highway mileage from 26 to 29 mpg. The Mariner can run at up to 25 miles per hour without relying on the gasoline engine. Ford also used lighter materials in the chassis and wheels to increase the fuel economy, according to Niel Golightly, director of sustainable business strategies at Ford Motor. The first of the $29,840 Mariner hybrids will be delivered to dealers on Oct. 3, Golightly said. More than 800 were pre-sold online, and Ford plans to make 2,000 for this shortened model year and 4,000 during the next model year....
Gore: Bush to Blame for Katrina Former Vice President Al Gore urged Americans on Friday to hold the Bush administration accountable for failing to adequately prepare for and respond to Hurricane Katrina. "When the corpses of American citizens are floating in toxic flood waters five days after a hurricane struck, it is time not only to respond directly to the victims of the catastrophe, but to hold ... the leaders of our nation accountable," Gore told environmentalists at the Sierra Club's national convention. Gore had been scheduled to give a speech to state insurance commissioners in New Orleans this weekend about the likelihood that global warming will spawn increasingly deadly hurricanes. He decided to take his speech to San Francisco after that conference was canceled. "The warnings about global warming have been extremely clear for a long time. We are facing a global climate crisis, it is deepening. We are entering a period of consequences," Gore said....
Officials say levees worse than thought The massive levee system protecting New Orleans has sustained heavy damage well beyond the five breaches that are widely known to have caused flooding in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, officials with the Army Corps of Engineers said Monday. Miles of levees that protected the eastern flank of the region, which borders Lake Borgne, washed away in the storm surge from Katrina, which swept inland and caused deep flooding in St. Bernard Parish and the 9th Ward of New Orleans. Army Corps officials disclosed the destruction of the city's eastern levee system in a detailed helicopter tour of the region Monday....
Mouse Zedong? The communist heirs of Mao Zedong and the capitalist successors of Walt Disney will share the stage in Hong Kong today with a near $1,8-billion monument to globalisation: China's first Disneyland. The meeting of the world's biggest communist party and the planet's best-known entertainment corporation would have been unthinkable to their founders. Walt Disney was a fervent anti-communist; Mao launched deadly purges of rightists and blocked Hollywood films. Disney has had to make only modest concessions to local customs. A feng shui master ensured that Mickey's magical kingdom satisfied traditional views of harmony with nature....
Gallagher Livestock closing after nearly 50 years in bovine business When the last cow leaves Gallagher Livestock auction yard this week, nearly 50 years of Fallon agricultural heritage will come to a close. Wednesday will be the last auction at Gallagher's, which is closing its doors forever following sale of the property, owner Tim Gallagher said. He said he only saw the initials of the buying party, and didn't know what the property would be used for in the future. "It was just time," he said. "I had a good offer on the property." Development has been encroaching on the auction yard for years, surrounding the property with houses, commercial and industrial properties. When the operation was started in the 1950s by his father, Tom, most of the adjacent land was alfalfa fields, Gallagher said....
'The granddaddy of dog trials' Sheepdogs and their handlers from around the United States and the world gathered in Meeker this weekend. Each were hoping to take top honors at gathering, herding and separating the skittish critters that once were an important part of the Western Slope economy. The winner this year was a dog named Pleat, owned by Scott Glenn from New Dayton, Alberta, Canada, followed in second place by Ethel, another Canadian, owned by Amanda Milliken of Kingston, Ontario, and an Easterner, Sly, owned by Tom Wilson of Gordonsville, Va., in third. The Meeker Classic Sheepdog Championship Trials, a five-day annual event in its 19th consecutive year, offered a total of $20,000 in prize money, from the $5,000 that went to the top dog down to $200 to 20th place. Additional special awards added to the cash total of the winners....
It's All Trew: Second income not such a new thing after all Getting by in hard times often required working at odd jobs to make ends meet. My father drove a school bus and played for dances on Saturday nights in addition to farming. A neighbor always took to preaching when his farm income dropped. During the New Deal era of President Roosevelt, many people built Works Projects Administration toilets and laid sewer lines to bring in additional income. Those fortunate enough to live near cedar growth, occurring usually in canyons or river breaks, took ax and saw in hand and cut cedar posts and stays for sale to the public. Hundreds of wagonloads and truckloads of cedar posts were delivered throughout the West for fencing the Great Plains. Palo Duro Canyon and the Canadian River breaks were favorite places for the post cutters of the time trying to make a few dollars on the side....

