Pacific Legal Foundation
Releases Earth Day
List of Top 5 “Human Costs” of Environmental
Extremism
Sacramento,CA; April
21, 2004: Pacific Legal Foundation
today released its Earth Day List of Top
5 “Human Costs” of Environmental Extremism,
providing factual and legal evidence that
inflexible environmental laws and
overregulation are dramatically impacting
people’s lives and livelihoods every day,
often for species protections that are
illegal or unnecessary.
The top five human costs of environmental
extremism are:
- Separating people from nature.
- Cutting people off from water to give
to fish.
- Extinguishing hundreds of thousands of
jobs.
- Diminishing the American dream of home
ownership, and
- Blocking forest fire prevention that
saves lives and homes.
“Organizations with an extreme view of
environmental protection have violated the
trust of the American people who care about
our environment, but are not willing to
stand by while human values are
disregarded,” said
M. David Stirling, Vice President of
Pacific Legal Foundation. “This
Earth Day, PLF is exposing how
inflexible environmental laws and
overregulation put species first and people
last.”
“People are paying a high price in their
personal lives for overzealous environmental
laws and regulation. People have lost homes,
farms, jobs and even their lives to protect
plants, insects, and fish,” added Stirling.
“Today we’re shining the spotlight on the
human costs of environmental excess.”
Human Cost #1: Separating People from
Nature — Families Kicked Off 210
Miles of Pacific Coast Beaches Despite Court
Ruling that Restrictions are Illegally
Imposed
Americans love the outdoors. Yet some
environmental activists continue to advance
the idea that people are not part of the
“environmental equation.” More and more,
environmental activists are fighting to
limit human access to our public lands,
parks and beaches in the name of “species
protection.”
For example, beachgoers, tourists and local
residents in California, Oregon, and
Washington are currently facing severe beach
use restrictions on over 210 miles of
Pacific coastline designated as “critical
habitat” for a small shorebird known as the
Western snowy plover. In some areas, people
can no longer enjoy beach recreation or even
walking on the beach because miles of
beaches have been roped off to them.
What’s worse is that the government is
enforcing these illegally imposed
restrictions. Two years ago, in response to
a
lawsuit brought by PLF, a federal court
ruled that the critical habitat for the
plover was unlawful because the government
had failed to perform an adequate economic
impact analysis as required under the ESA.
(The government had reported that it
expected no economic impact from putting
restrictions on hundreds of miles of
coastline where beach tourism and recreation
are an economic mainstay.) Although the
court ruled that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service must redo the evaluation, the judge
left the illegal designations in place while
the Service performs the new review-a
process the government says may take four
years.
But that’s not all. The Western snowy
plover is not actually threatened. In
February, PLF filed a
lawsuit charging the government with
sitting on two delisting petitions for the
plover that include over 500 pages of data
showing the plover is not threatened. After
ignoring the data for nearly two years, the
Service announced last month that the
petitions showed that delisting the plover
“may be warranted” and that it would
reconsider the listing over the next year.
In the meantime, people are still being
excluded from beaches.
“The plover is not threatened and the
government has admitted the beach
restrictions are illegal, yet people still
won’t be able to use the beaches for years
to come while we wait for government
bureaucrats to redo evaluations they should
have done correctly in the first place,”
said Stirling.
— PLF Attorney Contact on this Issue:
Russ Brooks/Gregory
Broderick
Human Cost #2: Cutting People Off from
Water to Give to Fish — Klamath
Farming Families Wiped Out for Fish Listed
under Illegal Counting Method
People and fish have one very vital thing in
common-they both need water to survive. But
increasingly, environmental activists are
putting the speculative needs of fish over
the actual needs of people.
In 2001, for example, environmentalists
convinced the government to shut off water
to farmers and their families in the
Klamath Basin on the Oregon/California
border, who have been farming in the region
and paying for their water for over a
century. The reason? To provide more water
to “endangered” salmon, even though there
was no scientific evidence that the fish
should even be listed as “endangered.”
