Posted on 10/06/2006 10:06:57 AM PDT by Spyder
» A look at the Stryker situation
By Gregg K. Kakesako
gkakesako@starbulletin.com
A federal appellate court found yesterday that the Army had violated environmental laws by not considering all alternatives in establishing a Stryker Combat Brigade in Hawaii.
The 2-1 vote by a three-judge panel assigned to the San Francisco 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals was seen as a victory for the nonprofit environmental group Earthjustice. Earthjustice attorney David Henkin said the federal appeals court ruling meant "the Army must cease all Stryker-related activities, including construction and Stryker training, until the court can rule on what activities, if any, will be allowed while a supplemental environmental impact statement is prepared."
Lt. Col. John Williams, Army spokesman, said the Army would continue to abide with "the last legal decision," an apparent reference to a decision made by U.S. District Judge David Ezra last year that allowed the Army to begin the transformation of the 25th Division's 2nd Brigade Combat Team.
Although Williams said he did not dispute Henkin's interpretation, he said Army attorneys "will thoroughly review the court's decision and take action as appropriate."
Williams would not say what steps the Army would take next. However, the preparation of a supplemental EIS followed by public hearings could take several years, based on the Army's record in dealing with these types of environmental studies -- including the Stryker brigade and the continued used of Makua Valley as a firing range.
The ruling could place in limbo at least $693 million in 28 construction projects at Schofield Barracks and the Big Island's Pohakuloa Training Area.
That money does not include what already has been spent in bringing the 328 Stryker combat vehicles to Hawaii and retraining soldiers in the 25th Infantry Division's 2nd Brigade Combat Team.
The cost of each of the Army's seven Stryker brigades has been placed at $1.5 billion.
The Army also agreed earlier this year to pay Parker Ranch $31.5 million for 2,400 acres near the Pohakuloa Training Area to accommodate training for the Strykers.
The federal appeals court decision means the Army has to prepare a second EIS. Moreover, it is two years delinquent on an EIS justifying the continued use of Makua Valley as a firing range that was supposed to have been completed in 2004.
The return of Makua has long been advocated by Hawaiian activists, many of whom were parties in the Stryker court appeal and have filed numerous lawsuits to stop all military training there.
The last time the military used live ammunition in the 4,190-acre valley was August 2004.
The Stryker supplemental EIS has to include a variety of locations for the 3,800-member combat brigade that is being established at Schofield Barracks, the appeals court said.
"The 9th Circuit's decision is not only right on the law," said Henkin, "but also makes Hawaiian organizations -- Ilioulaokalani Coalition, Na Imi Pono and Kipuka -- which have contended that the Army failed to consider other alternatives to stationing a Stryker brigade in Hawaii."
The Army "leaps to the assumption that transformation in Hawaii or no action are the only alternatives," the court said. "This is where the impermissible 'narrowing' takes place. The Army violated NEPA (the National Environmental Policy Act) by not considering alternatives that include transformation of the 2nd Brigade outside of Hawaii."
The federal appeals court also rejected the Army's arguments that Hawaii's strategic location was unique, since there are Stryker units in Alaska and Washington that could have supported the 2nd Brigade. In addition, federal appeals judges were not swayed by Army arguments that Hawaii's jungle terrain justified stationing Strykers in Hawaii, because the combat vehicles are best suited for urban combat.
The appeals judges reversed an April 2005 by Ezra, who sided with the Army.
The Army had hoped to be able to send the 2nd Brigade Stryker Combat Team into war duty next fall.
I hope this hasn't been posted - I was surprised that I couldn't find it doing a key word as well as a title search.
Are you the keeper of the Stryker ping list? :-)
Don't worry! They can just redeploy to Okinawa!
"Welcome to Styker Base. Trespassers will be shot"
Have you gone mad? Thats copper-jacketed lead!
;-)
No, I don't have a Stryker ping list, but patriciaruth might.
Let's ABOLISH the 9th circuit and put these jackals on the frontlines in Iraq..... let these pompous blowhard judges do something useful for once in their pathetic lives.....
Cool, rile up the pro-miltary vote, good job libs, keep it up.
This is same way the "border fence" will be stopped. Federal environmental laws and liberal judges.
Perhaps we should move the Army out of Hawaii. We would love to have them in Georgia.
Stryker is welcome in Fairbanks. Totally. Sen Murkowski has worked hard to get the Ninth split up and outta here.
Yet every day it's the same-old-same-old: we still have the 9th Circus, we still have PBA, we have the Kelo decision, we have laws to throw you in jail for mentioning an officeholder's name, etc., etc.. Pathetic.
I'm not advocating voting for the Dems or sitting on our hands. Maybe it's time for some FReepers to run for office. Because what we're getting right now is insane.
Stryker Ping.
It takes a long time to wipe away judges with lifetime tenure.
One word reply: impeachment.
DO these moonbats just live to be overturned by the SCOTUS. Are they that completely stupid.
alaska has LOTS of room for another group of Army folks up - and we could use the extra cash.
Greenies!
(Spits, walks off muttering)
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