Judge To Greens: Show Me The Green
From
High
Country News comes news that we
should have read a long time ago. How
welcome it is!
A federal judge is forcing environmentalists to back their challenge of a logging project with cold, hard cash.
In November, U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy ordered a halt to logging on the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest, outside of Butte, after three environmental groups appealed the judge’s earlier decision to allow the 2,600-acre timber harvest. Then, on Dec. 20, Molloy ordered the groups to post a $100,000 bond. Should the groups lose their appeal before the 9th Circuit Court, the money would help compensate the Forest Service and a private contractor for losses due to the delay, such as decaying timber. The agency had requested a $400,000 bond.
"We have asked for this kind of accountability for years," says Ellen Engstedt, executive vice president of the Montana Wood Products Association. "Ninety-eight percent of these cases are not legitimate. These groups have nothing to lose."
While bonds up to $10,000 aren’t unusual, one this size "certainly make(s) you gulp and think twice about the strength of your case," says Andy Stahl, executive director of Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics.
Another of the environmentalist
plaintiffs whined that such a large bond
could bankrupt them, should they loose
the case. Fine. They have set out on a
deliberate strategy of bankrupting and
ruining family and corporate timber
operations through their attack
litigation, so fair is fair.
If it gets a bit too hot in the kitchen,
dear plaintiffs, you are always free to
leave.