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Monday, September 12, 2005

 
NEWS ROUNDUP

Seizing livestock A property-rights group is claiming victory in the latest conflict between ranchers and federal land managers over livestock impoundments on Nevada's public lands. But so far, the feds have shown no sign of admitting defeat. The combative ranchers are welcoming a grand jury report and a new state law that orders federal land managers, for the first time, to obtain a court order before seized cattle changes hands. "The days of paramilitary cattle confiscations are over, I hope," said Ramona Morrison of the Nevada Live Stock Association, a states' rights group that largely disputes federal control of public lands. "I think everybody got their nose bloodied sufficiently and they won't want to do it again," she said. "The end result is BLM isn't confiscating cattle anymore." But the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, which oversees 48 million acres in Nevada, continues to reiterate its authority under federal regulations to seize cattle administratively -- without a court order or any other judicial review -- after notice and warning requirements are exhausted. The BLM said its lawyers are reviewing the new state law....
Two Types of Sheep, One Woolly Dispute Where the timber ends and granite stands against the clouds, four Sierra Nevada bighorn rams freeze for an instant — noses facing the wind, horns curling from their heads, haunches taut. Then, silently, they vanish among the jagged crags and canyons between Yosemite and Mono Lake. About 15 miles to the north, domestic sheep rancher Fred Fulstone gamely hauls his legs up a steep hillside of bitterbrush and sage. Then, spelling his lungs, the 85-year-old stockman watches somberly as government workers fasten tracking collars to five ewes. The devices are supposed to prevent his sheep from straying off undetected and infecting bighorns with pneumonia. Since the 19th century, the bighorns and Sierra sheepmen have been symbols of the wild and free-ranging Western frontier. But today they are at odds, their fate intertwined in a costly, highly politicized battle over grazing rights on public lands. Fulstone's fight has become a focal point for bighorn-domestic sheep conflicts that sheep industry associations say could affect grazing of 125,000 animals in California, Nevada, Arizona and South Dakota....
State lauds ruling on access to old roads State officials are calling a ruling from the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals a victory for the rights of the public to access old road rights of way that cut through federal land in three counties. But one environmental group says the ruling will only throw things into confusion and lead to yet more lawsuits. In a ruling issued Thursday evening, the Denver-based Court of Appeals rejected the U.S. Bureau of Land Management's criteria for defining a road that a lower federal district judge used in her decision. Instead, three appellate judges, including former University of Utah law professor Michael McConnell, chose the state's criteria, which makes it easier to designate road rights of way and could open up areas of federal land to public access. Among the BLM's criteria, a qualifying road must be established by "mechanical" construction. The state's criteria allows a right of way for roads that have been in continuous use for 10 years prior to 1976. "This case has been in litigation since 1996, when Kane, Garfield and San Juan counties were accused of trespass for performing maintenance on roads they asserted as their rights of way," said Assistant Utah Attorney General Ralph Finlayson. Calling the appellate ruling a major victory for counties and the state, Finlayson said many people who live in the Salt Lake area take easy access to places for granted. Finlayson said people who live near federal land rely on roads to access their cattle, their farms and each other. "These people absolutely need these roads for their livelihood and for their recreation," he said....
Rancher sent to prison A 69-year-old rancher and rodeo producer was sentenced to five months in federal prison for hiding wastewater leaks that contaminated soil. Michael Eugene Cervi of Roggen also was sentenced Friday to five months of home detention, a $30,000 fine and 50 hours of community service, which he must spend speaking to ranching and rodeo groups about his crime. He previously had pleaded guilty to a felony violation of the U.S. Safe Drinking Water Act. Cervi owns several ranches and two companies that provide horses and livestock for rodeos nationwide, as well as a business called Envirocycle, according to court documents. Envirocycle had a state permit to inject wastewater from oil drilling into a deep underground aquifer through a commercial injection well near La Salle, in Weld County. The well was found to be leaking contaminated fluids in March 2001, court documents said....
