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Up In Smoke [Hugh Hewitt: species protection planning helps bring on the fires of California]
www.weeklystandard.com ^ | October 30, 2003 | Hugh Hewitt

Posted on 10/31/2003 1:59:22 PM PST by RonDog

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Up In Smoke
A decade and a half of species protection planning helps bring on a species disaster in the fires of California.

by Hugh Hewitt
10/30/2003 12:00:00 AM


Hugh Hewitt, contributing writer

THE STEPHEN'S KANGAROO RAT was listed as "endangered" by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on October 31, 1988. This little-noticed action launched a revolution in land use in southern California that has culminated in the fires that have now claimed at least 17 lives, destroyed close to 2,000 homes, and consumed more than 600,000 acres throughout the region. For 15 years the federal government, urged on by environmental activists and assisted by state agency bureaucrats, has pursued an aggressive displacement of local authorities from the control of land use policies, all in the name of environmental protection. The result is an environmental disaster on a monumental scale.

The listing of the rat was followed in close order by the listings of the desert tortoise, the California gnatcatcher, the Delhi sands flower-loving fly, the arroyo toad, the Riverside fairy shrimp, the San Bernadino kangaroo rat, and scores of other plants and animals. In the wake of each listing came massive dislocations in land use planning because the destruction of even a single specimen of an endangered species--innocent or intentional--carries criminal penalties. The listings also trigger massive government mapping exercises, as the Service is obliged to designate "critical habitat" for every species it denominates as "threatened" or "endangered." The critical habitat for the desert tortoise, for example, covers 6.4 million acres in three states, including huge swatches of land in southern California.

The critical habitat designations themselves make land use decisions incredibly complicated, but they are only the half-way station to total federal authority over land. Desperate to regain some control over lands that are home to any of the long list of endangered species, the region's local governments have rushed to enter incredibly complicated, expensive ,and unwieldy "habitat conservation plans." Just one of these plans, the City of San Diego's Multiple Species Conservation Plan covers 900 square miles, the vast majority of which is within the City of San Diego alone. All of these plans dictate which acres may be developed and which must be set aside for species protection. The San Diego plan targeted 171,917 undeveloped acres for conservation, and boldly declared that the "MSCP will protect habitat for over 1,000 native and nonnative plant species and more than 380 species of fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals."

While no exact mapping of the fires' destruction has yet been overlaid on the boundaries of the San Diego plan, vast portions of it have been scorched and laid to waste, with certain further damage in the future when the rains come and erosion follows the water.

THE MANY SPECIES CONSERVATION PLANS that cover the southern California region all make claims of benefit to the species they purport to protect similar to the claims in the San Diego plan. It is now perfectly obvious that "habitat conservation plans" are to species protection what Soviet five-year plans were to steel production: A vast amount of wasted ink and money, signifying only the ideology and vanity of the planners. I have been a participant in many of these discussions, as a lawyer representing landowners, and know first hand the arrogance of the agencies that issue these orders and devise these grand schemes. Don't count on any apologies coming from their direction.

The post-mortem on the fires should lead to the most brutal review of the federal Endangered Species Act in its 30 year history. Nowhere more so than in southern California has more time and money has been invested in the idea that government bureaucrats (working with environmental activists, using the money scalped from landowners) can build a better nature than local governments and the market would otherwise deliver. The stubborn fact is California has never had fires of this magnitude. Now that the federal government is running a huge portion of land use, disaster strikes.

The core problem is that species protection prohibits many ordinary fire precautions. You cannot clear coastal sage scrub, no matter how dense, if a gnatcatcher nests within it--unless the federal government provides a written permission slip which is extraordinarily difficult to obtain. The same prohibition lurks behind every species designation, and can even apply to land on which no endangered species has ever been seen but about which allegations of "potential occupation" have been made.

The land that has passed into "conserved" status is at even greater risk of fire than private land that is home to a protected species because absolutely no one cares for its fire management policy. The scrum of planners, consultants, and G-11s that put together the plans should be monitoring these areas closely. Instead, they regulate and move on to savage the property rights of the next region.

