Posted on 02/26/2008 9:29:21 PM PST by SmithL
Missoula, Mont. (AP) -- A Bush administration official apologized Tuesday to a federal judge in urging that he not hold the U.S. Forest Service's use of a fire retardant that environmentalists say kills fish and plants.
Agriculture Undersecretary Mark Rey, who oversees the Forest Service, acknowledged the agency was slow in preparing environmental studies related to the effects of the chemical firefighting tool dropped from airplanes.
"There is no way to put a positive face on the fact that we dropped the ball," Rey testified in court. "We're sorry."
While Rey was contrite, U.S. District Judge Donald W. Molloy was visibly frustrated by the delays.
Molloy has threatened to hold the Forest Service in contempt, accusing the agency of skirting the law so it can keep fighting wildfires with the retardant.
"Don't come in here on the last day at the last minute and tell me you've got a problem," said Molloy, upset over the Forest Service's failure to inform him of their difficulty in meeting deadlines.
If Molloy finds the agency in contempt, potential sanctions include sending Rey to jail, putting him under house arrest and banning the Forest Service from using any fire retardants but water in air tankers.
Rey, a former timber industry lobbyist who has directed U.S. forest policy since 2001, said the environmental studies were completed in good faith and that he did what he could to move them along.
Court recessed Tuesday afternoon without a ruling. Additional testimony was scheduled for Wednesday.
In 2005, Molloy ruled the Forest Service violated the Endangered Species Act and the National Environmental Policy Act when it failed to go through a public process to analyze the potential harm from using ammonium phosphate, a fertilizer that can kill fish, as the primary ingredient for fire retardant.
(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...
Unlike fire, right? The freaks are probably largely worried that someone who dared to build a home "in nature" (likely rich folk!) won't get their just ecological punishment.
I don’t get it. If they don’t put the fire out then plants and animals will certainly die. Possibly humans too.
As my grandma would say, “I think these judges are gettin’ a little too big for their breeches.”
I haven’t read the case, but my guess is that the judge (and the law he’s relying on) focus on persistent “threats” to the environment. Of course an uncontrolled fire will kill plenty of plants and animals, but it is a temporary event and, in a way, a natural process to which living things have had time to adapt. If, to fight that temporary destructive process, you put something into the environment that is not “natural” to that local area, then you might be causing more long term harm than short term good. All that said, I personally think we should go after fires with whatever we’ve got that works most effectively and economically. I don’t discount the long term harm argument in principle, but I don’t think we currently know enough to be able to predict long term consequences.
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