Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
From: Liberty
Matters News Service [mailto:Liberty_Matters_News_Service@mail.vresp.com]
Sent: Thursday, January 08, 2004 8:58 AM Rodents Not Endangered Species
Extensive studies
conducted by researchers at the Denver Museum of
Nature and History have shown that the Preble
meadow jumping mouse is not a distinct species
from other common mice and does not deserve
protection under the Endangered Species Act. The
scientists concluded, through painstaking DNA
trials, that Prebel's (Zapus hudsonius preblei) is
genetically indistinguishable from another mouse (Zapus
hudsonius camPESTris) that infests wide areas of
Wyoming, Montana, the Dakotas and Canada.
Immediately upon news of the findings, Wyoming
Governor Dave Freudenthal fired off a 110-page
petition to the U. S. Fish & Wildlife Service
(FWS) to have Preble's removed from the threatened
and endangered list. The FWS, however, has refused
to remove the mouse from the list, saying the
"available science doesn't justify yanking federal
protections…" according to Ralph Morgenweck,
director of the Service's regional office in
Lakewood, CO. Governor Freudenthal said FWS should
"direct its scarce resources to an animal that
actually needs protection and recovery." In
another development, Senate Minority Leader, Tom
Daschle (D-SD), sent a letter to FWS director
Steven A. Williams, urging the agency to drop
consideration of prairie dogs for protection under
the ESA. "The notion that the prairie dog is
threatened defies logic," the Senator wrote. [A]
multi-state study of prairie dog populations
recently concluded that the species was
biologically viable and therefore did not meet the
definition of an endangered species" he continued.
EPA Will Not Relinquish Hold on Wetlands
The Environmental
Protection Agency will not remove federal
protection from millions of acres of the nation's
wetlands, according to new EPA head Mike Leavitt.
Leavitt indicated the agency would continue to
review current data before rushing to relinquish
its jurisdiction in wake of several federal court
decisions that rejected similar arguments for
withdrawal of protections. Jim Murphy of the
National Wildlife Federation said; "It's a win for
water resources and wildlife." Chandler Morse,
policy analyst for the National Association of
Home Builders, said the EPA decision would do
nothing to clear up the confusing and
contradictory interpretation of current wetlands
regulations. "[T]he problems that we're facing,
the issues that we'd like to see addressed, are
the inconsistency and the unpredictability in the
permitting process." Sec. Norton Announces Grazing Rule Proposal
Interior Secretary
Gale Norton gave federal lands ranchers an early
Christmas present when she announced proposed
changes to the current grazing rules in early
December. The new rules would overturn the
Clinton-Babbitt decision that allowed the federal
government to confiscate any out-of-pocket
improvements ranchers made in the course of
grazing federal lands; including stock tanks,
fences and windmills. The proposed regulations
would also limit comments from clueless,
unqualified, urban environmental activists
regarding grazing permits. That provision elicited
howls of indignation from the left. John Horning
of the Forest Guardians complained; "[T]he purpose
here is to give cowboys and the livestock industry
free rein over public lands," that will "eliminate
safeguards on overgrazing and other environmental
damage." "This proposed rule will help public
lands ranchers stay on the land," Norton said. "We
all know there are people out there who want to
end public lands grazing. President Bush is not
one of them." Administration Opens Tongass to Logging
Alaskans cheered the
decision of the Bush administration to open
300,000 acres of the Tongass National Forest to
logging. "Merry Christmas…this couldn't have come
at a better time," said Steve Seley, who just
completed a $1.4 million expansion of his Pacific
Log and Lumber Company in Ketchikan, one of the
few remaining sawmills in Alaska's panhandle.
Governor Frank Murkowski said the decision "was a
vital step in our plan to rebuild the Southeast
timber industry." A decade ago the timber industry
employed 5,000 people, but heavy-handed government
regulations reduced that number to a mere 650
timber related jobs. The new rules will open only
about three percent of the Tongass to logging, but
environmental groups would have none of it
trotting out their tired old arguments as they
rushed to block six timber sales. "The Bush
administration is just catering to its friends in
the timber industry by adopting this rule today,"
said Tom Waldo, attorney with Earthjustice.
Florida Judge Blasts Agency for Extortion
Coy Koontz, a Florida
landowner, sued the St. John's River Water
Management District (SJRWMD) for denying him use
of his property without paying compensation. A
Circuit Court Judge ruled for Koontz and the water
district appealed. The SJRWMD was unanimously
refused a hearing by Florida's 5th District Court
of Appeals and one Judge, Robert J. Pleus, wrote a
scathing denunciation of the District's actions.
Water district scientist, Elizabeth Johnson, had
concluded Koontz's proposed development of three
and seven-tenths acres would adversely affect fish
and wildlife, even though none were observed on
his fourteen acres. As a condition for allowing
Koontz to "use" his property, he was required by
SJRWMD to perform offsite mitigation for the
unseen fish and wildlife five to six miles from
his property, an "out-and-out" plan of extortion,
according to Judge Pleus. The good judge's opinion
exposed the flagrant misuse of power exercised by
government agencies that cloak their extortionate
actions under the blanket of "Sovereign Immunity."
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