Mantua ranch owners sell development rights to conservation group for $3.72 million Owners of a Mantua ranch have united with conservationists to preserve some of the last remaining Columbian sharp-tailed grouse habitat in the state. The species has lost 96 percent of its Utah habitat, but thrives in the tall grass and sagebrush covering the 6,700-acre Selman Ranch near Mantua. The bird is listed as a "sensitive species" in need of conservation, as are the Northern goshawks and Bonneville cutthroat trout that inhabit the ranch's fields and streams, said Bill James, habitat section chief of the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources. Nonprofit preservation group The Nature Conservancy plans to purchase the land's development rights for $3.72 million, said Amanda Smith, director of government relations for the organization's Utah chapter....
BLM wants to remove most horses near Muddy Gap Federal wild horse managers plan to remove most of the wild horse population near Whiskey Mountain west and southwest of Muddy Gap this fall. Roy Packer, range management specialist at the Lander Field Office of the Bureau of Land Management, said the roundup operation would be similar to one completed last year in the Antelope Hills area of the Red Desert. John Etchepare, director of the Wyoming Department of Agriculture, said management of wild horse herds is simply a matter of protecting the resources of the state. He said the wild horse population got away from the BLM for a variety of reasons, at a time when a multiyear drought was hammering the rangeland. Early in Gov. Dave Freudenthal's administration, the state sued the BLM, resulting in a mandate to reduce wild horse numbers....
Washoe Tribe asks Congress for Lake Tahoe shoreline access Two years ago, the Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California was ecstatic when President Bush signed legislation preserving 24 acres of prime federal land for it on Lake Tahoe’s east shore. Now, the tribe wants help from Congress after making a discovery: The bill did not provide the shoreline access it had sought at Skunk Harbor north of upscale Glenbrook. Tribal leaders support legislation by Nevada Sens. Harry Reid and John Ensign that would shift the boundary and provide about 300 feet of sandy beach. The bill would not increase the amount of the tribe’s land....
Seismic tests nixed for hunting Federal forest officials agreed to suspend seismic exploration for natural gas during hunting season in part of the Bridger-Teton National Forest in southwestern Wyoming after environmental groups complained that seismic exploration had negative effects on game. In a letter Friday, Catherine L. Beatty, appeal reviewing officer for the U.S. Forest Service's Intermountain Region, told the National Wildlife Federation she would grant the organization's request for a stay of a previous Forest Service decision to allow seismic testing. Seismic exploration is to end today. "We're happy to see activity stopped as of Sept. 11," said Dave Gowdey, executive director of the Wyoming Wildlife Federation, whose organization was one of many that appealed the Forest Service's decision to allow seismic exploration....
Logging is back on BLM lands Saws may again be buzzing on federal land set aside for northern spotted owls. As the result of an early August settlement of a lawsuit brought by timber interests, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management is preparing to revise its land use plans for western Oregon where the owls live. Because the spotted owl perches in pines on BLM land managed by the Klamath Falls office, it too will revamp its plan. "There potentially could be a big shift back," said Don Hoffheins, environmental coordinator in the Klamath Falls office. Before the current plan, crafted under President Clinton's Northwest Forest Plan, went into effect in 1995, 1.2 billion board-feet of timber was taken from the forests. "It basically shut down logging completely in the 1990s," said Jon Raby, manager of the BLM's Klamath Falls office....
