Friday, May 06, 2005
Industries call for streamlining of aged federal
NEPA policy
By
JAMIE HENNEMAN Freelance Writer
Capital Press
Originally created to make businesses consider the
environmental impacts of their projects, natural
resources businesses are now saying that the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) is
stagnating the health of the lands it was created to
protect. At an April 23 meeting in Spokane, Inland
Northwest businesses called for reform.
Hearing the testimony was a four-member
Congressional NEPA task force that is charged with
creating reform that will find a balance between the
duty of providing sound stewardship of the
environment while allowing natural resource
businesses to remain solvent. It is a difficult and
monumental task, especially when the discussions
about NEPA are charged with emotion and driven by
personal ideologies about the “environment.”
The April 23 meeting was no exception to this
tenacious debate as speakers cited their concerns,
support and suggestions regarding the NEPA document
that was crafted by the federal government in 1969.
Of those presenting was Family Farm Alliance board
member William Kennedy who said that NEPA has been
ignored by state and federal agencies to the
detriment of farmers.
Kennedy was one of the farmers making a living in
the Klamath Irrigation District in Oregon in 2001
when the Bureau of Reclamation made the decision to
turn off the irrigation to 170,000 acres of land.
The 2001 irrigation closure came after a 1997
lawsuit by water users demanding that BuRec complete
an Environmental Impact Statement under NEPA because
of changes in how the bureau delineated the use of
irrigation waters.
“By 2001, four years had elapsed since the Bureau’s
commitment to comply with NEPA and two years had
passed since the Bureau represented to the court
that it would complete an EIS for the long-term
operation of the irrigation district,” Kennedy said.
“However, that year the federal agencies sought to
bypass both their legal duties to the water users
and to NEPA, based on the provision of the
Endangered Species Act.
“The result was the devastation of family farm
ground that is still suffering the ramifications of
the Bureau’s negligence regarding NEPA,” he added.
The doubling up and counter-action of similar
environmental policies like the ESA (1973) has
caused problems for the 36-year-old document that
has since been followed by legislation like the
clean water act (1977) and the clean air act (1970;
1990 revised.)
Pacific Seafood Group representative Craig Urness
said that the doubling up of regulations has also
made it difficult for fisheries to make sound
decisions about harvesting.
“One of the problems with NEPA is that there have
been other environmental acts passed since its
creation, like the Magnuson-Stevens Act for
fisheries, that have requirements that are analogous
to NEPA,” said Urness. “So the requirements double
up and overlap. The time frame for decision-making
is so long that we are operating on outdated
information in relation to fish-harvesting levels.”
Natural resource businesses also cited concerns
about the laborious and vague process associated
with NEPA that does not outline specific directions
for companies.
Vaagen Brothers Lumber Company president Duane
Vaagen noted that the time it takes to complete a
NEPA often leaves salvageable timber to rot until it
is no longer useful.
“When we are looking at trying to salvage burnt,
dead or dying wood, we are looking at a minimum of
two years before the NEPA is completed due to its
policy structure, protests, lawsuits and analysis
paralysis,” said Vaagen, whose lumber mill is
located in Colville, Wash. “Burnt wood only has a
commercial value for two years. It is a sad state of
affairs when we now see that our company could
operate solely on the dead and burned timber on the
Colville National Forest without ever cutting a
green tree, yet NEPA constrains federal land
managers from restoring our national forests to
benefit clean air, water and wildlife habitat while
creating jobs in our communities.”
But despite the negative comments about NEPA, no
group was asking that the policy be repealed, rather
that it be streamlined for simpler, more efficient
regulation.
All of the natural resource representatives
testifying on April 23 made suggestions for how to
improve NEPA, including a NEPA screening process,
expediting the timber salvage review to six months
to better rehabilitate forests, and improvements to
the analysis and public participation regarding NEPA
decisions.
Congressional Natural Resources Committee member
Louie Gohmert (R-Texas) had several suggestions for
those testifying, including a word of caution
regarding how to address NEPA concerns.
“Basically this committee is here because we want to
hear from the people about how this policy is
working,” Gohmert said. “But I urge you to be
careful with words and not give in to the temptation
to encourage fear mongering to make your point. I
think that all of us want to create a better place
for our kids, so no matter what our opinion is, we
have a common goal.”
The Congressional Natural Resources NEPA taskforce
committee will be holding hearings throughout the
U.S. this year in an effort to get feedback from
businesses and citizens.
For more information about the Congressional NEPA
reform hearings, visit
www.resourcescommittee.house.gov.
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section
107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or
payment to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this
information for non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more
information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
|