Tuesday, September 15, 2009

President Obama Takes Crucial Step for Wetlands


cypress trees
Restoration efforts will benefit critical Louisiana coastal habitat.

"On the eve of the fourth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, President Obama took a crucial step toward saving Louisiana's nationally important coastal wetlands that provide natural hurricane protection, essential economic benefits and vital habitat for birds and other wildlife," says Dr. Paul Kemp, Vice President of Audubon's Louisiana Coastal Initiative and a recognized coastal expert. One of the worst disasters in our nation's history, Hurricane Katrina made its landfall in New Orleans on Aug. 29, 2005.

The White House Council on Environmental Quality announced it was creating a new federal interagency task force to coordinate the "economic and environmental resiliency" of Louisiana and the rest of the Gulf Coast region. Audubon and other conservation groups have called for White House intervention in what is widely viewed as a stagnant process – now overseen by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers – for bolstering coastal wetlands.

Audubon and other national and regional conservation groups are urging bold actions to reconnect the Mississippi River to its delta in Louisiana, thereby allowing sediment and freshwater to maintain and rebuild coastal marshes that help lessen storm surges, provide critical wildlife habitat, protect oil and gas infrastructure, and serve as nurseries for shrimp and other valuable aquatic species. Primarily because of the separation of the Mississippi River from its delta by levees, Louisiana has lost more than 1.2 million acres of coastal land in the last 75 years, representing about 80 percent of all coastal land loss in the United States. Louisiana continues to lose the equivalent of up to 32 football fields of coastal land each day.

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Friday, September 11, 2009

From: I Love Mountains


We have great news!

The Obama Administration has heard you! Today, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency placed all 79 mountaintop removal permits they were reviewing on temporary reprieve. This represents the biggest step ever taken toward reining in the destruction of the Appalachian Mountains by mountaintop removal coal mining.

The release of a list of 79 permits begins a 14-day countdown in which the EPA regional offices must respond to the EPA headquarters' recommendations. While we applaud the current decision by the EPA, these permits could still be approved.

The EPA's announcement is part of a coordination procedure outlined in a "memorandum of understanding" between the Environmental Protection Agency, the Army Corps of Engineers, and the Department of Interior to deal with a backlog of permits held up by litigation over the past few years. The EPA has promised a more stringent and transparent review of all mountaintop removal valley fill permit applications, and as of today they have delivered.

The EPA is requesting public comment during these 14 days and we need to send them the message loud and clear to stand firm. No more mountains or communities should be blasted off the map.

However, the EPA is not currently set up to receive these comments, so we will be sending you an alert early next week, providing the tools you need to thank the EPA and to make sure the regional offices keep these mountains and communities safe from mountaintop removal coal mining.

In the mean time, we have set up a new page on iLoveMountains.org where you can see the location and track of the status of the permits pending before the EPA. You can view the permit map and see videos of nearby communities threatened by mountaintop removal at:

http://ilovemountains.org/epa-permit-list/

Tuesday, September 01, 2009

Filling of wetlands continues

Sunday, August 30, 2009 9:23 PM
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

More than 477 acres have been covered since plan stalled in 2006

A state plan to better protect streams and wetlands from development stalled three years ago after business groups complained that it would cost too much to comply.

In the meantime, from 2006 to 2008, more than 477 acres of wetlands and 106 miles of streams were filled in, according to Ohio Environmental Protection Agency records.

"It's become more and more frustrating," said Trent Dougherty, staff attorney for the Ohio Environmental Council. "We're still living under rules that ultimately aren't as protective as these new rules would be."

When developers fill in streams and wetlands to build homes, shopping malls and offices, they must build wetlands and small streams to replace what they destroy.

But studies showed that these replacement streams and wetlands prove to be poor substitutes. That's when the Ohio EPA proposed new rules that would make developers make more exact copies of what they destroyed, down to the species of plants and the frogs, salamanders and insects that live in them.

But developers balked.

"With the severe economic depression we're in, it may not be wise to move boldly ahead with new rules and regulations that would slow development down," said Vincent Squillace, vice president of the Ohio Home Builders Association.

EPA officials say they're working with business and environmental groups on a compromise.

"It takes time to hear everybody, write things down and so forth," explained Linda Oros, an agency spokeswoman.

What does all of this mean to the rest of us?

Small streams are ecologically valuable because they provide habitat for fish and mussels and slow the flow of rain water, which in turn reduces flooding problems.

Wetlands shelter amphibians and insects and act as filters to keep fertilizers and pesticides out of drinking water supplies.

EPA officials used to think that simply replacing wetlands was good enough. But an agency report in 2006 found that half of the wetlands that developers built were either "poor" or "shallow, unvegetated ponds."

All of the wetlands surveyed in the report were in "banks," large pre-built wetlands where developers can buy shares to quickly satisfy their wetland repair and restoration obligations. Such banks are often miles away from the destroyed streams and wetlands they are supposed to replace.

The proposed rules include the kinds of plants necessary for different types wetlands, including skunk cabbage and sedges found in "forest seep" wetlands, and would grade the replacements on the number of animal species that live in them, including insect larvae.

"You're talking about getting back the true cost of the ecological loss," said Anthony Sasson, the Ohio Nature Conservancy's freshwater conservation coordinator.

"We're losing, environmentally, right now."

Jennifer Klein, the Ohio Chamber of Commerce's environmental policy expert, said the new standards would exceed federal rules and are unnecessary.

One recent change to federal standards, enacted in April 2008, lists wetland banks as the federal government's preferred option for developers. That appears to conflict with a provision in the state's proposal that replacement wetlands be built closer to construction sites.

Randy Bournique, supervisor of the agency's wetland permitting program, said there is nothing in federal law that keeps the Ohio EPA from enacting more restrictive, or protective, standards.

He said he's optimistic that a compromise set of rules could emerge in October.

shunt@dispatch.com