NRC ruling won't end fight over nuclear waste Utah officials say they are disappointed but not surprised that the Nuclear Regulation Commission ruled Friday to let a consortium of nuclear power utilities store nuclear waste on Goshute Tribal lands in Tooele County. "I think we gave up on the NRC a long time ago," said Rep. Rob Bishop, R-Utah. "We could see where they were headed." The timing of the ruling was more surprising. The NRC was set to rule Friday on the last in a long line of appeals by the state, this one over the issue of military over-flights by fighters using the Utah Test and Training Range. The NRC denied that appeal, as expected, but then, in a 3-1 vote, ordered its staff to go ahead and issue Private Fuel Storage a license to store up to 40,000 tons of spent nuclear fuel in above-ground casks. "Our decision today concludes this protracted adjudication, which has generated more than 40 published board decisions and more than 30 published commission decisions," the commission wrote in its ruling. "The adjudicatory effort, plus our staff's separate safety and environmental reviews, gives us reasonable assurance that PFS's proposed (storage facility) can be constructed and operated safety."....
Levees Failed Nature Refuge Just as They Did Humans Of all the uneasy compromises New Orleans has presented nature, none was more generous than the Bayou Sauvage National Wildlife Refuge, one of the largest urban wildernesses in the United States. But though this land east of the city was set aside in the 1980's as a 23,000-acre preserve, an offering to the wild in a place that also defied it, the marsh was enclosed by the same levees that guarded New Orleans, and so it was also vulnerable when they failed. Its ecosystem thrives on fresh water from rainfall, not on the brackish water of Lake Pontchartrain, which came pouring in. "It'll take years to recover," Dan Parker of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service said sadly on Friday, as he surveyed marsh grasses burned brown by salt. The green palmettos and other plants were doomed, he said. The water, the color of root beer, smelled of sewage and petroleum. Mr. Parker said that since the storm, he had not seen any of the wild hogs that used to roam the marsh. Yet he had also not seen one dead bird. Indeed, as leggy, starch-white egrets with a ruthless elegance stalked crawfish and as alligators vanished at the approach of Mr. Parker's airboat, the damage to Bayou Sauvage was far less obvious than the destruction to the human communities beside it....
Cricket watchers say caves may need expanded buffer After staying cooped up in a dark cave all day, crickets are willing to travel far and wide for a good meal. Cave crickets that share living quarters north of San Antonio with more than a dozen other creatures that have landed on the nation's endangered species list — spiders, beetles, psuedoscorpions and daddy long-legs — go twice as far as thought looking for food, according to a new study. And that, the scientist who tracked them says, could require that even more land be set aside to protect those endangered species. A team of researchers led by Steven Taylor, an entomologist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, found that the little brown-and-white hoppers travel up to 350 feet from the cave entrance in their nightly search for food....
Column: Bushies Plan to Destroy our National Parks The Bush administration continues its subversive agenda to destroy life as we’ve known it. Although not quite as bad as directing Hurricane Kartrina to kill black people in New Orleans, an official in the National Park Service plots to destroy our national parks, according to New York Times editorial editors. Worse, they say, he wants to promote horrendous secular sins allowing the sale of “religious merchandise” and purging reference to evolution in our parks. Gasp! Just how far will these people go to destroy our history and way of life? Times editors recently uncovered a “secret draft revision” of Park Service policy “circulating within the Interior Department.” Which begs the question: what could be secret about a draft policy spread around in a public land agency? Anyway, this vile person, one Paul Hoffman a deputy assistant secretary, has no credibility with the editors. Mr. Hoffman ran a chamber of commerce office in Cody, Wyoming, he was a congressional aide to the feared and reviled Dick Cheney, and he’s not your basic Parkie; he’s had “no park service experience.” Goodness, how dare anyone suggest public land policy who hasn’t been a sidekick of Smoky Bear, or Ranger Rick? So, how does Mr. Hoffman propose to destroy our national parks? Well, he wants to open the parks for greater use and enjoyment by more people, and he would like to have more commercial services available to them; further, Hoffman’s secret rules would allow state and local officials more say in park management decisions. How out of touch can one be?....
