NOTICE:
1. ICIE ANNUAL MEETING, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER
22ND
CAN THE ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT BE FIXED?
ICIE Annual Meeting to examine laws impacts,
chances for reform
BOISE The Endangered Species Act has been a
dismal failure, according to many who would like
to see it actually save species and still
provide for a healthy economy.
Whether and how it can be fixed will be the
focus of the Idaho Council on Industry and the
Environments 2005 annual meeting, set for
Tuesday, Nov. 22. The program at the Boise
Holiday Inn will run from 9:30 until 11:30 a.m.,
to be followed by a 30-minute membership
meeting.
Part One of the program will deal with the
ESAs impacts on Idaho and will feature:
Scott Nichols, former bureau chief at the
Idaho Department of Lands, talking about land
management impacts of ESA; Murray Feldman,
attorney at Holland & Hart, talking about
impacts on mining, land owners and
recreationists; and Phil Davis, rancher and
Valley County Commissioner, talking about
impacts on agriculture and rural Idaho.
Part Two will deal with ESA reform
legislation. Speakers will be:
Rick Agnew, attorney with Van Ness Feldman's
Seattle office, discussing the reform bill which
has passed the U.S. House of Representatives,
and contrasting it with current law; Layne
Bangerter, Idaho State Director of Natural
Resources and Environment for U.S. Senator Mike
Crapo, talking about the politics of ESA reform
in the Congress.
Part Three will be a roundtable discussion
with all the presenters and attendees on what
must be done to make the ESA more efficient and
effective.
The program is open to the public. Contact:
Pat Barclay, 208-336-8508.
2. CALFED REPORT RELEASED
This month brings the release of two
documents relevant to the CALFED Bay-Delta
Program. 1. The state's Little Hoover Commission
has released a report on CALFED's governance,
online at
http://www.lhc.ca.gov/lhcdir/report183.html.
2. And the state Department of Water
Resources has released a report on revitalizing
CALFED, online at
http://www.calwater.ca.gov/Revitalizing_CALFED/Cal_Fed_Report_11-05.pdf.
The Little Hoover report was just released
today. The DWR report is summarized on the ACWA
Web site at
www.acwa.com.
AGENCY PRESS RELEASE:
3. RECLAMATION COMMISSIONER KEYS COMMENDS
PASSAGE OF RURAL WATER LEGISLATION
RECLAMATION
Commissioner's Office
Washington, D.C.
Contact: Trudy Harlow, 202-513-0574
tharlow@usbr.gov
Brock Lowrance, 202-513-0683
blowrance@usbr.gov
For Release on: November 18, 2005
Bureau of Reclamation Commissioner John Keys
today praised the United States Senate's
bi-partisan passage of legislation to establish
a new program that would help rural Western
communities meet their critical water supply
challenges.
The Senate unanimously passed S.895, the
Rural Water Supply Act of 2005, on the evening
of Nov. 16. The bill, which now is ready for
consideration in the House, addresses a serious
water crisis in America, particularly among
rural areas that by themselves don't have the
resources to establish and maintain drinking
water supplies.
Keys commended the Senate Committee on Energy
and Natural Resources, especially Chairman Pete
Domenici (R- N.M.) and Sen. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.)
for their leadership in drafting and shepherding
the bill through the Senate.
"This legislation establishes a much-needed
program in Reclamation for projects that have
been managed on an ad hoc basis in the past,"
Keys said. "With this program, Reclamation will
now be able to work with other government
agencies to better coordinate rural water
efforts." The legislation authorizes $20 million
a year for the Bureau of Reclamation to provide
guidance and technical assistance in the
planning, design, and construction of rural
water supply projects. The program would ensure
that these projects are evaluated to ensure cost
effectiveness and to promote long-term
protection of water supplies.
The bill also would establish a loan
guarantee program in Reclamation to help
communities finance new water projects and pay
for maintenance on existing water systems. The
program would allow rural communities to obtain
loans at interest rates far lower than loans not
guaranteed by the federal government. The
legislation also expedites the appraisal and
feasibility study process to allow communities
to find the best approach to meet their needs.
NEWS ARTICLES:
4. N.Y TIMES EDITORIAL MISREPRESENTS POMBO
The Tracy Press
11-19-2005
A New York Times editorial on Halloween eve
took issue with House Resources Committee
Chairman Richard Pombo, a conservative
Republican who has represented Tracy for 13
years in Congress. In “Pombo Time,” the
editorial board of what in many circles is
regarded as the nation’s newspaper of record,
concludes, “Mr. Pombo’s only idea, and it is a
terrible one, is to treat this nation the way he
treats his Congressional [sic] district, as if
it were ripe for exploitation.”
As his hometown paper, we are obligated to
respond to this and other inaccuracies in the
editorial.
The Times opines that Pombo has had a hard
time staying out of the news lately. What the
editorial doesn’t say is that the accusations
about Pombo’s career in Washington are by biased
political and special interest groups that in a
concerted effort want to damage his re-election
chances.
For the remainder of this article see:
http://www.tracypress.com/voice/2005-11-19-our-voice.php
5. POMBO IS DOING SOMETHING RIGHT
Raymond Keating
Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council
11-18-2005
Extreme environmental groups do not like him.
The liberal editorial page of The New York Times
has attacked him.
