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Pastimes : Lake New Orleans -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tsigprofit who wrote (917)9/25/2005 9:58:09 AM
From: paret  Respond to of 1118
 
You'll never see this on MSNBC:
...............................................................
U.S. law blocked storm barrier
By Joyce Howard Price
THE WASHINGTON TIMES September 13, 2005

A congressional task force says energy production, the construction of affordable homes and hurricane protection for New Orleans have been hampered by a 35-year-old federal law known as the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).
"We have heard from numerous industries that expensive and time-consuming legal and procedural delays are preventing energy production and construction projects," Rep. Cathy McMorris, Washington Republican and chairwoman of the House Task Force on Improving the National Environmental Policy Act.
The 1970 law was designed to protect the environment. The 22-member task force has held four hearings across the country to assess NEPA's role in accessing affordable energy, building roads and homes, and managing the nation's natural resources.
NEPA, which established a national environmental policy framework, has "resulted in thousands of lawsuits," holding up some projects for more than 20 years and killing others, said Jennifer Zuccarelli, a task force spokeswoman.
"The NEPA process, as it has evolved from a vague, extremely short statute, has grown into a massive, unclear process that hurts communities as they wait decades for homes, buildings, roads, energy and job-creating projects," Miss Zuccarelli said.
NEPA requires the U.S. government to evaluate the environmental impact of any significant project undertaken by a federal agency, financed with federal money, or requiring a federal permit. It further mandates that the results of the government assessment be made public and that the public decide whether its benefits outweigh its drawbacks.
On Friday, the task force said NEPA lawsuits at least twice had prevented system improvements to protect New Orleans from a hurricane. It said the Sierra Club and other environmental groups in 1996 sued the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and blocked a project to raise and fortify LEVEES around New Orleans.
It also cited a Los Angeles Times story that said a Save the Wetlands lawsuit filed in 1977 killed plans approved by Congress to create a "massive hurricane barrier to protect New Orleans." The plan was created after Hurricane Betsy in 1965.
A federal judge stopped plans for the hurricane barrier after finding that an environmental-impact statement drafted by the Army Corps of Engineers was flawed. The corps abandoned the project by the mid-1980s.

Rep. Thelma Drake, Virginia Republican and a member of the congressional NEPA task force, says it is clear that NEPA "plays a role in hampering our ability as a nation to develop efficient supply chains capable of providing Americans with affordable energy."
"For years, construction projects that could have mitigated adverse impacts to our supply have been needlessly blocked due to endless red tape and a sluggish federal bureaucracy," the congresswoman added.
The NEPA panel, comprising 12 Republicans and 10 Democrats who are members of the House Resources Committee, was charged in April with making recommendations for improving NEPA. The task force will submit a report to the full committee by year's end.
The task force will hold its fifth hearing on Saturday at 1 p.m. at Old Dominion University in Norfolk.



To: tsigprofit who wrote (917)9/25/2005 10:02:15 AM
From: paret  Respond to of 1118
 
Environmental lawsuits at least twice had prevented system improvements to protect New Orleans from a hurricane.

The Sierra Club and other environmental groups in 1996 sued the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and blocked a project to raise and fortify LEVEES around New Orleans.



To: tsigprofit who wrote (917)9/25/2005 10:05:33 AM
From: paret  Respond to of 1118
 
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.

Greens vs. LEVEES Destructive river-management philosophy.
NRO ^ | September 08, 2005, 8:24 a.m. | By John Berlau

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.

In 2000, American Rivers’ Mississippi River Regional Representative Jeffrey Stein complained in a congressional hearing that the river’s “LEVEES that temporarily protect floodplain farms have reduced the frequency, extent and magnitude of high flows, robbing the river of its ability … to sustain itself.” Similarly, the National Audubon Society, referring specifically to Louisiana, has this statement slamming LEVEES on its website, “LEVEES have cut off freshwater flows, harming fishing and creating salt water intrusion.” The left-leaning Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, in describing a grant it gave to Environmental Defense, blasted “the numerous LEVEES and canals built on the lower Mississippi River” because “such structures disrupt the natural flows of the Mississippi River’s sediments.”

Some went beyond opposition to building or repairing LEVEES. At an Army Corps of Engineers meeting concerning the Mississippi River in 2002, Audubon official Dan McGuiness even recommended “looking at opportunities to lower or remove LEVEES [emphasis added]” from the river.