USDA mandates tick inspections for Cameron County livestock Citing a recent spike in the number of fever tick cases in Cameron County, the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service of the United States Department of Agriculture has mandated tick inspections for every head of cattle and every horse, mule and donkey in the county. The U.S. Department of Agriculture successfully eradicated disease-causing fever ticks from the United States in the 1930s. The tick, belonging to the genus Boophilus, is a scourge to ranchers because it is known to carry the babesiosis disease, which causes fever and death in infected animals. Unfortunately for Cameron County cattle and horse ranchers, Mexico never eradi-cated the fever tick. A permanent quarantine zone has been drawn up by USDA that extends up to U.S. Highway 281 in Cameron County and runs roughly 2 miles from the Rio Grande along the Texas-Mexico border, provides a buffer zone between the two nations where fever ticks still make it across the border on stray and smuggled cattle and horses and free-roaming wildlife such as deer....
When Roy, Trigger and Dale ruled the West Treasure is where you find it. Who would have thought that a thick book bristling with facts and written in the monotone, dry-as-dust style of a corporate annual report could turn out to be a delight? Of course, it helps that the subject matter is Roy Rogers and Dale Evans, entertainers themselves treasured by probably a majority of Americans over 50 and likely by a considerable number under that age, too. Even the most jaded of us can manage a smile at the happy reminiscence of decent, honorable Roy biffing -- but never, ever killing -- the bad guys with the assistance of loyal, plucky Dale. "King of the Cowboys, Queen of the West" contains almost everything the most ardent Roy and Dale fan might want to know about their professional careers. If it is not in the narrative history in the first one-fifth of the book, it is certainly in the minutely detailed filmography, discography, etc., that make up the remaining four-fifths. The numerous photos are a treat in themselves. (The cover price is rather steep, but the publisher promises a paperback edition will follow.) What readers won't find is much about the duo's personal lives, beyond the skeletal facts -- no examination of the dynamics, tensions and pressures in their domestic existence. Still, the facts alone have an allure....
Dodge City hosts celebration of 50th anniversary of Gunsmoke There were many Old West cowtowns in Kansas, but it was Gunsmoke with Marshal Dillon, Miss Kitty and all the assorted characters that made Dodge City the cowtown known around the world. This weekend, faithful fans flocked here to pay homage to Gunsmoke on the 50th anniversary of the start of its 20-year run on television. It lives on in reruns, so Matt Dillon never rides off into the sunset and Doc Adams still shuffles into the Long Branch to quaff a brew. "When we learned that nobody was doing anything for the 50th anniversary, we said 'That's crazy.' We said we're not going to let this pass," said Jim Johnson, president of the Dodge City Trail of Fame, which spearheaded the celebration. Set in frontier Dodge City of the late 1800s, Gunsmoke made people aware of the town's real Old West history, which included the likes of Wyatt Earp, Bat Masterson and Doc Holliday....
On the Edge of Common Sense: Ranchito motto: Nada es facil - nothing is easy Bow yer neck and keep goin'. That has been the name of the game in farming and ranching since Noah planted the first row of corn. I've watched hard workin' folks push through, around, over and by obstacles, shoulder to the wheel, nose to the grindstone, third down and ten. Get knocked down - git back up. Little things like runnin' out of staples two hours from the hardware store, or big things like floods, hurricanes, blizzards and Parkinson's disease. We all enjoy seeing fellow humans win the lotto, survive a wreck unscathed, or make a good bronc ride. But it is our resilience, our quiet courage, our persistence in the face of adversity that gets children raised, wars won, and lets good guys finish first now and then....