And the Democratic Congressional Campaign
Committee has made him a high-profile target in
the 2006 congressional elections.
Wow! Who is this guy? He must be doing
something right.
For the remainder of this article see:
http://www.tracypress.com/voice/2005-11-18-hisvoice.php
6. SACRAMENTO RIVER SALMON AT HIGHEST
POPULATION LEVEL IN 24 YEARS
By DON THOMPSON, Associated Press Writer
Published 10:35 am PST Sunday, November 20,
2005
SACRAMENTO (AP) - Wildlife managers expect
more than 15,000 endangered winter-run chinook
salmon to thrash their way up the Sacramento
River this year, the largest number in 24 years
thanks to extraordinary and expensive efforts to
save the species.
But there are a couple of caution flags: An
unusually high percentage of the returning fish
were born in a hatchery, while an improbably low
proportion of dead male fish were found by
biologists counting carcasses of the salmon,
which die after breeding.
An estimated 18 percent are hatchery fish
this year, up from the usual 5 percent to 10
percent. Biologists limit the number of hatchery
fish to avoid contaminating the wild gene pool,
but an unusually large number were released
three years ago as an experiment.
For the remainder of this article see:
http://www.sacbee.com/state_wire/story/13884770p-14723817c.html
7. TURNING WATER INTO GOLD
Liquid assets: first of four parts
By David Olinger and Chuck Plunkett
Denver Post Staff Writers FIRST OF FOUR PARTS
Article Last Updated: 11/20/2005 04:59 AM
Everyone who buys a house in Denver's growing
suburbs pays a hidden price for water.
That first twist of the faucet in a new
suburban home costs as much as $24,424 - more
than twice the amount charged in any U.S. city
outside metro Denver surveyed last year by the
American Water Works Association.
In semi-arid Colorado, there are well-known
reasons for the high cost of water service.
Among them: scant reservoir space and an immense
mountain range separating water from people.
For the remainder of this article see:
http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_3235495
8. STEEPED IN GREENHOUSE GAS, PINE TREES
DEVIATE
By Cheryl Lyn Dybas
Special to The Washington Post
Monday, November 21, 2005; A06
From the air, they look like a cross between
unexplained Midwestern crop circles and the
megaliths of Stonehenge. But these tall
structures loom out of a forest.
Arranged in a loop, the 100-foot-high by
100-foot-wide assemblages are releasing carbon
dioxide, a colorless, odorless miasma that wafts
through the loblolly pines they encircle.
The 50-foot-tall pines, natives of the Deep
South, are subjects in an experiment by
scientists at Duke University who are using this
engineered micro-climate as a kind of time
machine to find out how these trees are likely
to react as carbon dioxide builds up in the
atmosphere and temperatures climb.
For the remainder of this article see:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/20/AR2005112000788.html
9. CALIFORNIA'S CALAMITY IN WAITING
By Kevin Starr
Kevin Starr is University Professor and
professor of history at USC. His latest book is
"California: A History."
The LA Times
November 20, 2005
THINKING catastrophically should come
naturally in this year of disaster. Instead,
most California policymakers have distracted
themselves with relatively minor matters, as
with the recent special election.
Meanwhile, this state remains vulnerable to
devastation that would combine elements of
Pakistan's earthquake and New Orleans' flood.
The conversation turned almost casually to
this tragic scenario as I dined recently with
two Metropolitan Water District board members,
David Farrar, an attorney representing the city
of Los Angeles, and fifth-generation rancher
Randy Record, who represents eastern Riverside
County. With us was Ron Gastelum, interim
president of the L.A. Chamber of Commerce,
formerly the chief executive of the MWD. My
companions were chillingly quick to agree that
it is probable — and inevitable if no action is
taken — that a quake will someday trigger a
catastrophic failure of public works, and that
this could prove Katrina-like in its effect. The
following week, Lester Snow, director of the
state Department of Water Resources, in
testimony before a joint legislative committee,
confirmed everything that Farrar, Record and
Gastelum had been discussing.
For the remainder of this article see:
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/opinion/la-op-starrlevees20nov20,1,7873952.story
10. WATER-CLEANUP LIST GROWS
Officials warn of cascading costs to restore
state's 'impaired' sites
By Terry Rodgers
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
November 18, 2005
The state's list of polluted streams, lakes
and beaches continues to grow, prompting water
experts to warn that the contamination will cost
Californians billions of dollars to clean up and
require changes in their routines.
In Southern California, water quality could
be restored in several decades if every
household were to pay an additional $4 to $5 per
month, said John Robertus, executive officer of
the San Diego Regional Water Quality Control
Board.
The report, issued by the Water Resources
Control Board, includes 825 "impaired" water
bodies in California – an increase of 40 percent
from 2003.
For the remainder of this article see:
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/state/20051118-9999-1n18water.html
11. WATER ISSUE STAYS ON SIMMER
Question on purity, safety is unresolved
By Anne Krueger
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
November 19, 2005
LIVE OAK SPRINGS – Nazar Najor says the water
he provides to this backcountry community is
clean and safe.
But the county says its tests show the water
is contaminated and has told residents for the
past three weeks to boil their water before
drinking it.
Caught in the middle are residents who say
they're getting conflicting information about
their water. Most are playing it safe.
For the remainder of this article see:
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/20051119-9999-2m19oak.html |