The groups argued that the “natural” way would lead to better river management, but it was clear they had other agendas in mind besides flood control. They were concerned because LEVEES were allegedly threatening their beloved exotic animals and plants. In his testimony, American Rivers’s Stein noted that the Mississippi River was home to “double-crested cormorant, rare orchids, and many other species,” which he implied were put at risk by man-made LEVEES.

So far the environmental movement’s role in the events leading to the flooding has been little discussed. One exception is former Rep. Bob Livingston (R., La.), who told Fox News on Saturday that environmentalists were one of the major reasons levee projects were held up.

At this point, there are still questions about the particular LEVEES that broke in New Orleans. Care should be taken about drawing direct conclusions about the causes until there are more facts. But there are some important points that are clear that should put in perspective about levee funding and flood control.

Nearly all flood-control projects — even relatively small ones — are subject to a variety of assessments for effects on wetlands, endangered species, and other environmental concerns. These reviews can be costly and delay projects by years. In the ‘90s, for instance, the Clinton administration’s Environmental Protection Agency required a comprehensive environmental impact statement just to repair a few Colorado River LEVEES that had been destroyed in the floods of 1993.

The Clinton administration would frequently side with environmentalists on flood-control projects, even against local Democrats. The Army Corps of Engineers under Clinton began implementing a planned “spring rise” of the Missouri River that would raise water levels on the Missouri River during part of the year. This was supported by eco-groups, who argued that this restored the river’s natural flows and protected a bird called the piping plover. But farm groups and others said that combined with the ice melting from winter, the project could increase the risk of flooding in river communities and affect more than 1 million acres of productive farmland. Nearly all the Republicans and Democrats in Missouri’s congressional delegation opposed the plan, as did Missouri’s late Democratic governor, Mel Carnahan. But the Clinton administration refused to budge, and this was a major factor in Bush’s carrying of Missouri in 2000.

The Bush administration’s flood-control efforts were often relentlessly opposed by environmental groups, and this opposition was frequently echoed by liberal activists and in the press. Bush kept his promise, and his appointees at the Corps of Engineers have stopped the “spring rise” plan that concerned so many about flooding. Environmentalists launched a barrage of criticism and a series of lawsuits. This was also the case with Bush’s moves to stop the Clinton administration’s plans to breach the dams on the Columbia and Snake Rivers in the northwest. Even though the dams greatly help to control flooding in the region, American Rivers blasted the administration for failing to do enough to save the sockeye salmon native to the region.

Ironically, among those criticizing Bush for his actions to prevent flooding of the Missouri River was the ever-present anti-Bush environmental activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. He chastised Bush in 2004 for “managing the flow of the Missouri River.” If, before Katrina, Bush had proceeded full-speed ahead and fortified the LEVEES of the Mississippi for a Category 5 hurricane, Kennedy and others of his ilk would very likely have criticized Bush for trying to manage the natural flow of the Mississippi. And it’s a good bet that many of the lefty bloggers now critical of Bush for not reinforcing the LEVEES would have cited Bush’s levee fortification as another way he was despoiling the natural environment.



To: tsigprofit who wrote (917)9/25/2005 11:12:24 AM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1118
 
The Sierra Club-Clinton Legacy: Dead Firemen, Charred Forests, Dying Economy
Toogood Reports ^ | 11-02-03

I lived in the California Sierra foothills almost at the edge of the El Dorado National Forest from 1976 to 1999 and had a front row seat in the Great Debate over sustainable development, the Sierra Club´s environmental propaganda and the death of the economy in my county as its economic base, logging and related businesses, were slowly strangled to death during the eight years of the Clinton Administration.

As I watched the massive fires now raging in Southern California, that have so far killed 20 people, burned about a half-million acres and hundreds of homes, I thought about articles I have written in years gone by that warned this would happen.

Eight years ago, in the April 1995 issue of the Reagan Monitor newsletter, which I edited, I reported the warnings of a recently retired U.S. Forest Service Ranger who had lived and worked in the forests of Northern California for more than 60 years.

In that issue of the Reagan Monitor newsletter, I sounded the alarm about the nonsense the Sierra Club was spouting about the California Spotted Owl which, the club claims, can only "nest in trunk cavities, dead tree tops or broad snags (dead trees)" and could survive only "old-growth forests where trees are at least 200 years old."