Klamath farmers lost their crops and the
local economy lost an estimated $200 million
in crop and property value, devastating the
region. Some families lost farms that had
been in their families for generations.
But recent events reveal that the farmers’
loss was based on illegal listings. In
February, PLF won a
landmark victory at the Ninth Circuit
Court of Appeals when the court let stand a
2001 federal district court ruling that the
government had been illegally undercounting
coho salmon along the Oregon coast to
justify its listing under the ESA.
Specifically, the government had been
illegally excluding hatchery born salmon in
fish counts to qualify naturally spawned
salmon for listing. The government is using
the same illegal counting methods for the
salmon in the Klamath Basin, as well as
chinook, chub, sockeye, and
steelhead salmon throughout the West.
Incredibly, a
study by the Property and Environment
Research Center (PERC), Accounting for
Species: Calculating the True Costs of the
Endangered Species Act, released last
week by PLF, reports that salmon species
accounted for the top five most expensive
species listed under the ESA in 2000. In
addition, a 2002 study by the General
Accounting Office reported that taxpayers
spent $1.505 billion in taxpayer dollars
from 1997 to 2001 to preserve salmon in
Oregon, Washington, and Idaho. Yet many of
these salmon have been illegally listed for
years.
“American taxpayers are paying hundreds of
millions of dollars a year to protect salmon
that never should have been listed in the
first place,” said Stirling. “Billions have
been wasted and people’s lives have been
devastated for fish that are not
endangered.”
--- PLF Attorney Contact on this Issue:
Russ Brooks
Human Cost #3: Extinguishing Hundreds
of Thousands of Jobs — Working
Families Lose Jobs, Way of Life to Protect
Species; Jobs Shipped Overseas
Excessive ESA regulation on agricultural
production, forest management and other
industries destroys businesses and jobs,
with far-reaching effects on the American
economy. The workers in these industries are
hit the hardest.
For example, in the late 1980s,
environmentalists filed a series of lawsuits
invoking ESA protections for the northern
spotted owl. In 1991, a federal court ruling
shut down logging on 24 million acres in
Oregon, Washington, and northern California.
According to PERC’s study “Accounting for
Species,” at least 130,000 jobs were lost
when more than 900 sawmills, pulp and paper
mills closed to protect the owl. Thousands
of families lost not only their incomes and
their homes, but their way of life.
Protections for the California spotted owl
have been equally destructive. Although it
has never been officially listed under the
ESA, environmentalists’ lawsuits pressured
the U.S. Forest Service to set aside tens of
thousands of Sierra Nevada mountain forest
acres as protected habitat for the
California spotted owl. By 2000, over 50
percent of the region’s timber harvesting
had stopped, and a corresponding percentage
of its lumber mills shut down.
These jobs have now been shipped outside the
United States. Despite the fact that there
are more trees in those forests today than
there were when the environmentalists’
lawsuits where filed in the late 1980s, 80
percent of the wood products used on
California building and construction
products now come from out of the country.
But there’s more. In February, 2003, the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service made a
shocking disclosure: the California spotted
owl was not in need of special habitat
protection, nor had such protection ever
been necessary. Yet it took more than a
decade and tens of millions of dollars in
research for the government to reach this
decision.
“The economic losses suffered by America’s
timber and farming families is a classic
example of the devastating impact of
environmental extremism on ordinary people.
These families’ lives and livelihoods were
destroyed because of environmental zealotry,
often for species that never needed
protection,” Stirling said.
--- PLF Attorney Contact on this Issue:
Russ Brooks
Cost #4: Diminishing the American
Dream of Home Ownership — Government
Shuts Down 400,000 Acres to Development in
Midst of Housing Crunch after “Guessing” at
Snake’s Habitat
ESA regulatory delays and fees impede
development, reduce the supply of affordable
housing, and increase home prices and
commute times. Consumers at the lowest end
of the housing affordability spectrum
disproportionately bear this economic
burden.