THE MOST PRESSING QUESTION for the federal government after the fires are put out will be the number of acres of land burned which had already been set aside for species conservation purposes. Whatever that number is, it will be a challenge to the drafters of the plans to provide evidence that they had anticipated the conserved acres being charred. Of course they didn't, but that won't protect the guilty from intoning about the natural benefits of fire. In their acquisitiveness, the planners have focused only on locking up land against development, not in protecting it from devastating fire. The nakedness of their error is found in the very plans they developed, which lack comprehensive fire management programs and the means to carry them out.

The Bush administration, as in so many areas, inherited eight years of disastrous extremism dressed up as "science"--described by Bruce Babbitt as "walking lightly on the land." Babbitt's tenure as Secretary of the Interior, seen through the smoke of California and the charred remains from Arizona, Colorado, and South Dakota, is clearly the most damaging to the environment in the history of the department.

All the fine phrases and photo-ops cannot disguise that the self-proclaimed defenders of the ecosystem have become its worst enemies.

Secretary of the Interior Gail Norton would be well advised to launch an investigation by an independent panel not dominated by agenda activists into the role in creating the conditions for this disaster played by the ESA and other federal controls such as those administered by the Army Corps of Engineers and the EPA. In the meantime, the agency ought to promulgate a nationwide "take" permit for fire protection activities impacting endangered species. There is no need for a sequel.

The key recognition: The species that live close to humans are the ones that are faring the best. When the chips are down, we are species-centric, and rush to save the lives and property of human beings. Habitat conservation planners would be well advised to remember that the proximity of human housing to species preserves isn't a threat to those preserves, it is a guarantee of active and species-saving management.

Hugh Hewitt is the host of The Hugh Hewitt Show, a nationally syndicated radio talkshow, and a contributing writer to The Daily Standard. His new book, In, But Not Of, has just been published by Thomas Nelson.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: California
KEYWORDS: californiafirestorm; christianlife; environment; hughhewitt; wildfires
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1 posted on 10/31/2003 1:59:22 PM PST by RonDog
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To: doug from upland; ALOHA RONNIE; DLfromthedesert; PatiPie; flamefront; onyx; SMEDLEYBUTLER; Irma; ...
"...Secretary of the Interior Gail Norton would be well advised to launch an investigation by an independent panel not dominated by agenda activists into the role in creating the conditions for this disaster played by the ESA and other federal controls such as those administered by the Army Corps of Engineers and the EPA.

In the meantime, the agency ought to promulgate a nationwide "take" permit for fire protection activities impacting endangered species.

There is no need for a sequel." - Hugh Hewitt

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If you listen to Hugh Hewitt, or read his WND commentaries,
this PING list is for YOU!

Please post your comments, and BUMP!

(If you want OFF - or ON - my "Hugh Hewitt PING list" - please let me know)

2 posted on 10/31/2003 2:03:56 PM PST by RonDog
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To: JohnHuang2
ping
3 posted on 10/31/2003 2:04:12 PM PST by RonDog
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To: RonDog; xm177e2; mercy; Wait4Truth; hole_n_one; GretchenEE; Clinton's a rapist; buffyt; ...

Hugh Hewitt MEGA PING!


4 posted on 10/31/2003 2:05:47 PM PST by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2
Thanks for the heads up!
5 posted on 10/31/2003 2:09:28 PM PST by Alamo-Girl
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To: JohnHuang2
Hugh Hewitt ~ Bump!
6 posted on 10/31/2003 2:20:34 PM PST by blackie
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To: RonDog
The Environmentalists are the worst threat to the environment?

You DON'T SAY!!

/sarcasm off.

Environmentalists enrich themselves while trying to appear idealistic. They are greedy sonsabitches who use other people's sympathies to garner more wealth for themselves while APPEARING to be "standing up for a cause".

Their "cause" is "Cause My Pockets Are Too Light."

Hypocritical bastards.

Good thing people are beginning to notice. I was starting to think this entire COUNTRY was made up of Blue Pill Sheeple.

DG
7 posted on 10/31/2003 2:59:38 PM PST by DGallandro (Stupid people provide me free entertainment.)
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To: DGallandro
Their "cause" is "Cause My Pockets Are Too Light."

Exactly. The whole environmental movement is a scheme to provide employment for homosexuals. The executives of the Sierra Club roost in plush offices in San Francisco, drive BMW's and drink fine wine. Their real business is extortion, both from business, government and especially private property. The only time they venture out into the "Wilderness", is to some forest resorts that cater to the "Fairy Wildlife". It's not the bears one needs to be on the lookout for in the forest, but the "Pixie Dust".