According to the Sierra club, the logging in El Dorado County was killing the "old growth" forests and needed to be shut down to save the Spotted Owl. The Sierra Club website states, with great pride in its accomplishment, "In 1993, the U.S. Forest Service put into place the Northwest Forest Plan, the culmination of a series of lawsuits challenging the aggressive logging that was stripping the Pacific Northwest of its old-growth forests. The plan reduced the rate of logging on 13 national forests in the western parts of Washington, Oregon, and California by about 85 percent."

I reported in my article entitled "Owls, Mice and Bulldozers" that by 1994 the ten million acres of National Forests in the Sierras of California the 2.18 billion board feed of lumber logged in 1988 had dropped to only 360 million board feet. Since 1994 that has dropped to such an extent that, in effect, logging in El Dorado County, and its associated businesses have closed down, bringing economic disaster to hundreds of thousands of people connected with logging and construction in the area.

Yet, has been known for many years by those actually involved in the forests that the Sierra Club policies, which became public policy in the 1990s under Bill Clinton, would cause exactly the kinds of fires we are now experiencing in Southern California. As recently as last year I reminded readers in an article:

"Actually, the spotted owl was never endangered. The spotted owl boondoggle was the result of an owl counting venture in 1972 when Eric Forsman, a city-bred graduate student at the Cooperative Wildlife Research United at Oregon State university, reported, after only a year of study, that Spotted Owl pairs were found only in areas of old growth forests slated for timber harvest. Yet, Spotted Owls in California are all over the place and have been found nesting in a K-Mart sign. They increased in the El Dorado National Forest in the early 1990s after a severe fire that burned a huge segment of the forest.

"…However, a widely ignored July 23, 1990, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service report warned: ‘Past fire protection practices in the forests have caused abnormal fuels conditions to develop´ and noted that the practice of ‘protecting snags, dead but standing trees which are favorite nesting spots for the Spotted Owl are obstacles to fire suppression´ and that ‘current practices are creating forest conditions that most likely will lead to large, high severity fires.´" This report was ignored.

In 1996 I attended a Congressional hearing held Stockton, California by Rep. John Doolittle of California and Rep. Helen Chenoweth of Idaho in which a representative from the U.S. Forest Service warned that, unless the "no logging" regulation was rescinded and an aggressive policy implemented of logging and clearing underbrush, it was not "if" the forests would burn with dangerous, high severity fires, but WHEN they will burn, because of the huge amount of fuel we have allowed to grow in them.

Two years earlier, in 1995, I quoted a man who had spent literally 65 years in forests and was very familiar with Spotted Owls,. He was born and grew up in Oregon, where his father was a logger and worked 40 years as a Ranger, most of it in El Dorado National Forest. Keith Butts had seen a lot of people and policies over the years that ran totally contrary to his daily experiences in the woods, which included the owls following his bulldozer to swoop down on small rodents he disturbed while working.

"Today," he told me, "everything in the woods can be used. Nothing needs to be burned. Portable chippers can be brought in to chip up the slash (i.e. branches and underbrush) for waferboard that is used for building. Keeping the underbrush under control would prevent the worst damage of wildfires and firestorms that destroy million of trees, millions of dollars worth of property and sometimes kill firefighters. We are now either burning on purpose or letting wildfires consume millions of acres of trees, yet the Black Forest in Germany has been preserved for hundreds of years by good management that picks up every fallen branch to prevent fires."

We have known for a long time how to preserve our forests. It´s now too late to preserve millions of acres of once healthy forests – because of political decisions made in Washington by people who don´t seem to know the difference between a pine forest and a petunia patch.

This is really not a complicated problem. Crowded trees, underbrush and water shortages cause trees to die and become diseased. Mother Nature´s method of solving the problem is a huge bonfire to clean up the mess and start all over with a clean slate. Human beings with a brain can use the wood in crowded stands of trees, now even the underbrush, and that keeps the remaining trees healthy and alive. Fire kills the trees, the animals, birds, and insects – including the Spotted Owls – and sometimes people.

What is happening in Southern California is the natural result of Sierra Club-Clinton policies and decisions by activist liberal judges that prevented proper care of the forests. The solution to the problem is in the voting booth.