For example, over the last few years, the
Bay Area in northern California has faced
one of the worst housing shortages in the
nation. Workers all over the region commute
as much as four hours a day to and from work
because of the lack of affordable housing.
Nevertheless, in October, 2000, the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service designated 406,708
acres in Alameda, Contra Costa, Santa Clara,
and San Joaquin counties as critical habitat
for the Alameda whipsnake, 61 percent of
which was private land sorely needed for
residential development in the East Bay
Area. The government had rushed the
designation as part of the settlement of a
lawsuit by an environmental activist
organization.
Pacific Legal Foundation
sued to stop the designation, and
exposed the fact that the government
admitted that it did not have adequate
survey data to know what land was actually
occupied by the whipsnake. Rather than
performing a proper study, government
bureaucrats guessed-including all
“potential” habitat within the snake’s range
in the designation.
In May, 2003, PLF won a
landmark decision at the U.S. District
Court for the Eastern District of
California. The court ruled that the
government had illegally ignored the
requirements of the Endangered Species Act
in designating critical habitat for the
whipsnake and invalidated the designation.
“Environmental groups shamelessly misuse the
Endangered Species Act as a tool to stop
development,” said Stirling. “The real
victims of the environmentalists’ game are
families who can’t afford to buy a home
because abusive environmental regulation has
priced them out of the market.”
--- PLF Attorney Contact on this Issue:
Reed Hopper
Human Cost #5: Blocking Forest Fire
Prevention that Saves Lives & Homes —
Wildfires Consume Tens of Thousands of Acres
in the Name of “Species Protection”
Environmental extremism costs human lives.
Last year, devastating fires in southern
California destroyed hundreds of homes and
killed 16 people, seriously injuring many
more. These and other recent fires that have
devastated thousands of acres throughout the
West were in large part due to delays in
implementing forest fire prevention policies
caused by ESA regulation and lawsuits filed
by environmentalist organizations.
Last week, California Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger’s Blue Ribbon Fire Commission
released a
report finding that inflexible
environmental regulation, including the
Endangered Species Act, is one of the key
factors blocking “fuel reduction programs”
that are critical to forest fire prevention.
For example:
- According to a congressional
investigation, cited in the Blue Ribbon
Commission report, more than half of
all federal projects proposed to reduce
fuel were never implemented, including
several that would have limited the scope
of California’s devastating Firestorm
2003. These programs were caught in a
morass of litigation threats and lawsuits.
- The Los Angeles Times reported
that fuel reduction programs (tree and
brush thinning) that would have limited
the scope of Firestorm 2003 were not
implemented because of the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service’s concerns over the
threatened California gnatcatcher and
other species.
Nationwide, lawsuits by environmentalist
organizations-targeted specifically to delay
or stop fuel reduction projects-are one of
the most difficult roadblocks that face
state and federal agencies responsible for
fire fighting and prevention. For example:
- In Montana, an environmental group is
suing to stop the use of fire retardants
to fight forest fires. If successful, the
lawsuit will critically weaken
firefighters’ ability to fight fires.
- In California, environmentalists
successfully stopped the fuel reduction
and restoration projects following the
Star Fire that consumed 17,000 acres in
the El Dorado and Tahoe National Forests
two years ago. The Star Fire salvage
project would have removed fire fuel in
10% of the burned area, replanted trees,
and rehabilitated the seared hillsides,
but environmentalists convinced the Ninth
Circuit Court of Appeals to
enjoin it.
- In Oregon, the Wilderness Society and
other environmental groups have made it
clear that they will sue to stop the
Biscuit Fire Recovery Plan, a plan aimed
at restoring damaged ecology by
reforesting portions of the burned forest.
“Environmentalist organizations continue to
abuse environmental regulations to block
sensible forest fire prevention programs in
the name of species protection,” Stirling
said. “The irony is that the species they’re
supposedly trying to protect are destroyed
in forest fires, along with their habitat.”
— PLF Attorney Contact on this Issue:
Emma Suarez
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