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Sunday, September 11, 2005

 
SATURDAY NIGHT AT THE WESTERNER

Cowboys—packaged pride in what they do

By Julie Carter

Extreme weather is and always has been a noted feature offered up by the Texas panhandle.

There are more stories about the “extremes” of hot and cold in that area than there are cattle in the feedlots. It is not uncommon to have someone tell you about their kin that moved to Amarillo, Texas from Fairbanks, Alaska and promptly moved back to Fairbanks after declaring it was “too damn cold” in Amarillo.

Blizzards, both sand and snow are a common occurrence and you just about have to be from there to like it there. But the close proximity to feed and cattle keep the feed yards in business and the cowboys employed.

Men from the smaller backyard cattle growing region of the southeast will come in with a woods colt, an old saddle, and pointed-toe boots common to that region. With an excited attitude, they perceive this feedlot cowboy job to be an adventure.

The climate and severe working conditions of the feed yards can disillusion them in a hurry. They are able to go back home to a job and often do; resuming previously thought mundane careers of driving lumber or cattle trucks. Upon their return they will be able to talk about their time working in the big country and how cold and hard it was.

The homegrown panhandle ranch cowboys will have handmade tall top boots with several rows of stitching, under slung heels and round toes to prevent stirrup hang ups. They will bring handmade western working saddles which are traditional style double rigged and have a breast collar. Their saddles will wear anywhere from one to a dozen piggin’ strings (small ropes) hanging from them as well as hobbles and medicine bags.

Their custom spurs will have hinged buttons and their spur and headstall buckles will be rust colored with silver brands or initials. The spurs will sometimes bear cutting, roping or other type of special rowels reflecting the cowboy’s particular interest. Some will sport the pizza cutter rowels and jingle bobs that are usually to make noise to aggravate everybody else.

Panhandle punchers will, almost to a man, always wear black well worn hats. These make a statement as well as any words in the English language verbalized could by saying “I’m here now, move it on over.” For the most part, that is not brag-- just fact.

Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorado cowboys all have variations in their style depending on the regions. The northern boys will have leggings for chaps instead of the short chinks worn by many from the hotter desert regions. New Mexico seems to favor the higher topped boots and other garb that lets them blend across the borders in any direction.

Then there are few idiosyncrasies in cowboy gear that each generation hopes will pass without becoming history. One of those currently is the “taco hat” which is a straw cowboy hat with an extremely wide brim folded up to resemble a taco shell. The style appeared to originate in the panhandle but has begun migrating west. Recently I heard it called the ‘No Mirror” hat, meaning if that cowboy had a mirror and saw how ridiculous he looked, he would take it off and stomp on it.

While the Texas panhandle cowboys will lay claim to be the punchiest bunch of punchers ever, the title will always be challenged by cowboys from everywhere. If a cowboy isn’t anything else, he is a walking talking package of pride in what he does-- no matter where he does it.

Julie can be reached for comment at jcarter@tularosa.net

© Julie Carter 2005


Whose neighbor are you?

by Larry Gabriel

One of the best things about life in rural South Dakota is having great neighbors.

We hear about it in the news once in a while when farmers unite to harvest the crops or ranchers gather to work the cattle of a neighbor who is unable to do it. Those of us who live here know without a doubt that if some tragedy strikes our family, our neighbors will be there for us in droves (without any asking).

It's a heritage. We think little about it. We just do it. I wonder what would happen if we applied our good neighbor tradition to the victims of Hurricane Katrina.

How many of our little towns have empty houses? More than few, I suspect.

If the owners of those houses were to donate the value of its use to a local church and a local church were to sponsor a hurricane refugee family, I suspect that being a good neighbor during this tragedy would benefit everyone.

The landlord could at least get a tax deduction if not rents. The small town would grow. The school would gain students. The church might gain members or at least supporters. But most importantly the rural community would grow.

When we promote rural development, we often try to entice some company to come to the community and create a job base on which the community will grow.

There is an alternative method. We could "build" the community to attract the company. We could encourage newcomers at every opportunity by doing nothing more than practicing on them our old tradition of being a good neighbor.

In some cases, we might find that hospitality works even better than traditional development plans.

Jobs are no problem when you are talking about a few newcomers at a time. Any three leaders of any community in this state can meet with a refugee family for an hour and come up with one or more jobs for them, if they put their minds to it.

I really can't think of any downside to doing such a thing. The potential benefits to our communities, our towns and our small schools make it worth doing as a good business decision.

Whether you are moralistic or not, if you live in rural America, you know from experience it always pays to be a good neighbor.

We have invited some of the victims here for temporary shelter, but a shelter is not a home in a community.

It takes a family to make a house into a home and good neighbors to make a place into a community.