8 posted on 10/31/2003 3:41:58 PM PST by elbucko
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To: RonDog
When the ESA was instituted, I'm sure most Americans did not imagine where the extremists would take it.

The eco-Marxists have used it to outlaw common sense!!
9 posted on 10/31/2003 3:57:27 PM PST by DLfromthedesert
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STEPHEN'S KANGAROO RAT
From www.enature.com:


Stephen's Kangaroo Rat
Dipodomys stephensi
Cute little bugger, for a RAT. :O)
10 posted on 10/31/2003 4:24:56 PM PST by RonDog
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To: RonDog
`Some democrat today told me that California had requested federal funding for clearing out the brush and they were turned down by Bush administration. I know there has to be more to this story. Anybody know anything about this? Thanks in advance.
11 posted on 10/31/2003 4:25:13 PM PST by olliemb (Pray---Fast---Trust in God and GWB will win in 2004)
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To: DLfromthedesert
See also, from www.hughhewitt.com:
Posted at 6:25 AM, Pacific

With at least 20 dead and 2,600 homes destroyed, the fires that have ravaged at least 625,000 acres in southern California may come much closer to containment today as the extraordinary efforts of 13,000 firefighters get an assist from the weather, including a very unusual chance of rain and even snow at the higher elevations tonight.

The media will move on as soon as the fires diminish in their immediate threat to life and property, but sane people can only hope that the clean-up and rebuilding process is accompanied by a searching and thorough inquiry into the causes of the disaster --an undertaking that environmental activists will resist at every turn because a genuine inquiry will result in an indictment of almost every nostrum they hold dear. 

My WeeklyStandard.com article this morning, "Up in Smoke," is a first installment in what should be an outpouring of critiques of the federal policies which came to dominate Southern California land use during the Clinton years.  One of the conclusions of any fair review of the past ten years: "The Bush administration, as in so many areas, inherited eight years of disastrous extremism dressed up as 'science'--described by Bruce Babbitt as 'walking lightly on the land.'  Babbitt's tenure as Secretary of the Interior, seen through the smoke of California and the charred remains from Arizona, Colorado, and South Dakota, is clearly the most damaging to the environment in the history of the department."

The most outrageous action among political elites concerning the fires is the sudden abandonment of Democratic opposition to President Bush's "Healthy Forests Initiative."  Helen Dewar's article in the Washington Post states that the Senate was "[w]hipped into action by the deadly wildfires that are ravaging Southern California," but that is simply dishonest.  Democratic obstructionism was once again revealed to have cost Americans dearly, and the Democrats leading the obstructionism --especially California's Barbara Boxer-- fled the field. The "Senate" didn't change course.  The Senate Democrats did. Dianne Feinstein cobbled together some face-saving amendments, and the bill passed by a vote of 97 to 1 after a delay of many months.

If I was a burned out homeowner, or the family of a victim, I would be beyond outrage not only with the desperate hypocrisy of the left, but also with the media's willingness to allow the Senate Democrats to slip away without explaining why their opposition to forest thinning has evaporated this week.

The new bill addresses only part of the problem, and House Republicans should demand that the original bill be kept free of the wishful thinking and ideological posturing of the environmental lobby.  How many disasters does it take, after all, to expose these people and their fraudulent theories?

The Endangered Species Act should be next up for thorough amendment --it is a disastrous and ineffective exercise in granting enormous power to incompetent federal bureaucrats that brings ever increasing hardships and little in the way of genuine conservation benefits.  The GOP has got to realize that the public long ago woke up to the facts about the environmental movement's extremism on the issue of species protection.

The party of TR can recover the legacy of genuine conservation, but not by refusing to expose lousy science as lousy science, and bureaucratic ineptitude as just that.  The Party fears getting labeled as anti-environmental, but the disasters of the past few years are the backdrop against which serious reforms can be demanded and explained.

Many in elite media will of course distort every attempt to recover a genuine conservation ethic that is now hostage to wild extremism of the left... 


12 posted on 10/31/2003 4:34:58 PM PST by RonDog
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To: Carry_Okie
I would be interested on your comments/thoughts on this article. Thanks.
13 posted on 10/31/2003 5:38:27 PM PST by Auntie Mame (Why not go out on a limb, isn't that where the fruit is?)
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To: Auntie Mame
I would be interested on your comments/thoughts on this article. Thanks.

