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To: Threshold who wrote (33070)12/19/2003 12:10:16 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
BUSHGREENWATCH
Tracking the Bush Administration's Environmental Misdeeds
bushgreenwatch.org
***************************************

December 19, 2003

HOLIDAY TRADITION OF STEALTH ENVIRONMENTAL ANNOUNCEMENTS

Tradition is an important part of the holidays for many
Americans, and the Bush Administration is no exception. This
holiday season, the Administration is adhering to its tradition
of waiting until odd hours -- when the press and public are
preoccupied with other things -- to announce controversial
environmental decisions.

The year's holiday announcements kicked off last month, when the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service chose the day after Thanksgiving
to announce its "incidental take rule" allowing for the killing
of polar bears and Pacific walrus by oil companies drilling on
the North Slope of Alaska.[1]

Late-afternoon announcements on Fridays are another tactic. On
Friday, Dec. 5, the Administration announced proposed rollbacks
to Clinton-era grazing regulations meant to limit damage to
public lands by livestock.[2]

Last year, Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) dubbed the
Administration's slew of stealth announcements a "holiday sneak
attack" on the environment.[3]

The 2002 announcements included the release -- on New Year's Eve
-- of a controversial rule allowing tuna caught by fishermen
encircling dolphins to qualify for the "dolphin-safe" label.
Revisions to the Clean Air Act to allow power plants and
refineries to expand without having to install anti-pollution
equipment were also announced on New Year's Eve. On Thanksgiving
eve came the announcement that logging would be allowed in
national forests with less environmental oversight.

In 2001, the Army Corps of Engineers released its Everglades
restoration plan -- criticized by Everglades advocates as
inadequate -- on the Friday after Christmas. And also that year,
when the National Park Service was considering a controversial
permit to allow gas drilling in Padre Island National Seashore
-- the only U.S. nesting grounds for the world's most endangered
sea turtle -- it gave public notice in the Federal Register the
day after Thanksgiving. The public comment period closed on
Christmas Eve.[4]

###

[1] Federal Register notice, ga3.org
[2] Bureau of Land Management press release,
ga3.org
[3] Sen. Leahy press release, Dec. 23, 2002,
ga3.org
[4] Sierra Club fact sheet, ga3.org