Let's invite them to stay with us. It's the neighborly thing to do.

Larry Gabriel is the South Dakota Secretary of Agriculture.

I welcome submissions for this feature of The Westerner.

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OPINION/COMMENTARY

Greens vs. Levees

With all that has happened in the state, it’s understandable that the Louisiana chapter of the Sierra Club may not have updated its website. But when its members get around to it, they may want to change the wording of one item in particular. The site brags that the group is “working to keep the Atchafalaya Basin,” which adjoins the Mississippi River not far from New Orleans, “wet and wild.” These words may seem especially inappropriate after the breaking of the levee that caused the tragic events in New Orleans last week. But “wet and wild” has a larger significance in light of those events, and so does the group using the phrase. The national Sierra Club was one of several environmental groups who sued the Army Corps of Engineers to stop a 1996 plan to raise and fortify Mississippi River levees. The Army Corps was planning to upgrade 303 miles of levees along the river in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Arkansas. This was needed, a Corps spokesman told the Baton Rouge, La., newspaper The Advocate, because “a failure could wreak catastrophic consequences on Louisiana and Mississippi which the states would be decades in overcoming, if they overcame them at all.” But a suit filed by environmental groups at the U.S. District Court in New Orleans claimed the Corps had not looked at “the impact on bottomland hardwood wetlands.” The lawsuit stated, “Bottomland hardwood forests must be protected and restored if the Louisiana black bear is to survive as a species, and if we are to ensure continued support for source population of all birds breeding in the lower Mississippi River valley.” In addition to the Sierra Club, other parties to the suit were the group American Rivers, the Mississippi River Basin Alliance, and the Louisiana, Arkansas and Mississippi Wildlife Federations. The lawsuit was settled in 1997 with the Corps agreeing to hold off on some work while doing an additional two-year environmental impact study. Whether this delay directly affected the levees that broke in New Orleans is difficult to ascertain. But it is just one illustration of a destructive river-management philosophy that took hold in the ‘90s, influenced the Clinton administration, and had serious policy consequences. Put simply, it’s impossible to understand the delays in building levees without being aware of the opposition of the environmental groups to dams, levees, and anything that interfered with the “natural” river flow. The group American Rivers, which leads coalitions of eco-groups on river policy, has for years actually called its campaign, “Rivers Unplugged.” Over the past few years, levees came to occupy the same status for environmental groups as roads in forests — an artificial barrier to nature. They frequently campaigned against levees being built and shored up on the nation’s rivers, including on the Mississippi....

Turning Science Into Hot Air

With America's eyes fixed on Hurricane Katrina's destructive force, we naturally look for an explanation or a cause. Eyes in times past would have roved upward to the heavens; now they fix themselves firmly on science, eager to hear explanations of a link between global warming and impressive natural disasters. There are many out there ready to indulge this notion and use a terrible calamity to further their own political ends. They glibly contend hurricanes are exactly the sort of result we can expect if we keep contributing to global warming and that New Orleans has reaped the fruit of our irresponsibility. Yet there is much evidence this is all just hot air. The alarmists notably fail to cite the cyclical nature of hurricane behavior. From the late 1920s to the 1960s there was high hurricane activity. If global warming is to blame for more hurricanes now, what caused the last cycle? As leading hurricane scientist William Gray argues, North Atlantic surface temperatures vary naturally. They were cool from the 1970s to the 1990s, but warm during the last period of intense hurricane activity from the late '20s to the 1960s. He says, "Instead of seeing a long-term trend up or down, we do see a quasicyclic multidecade regime that alternates between active and quiet phases for major Atlantic hurricanes on the scale of 25-40 years each." The global warming-hurricane theory is flawed; Mr. Emanuel and others have tracked the buildup of a natural cycle, not discovered a linear trend. It is apparent the intuitive ideas forwarded by the likes of Mr. Emanuel inevitably result from classic "cherry picking" science. Given that patterns in hurricanes seem driven by 20-40 year cycles, to draw solid conclusions from a period that began in the 1970s and neglect prior natural patterns is a bit like staying up from 5 a.m. to 9 a.m. and finding there is a trend the Earth is getting brighter....