His criticisms appear to be fairly lucid. What he hasn't acknowledged (and may not understand) is the way these regulations are so often used to enrich the few and well connected. Further, he offers no plan to fix it other than going back to the same system that grew into the mess we have today, only "less of it."

It's government fix thyself, as if the politicians in charge could do anything about crooked courts and scads of NGO lawyers in cahoots with entrenched agency bureaucrats.

It is thus a well informed, but typically clueless Republican approach.

14 posted on 10/31/2003 6:08:05 PM PST by Carry_Okie (The environment is too complex and too important to manage by politics.)
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To: Carry_Okie
...It is thus a well informed, but typically clueless Republican approach.
Well, you got THAT part right... :o)

From www.chapman.edu:

Hugh Hewitt Associate Professor of Law
Prof. Hugh Hewitt Areas of Expertise
Constitutional Law, Administrative Law

Education
A.B., cum laude, Harvard College; J.D., magna cum laude, University of Michigan Law School

Experience
Professor Hugh Hewitt is a major player nationally as an advocate for property owners and development interests subject to environmental regulation. He is a partner in Hewitt & McGuire, representing businesses and developers on endangered species, wetlands, and other environmental issues. He also served for several years as a Board Member of the South Coast Air Quality Management District. Professor Hewitt's involvement in public affairs is not limited to environmental matters. He advised President Ronald Reagan as Assistant White House Counsel, served as Deputy Director and General Counsel of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, was Director of the Richard Nixon Library and Birthplace, and clerked for the Honorable George MacKinnon, U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Professor Hewitt is currently co-host of the television news and public affairs show "Life and Times" on PBS Los Angeles affiliate KCET-TV, and is a member of the California Arts Council.


15 posted on 10/31/2003 6:18:24 PM PST by RonDog
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To: olliemb
`Some democrat today told me that California had requested federal funding for clearing out the brush and they were turned down by Bush administration. I know there has to be more to this story. Anybody know anything about this? Thanks in advance.
See also:

CBS NEWS, Dan Rather:
BUSH ADMIN., FEMA TO BLAME FOR CA WILDFIRES

CBS NEWS | 10/31/2003 | SELF
Posted on 10/31/2003 4:09 PM PST by Swanks

CBS (2nd) lead story: Bush and FEMA resp. for CA fires.

* Per Dan the Newz-man: Seems Grey Davis put a request in to Washington for $413M to clear a row of Beatle infested, dead trees six months ago.
* Request was ignored six months, recently turned down.
* Grey-out raising the issue today in soundbites.
* "Adminstration response" (therefore insinuation o guilt) was FEMA is the wrong Gov't Agency to make request to.
* Barbara Boxer pounding a podium - declaring we warned this Admin. of the pending disaster; situation deamnds answers, etc.

CLICK HERE for the rest of that thread

16 posted on 10/31/2003 6:21:43 PM PST by RonDog
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To: Carry_Okie
Thanks for your taking the time to read and comment.

I'm not surprised at your response. Hugh's a good guy, he just needs to read your book. ; - )
17 posted on 10/31/2003 6:44:09 PM PST by Auntie Mame (Why not go out on a limb, isn't that where the fruit is?)
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To: Auntie Mame
Hugh's a good guy, he just needs to read your book. ; - )

That was my take.

A typical radio personality is bombarded with 300 books a month. So, there's no way he'll listen to me as the author. Unfortunately, I can't afford a publicist so the only way to interest him is if other people tell him and more than once. That's just how it is.

18 posted on 10/31/2003 7:06:44 PM PST by Carry_Okie (The environment is too complex and too important to manage by politics.)
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To: RonDog
Hugh's statistics are out of date now. Today's news reported 2900 homes and over 749,000 acres burned. Over 100,000 people evacuated from their homes.

19 posted on 10/31/2003 9:28:36 PM PST by Susannah (AMERICA is the best! - Could hundreds of millions of immigrants be wrong?)
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To: JohnHuang2
The solution to satisfying the environMENTALists:

Humans must continue to push eastward and leave the western states that under draconian environmental control.


20 posted on 10/31/2003 9:33:40 PM PST by Susannah (AMERICA is the best! - Could hundreds of millions of immigrants be wrong?)
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