Gang Green: CRC lists the worst environmental groups

1 Rainforest Action Network The Rainforest Action Network’s current targets include Ford Motor Company and Wells Fargo. In its Jumpstart Ford campaign, RAN makes ridiculous demands of asking Ford to increase its fuel economy to 50 mpg by 2010 and reduce greenhouse gas emissions to zero by 2020. Thus far, Ford has tried to appease RAN by meeting with the to “better understand their perspective” (page 10 of the Corporate Citizenship Report). Problem is, RAN understands one thing: capitulation to its demands.
2 Greenpeace Fund Greenpeace’s current campaign is called “Project Thin Ice 2005.” The campaign involves the Greenpeace ship Artic Sunrise to scare people into believing that “Global Warming is real.” The ship is currently touring the ice sheet in Greenland, no doubt looking for lots of “scientific evidence.” “Ten per cent of the world’s fresh water is locked up in the Greenland ice cap, and if global warming caused by the burning of fossil fuels continues unchecked, the entire ice sheet is in danger of melting.” The Greenpeace website warns. “Should that come to pass, then sea level around the world will increase by 23 feet (7 meters), inundating low lying cities in the U.S., the entire nation of Bangladesh, and many Pacific island nations.” However, as Patrick Michaels of the CATO Institute points out, that scenario is based on junk science....

Hurricanes Aren’t Caused by Global Warming but Political Hot Air Is

At the 27th annual National Hurricane Conference University of Colorado atmospheric scientist, Dr. William Gray, explained that nature is responsible for hurricane cycles, not humans. Periodically changing ocean circulation patterns, he explained, led to the cycle of increasing hurricane activity that the world is currently experiencing. 2004’s above average hurricane season was part of a completely natural and normal cycle that scientists have monitored for more than 100 years. In fact, for about the past 25 years there has been a relative lull in hurricane activity in the U.S. We have recently begun to emerge from that cycle into a more active cycle of hurricane activity like those from the 1930s through 1950s. Indeed, according to the National Hurricane Center, category 3,4 and 5 hurricane numbers peaked in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s with an average of 9 per decade. In the 1940’s alone, 23 hurricanes hit the U.S. mainland, 8 were category-3 or stronger storms. By contrast, since the 1980s when environmentalists first began to argue that humans were causing catastrophic climate change, the number of category 3 or higher hurricanes have averaged 5 per decade. Recently, a paper by six noted tropical cyclone experts, Hurricanes and Global Warming, in the the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, made three main points. First, that no connection has been established between greenhouse gas emissions and the observed behavior of hurricanes. Second, the scientific consensus is that any future changes in hurricane intensities will likely be small and within the context of observed natural variability. And third, the politics of linking hurricanes to global warming threatens to undermine support for legitimate climate research and could result in ineffective hurricane policies....

Strategic reserves -- no strategy

Hurricane Katrina slashed U.S. oil production by 1.4 million barrels a day -- the global equivalent of suddenly losing two-thirds of all oil produced by Iraq or Kuwait. "President George W. Bush has responded quickly to Hurricane Katrina," said a Bloomberg report, "suggesting that Hurricane Ivan last year taught him a lesson about opening up the reserve." Energy Secretary Bodman announced he had "approved a request for a loan of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve" and "continues to review other requests as they come in.'' That announcement should have been made by the president at least a week before the hurricane actually hit. He should have said, "The United States stands ready to replace all oil production loss resulting from the hurricane for as long as necessary." If that had happened, oil would now be at least $10 a barrel cheaper than it is. Since 1991, however, it has always been safe for traders to bet against the SPR being used in such a serious way. The new SPR loans did arrive a few days sooner than the expensive11-day lag following Hurricane Ivan. But a loan is just a loan. To loan oil from the SPR (rather than sell it) does not add a drop to world oil supply over the medium term. On the contrary, it ultimately reduces world oil supply because those who borrow oil have to return more than they borrowed, as interest....

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