--- Chad Smith <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > From: "Chad Smith" <[log in to unmask]> > > Subject: FW: Mike Grunwald piece on Missouri River > Date: Tue, 21 Oct 2003 08:46:28 -0500 > > Thought you would all be interested in the Missouri > River piece below. > > No real update on the litigation at this point. > Things are quiet now as we > wait to see what the Corps and the FWS come up with. > From all indications, > the Corps is prepared to issue a new Master Manual > with no flow changes, > which will mean we will be back in court again early > next spring, if not > sooner. > > Let me know if you have any questions. > > Chad Smith, Director > Nebraska Field Office - American Rivers > Mill Towne Building > 650 J Street, Suite 400 > Lincoln, Nebraska 68508 > 402-477-7910 > 402-477-2565 (FAX) > 402-730-5593 (CELLULAR) > [log in to unmask] > > -----Original Message----- > From: Chad Smith [mailto:[log in to unmask]] > Sent: Tuesday, October 21, 2003 8:33 AM > To: River Team Missouri (E-mail) > Cc: Rebecca Wodder (E-mail) > Subject: Mike Grunwald piece on Missouri River > Importance: High > > Washed Away > Bush vs. the Missouri River > > By Michael Grunwald > The New Republic > October 27, 2003 > > 'Sound science" is the Bush administration's > environmental mantra, its > hardheaded response to fuzzy-minded ecoradicalism. > "When we make decisions, > we want to make sure we do so on sound science--not > what sounds good, but > what is real," President Bush declared last year. > Interior Secretary Gale > Norton--a former adviser to the corporate-sponsored > Advancement of Sound > Science Coalition--actually appointed a "high-level > team" this spring to > make sure her department's decisions are "based on > the best available > science." > > That team might want to sneak a peek at the Missouri > River, where the Bush > administration is about to decide one of the most > explosive environmental > issues facing the middle of the country. The team > would find that the > administration is angling to do the exact opposite > of what the best > available science says it must in order to save the > river's endangered > species--and that Assistant Interior Secretary Craig > Manson has scrapped a > plan to have independent scientists review the > administration's decision in > advance. Then again, the "sound science" team > probably knows that--because > Manson is its leader. > > In recent years, the science of the Big Muddy has > become increasingly clear: > The Fish and Wildlife Service, which is part of the > Interior Department, has > concluded that more natural ebbs and flows are > needed on the dammed, > ditched, and diked Missouri to prevent the > extinction of two endangered > shorebirds as well as a Jurassic-era fish, and the > independent National > Academy of Sciences has found that the Service is > right. The legalities of > the Missouri are also clear: A federal judge > demanded more natural flow > patterns this summer, citing the Endangered Species > Act, and held the Bush > administration in contempt when it tried to wriggle > out of compliance in > order to protect the river's barge industry. Even > the economics of the > Missouri are clear: The Army Corps of Engineers, > longtime manager of the > river and perennial shill for the barge industry, > admits that the upstream > recreation interests that would benefit from more > natural hydropatterns > already generate at least twelve times more economic > activity than the > downstream navigation interests that would suffer. > > It's just the politics of the Missouri that are > murky. Bush and Vice > President Dick Cheney both promised during the 2000 > campaign to protect the > status quo on the Missouri, and their administration > has consistently > resisted the scientific, legal, and economic > arguments for more natural > flows. The Army Corps is now under orders to produce > a new plan for the > river that will not change flows, and the Fish and > Wildlife Service is under > pressure to approve it. In an interview, Manson > pledged that science will > ultimately guide the Service's decision, but he also > warned that the > Service's biologists should not feel bound by their > "preconceived notions" > and should stop talking publicly about their > science. Complains one federal > biologist, "The pressure on this issue is just > unreal." > > The natural Missouri River was described by an early > observer as "a tawny, > restless, brawling flood," constantly mutinying its > banks, rambling and > meandering across its valleys, building thousands of > sandbars, islands, and > oxbows along its 2,400-mile journey west. "No other > river was ever so > dead-set against being navigated," another > Missouri-watcher wrote. Still, > the unruly braided river carried Lewis and Clark > west along their journey of > discovery 200 years ago next year; William Clark, > who was much better at > adventuring than spelling, was enraptured by the > oak, ash, and cottonwood > forests of the Missouri Valley, "one of the most > butifill Plains I ever Saw, > open & butifully diversified." > > But Congress didn't want a free-flowing Missouri > River; it wanted an orderly > liquid highway. So, in 1882, it ordered the Army > Corps to start throttling > the lower Missouri with wing-dikes; it then approved > a series of massive > dams on the upper Missouri in 1943--shortly after a > Corps official, > infuriated about flooding in Omaha, famously > shouted, "I want control of the > Missouri River!" Over the years, the Corps has > squeezed the water that used > to spread all across the Missouri's floodplain into > a deep and narrow > channel, reducing the river's width by two-thirds. > To ease barge travel, it > has sliced off hairpin turns that once confounded > steamboats, reducing the > river's length by 127 miles. And it has managed the > river to maintain a > reliable nine-foot-deep barge channel at all times, > eliminating the ebbs and > flows and shoals and shifts that used to make > navigation so treacherous and > uncertain. Muddy banks that used to erode and shift > by the hour were armored > with unyielding rock revetments. Shallow backwaters > and chutes filled with > silt. Wetlands were gradually converted into > farmland. > > The manhandling of the Missouri produced reservoirs, > hydropower, and flood > control for millions of Midwesterners. But, as a > navigation canal, the river > has been a bust. In the 1930s, the Corps justified > taming the Missouri by > predicting twelve million annual tons of freight; > today, the Corps still > manages the Missouri primarily for navigation, but > the river's barges float > less than 1.5 million tons per year between St. > Louis and Sioux City. A > Corps booklet celebrating "100 Years of the Missouri > River Navigation > Project" admitted that, "from a point of view of > commercial traffic, the > engineering accomplishment has been wasted effort." > > From a point of view of the Missouri's ecology, the > engineering > accomplishment has been an utter disaster. It has > eliminated nine-tenths of > the river's sandbars and islands, four-fifths of its > aquatic food, and > two-thirds of its catfish. In 1990, the Fish and > Wildlife Service first > warned that manipulation of the river was > jeopardizing the survival of three > endangered species: the least tern, the piping > plover, and the pallid > sturgeon--an ugly behemoth that had done just fine > for 150 million years > before the Corps started messing with the Missouri. > The Service pointed out > that, during the spring, when the river would > naturally swell, triggering > mysterious reproductive impulses for sturgeon and > other fish, the Corps was > holding back water behind the upstream dams. In the > summer, when the river > would naturally dwindle, exposing the sandbars and > islands where shorebirds > build nests, the Corps was releasing the extra water > to float barges--even > though, according to the Corps, barges produce less > than 1 percent of the > river's annual economic benefits. > > The Service was still a long way from completing its > official "biological > opinion" analyzing the threat to the three river > creatures, as demanded by > the Endangered Species Act, but the mere possibility > of a "jeopardy finding" > that would require the Corps to restore the river's > natural rhythms stirred > powerful interests in the lower basin. The barge > industry--controlled by > conglomerates like ConAgra, Cargill, and Archer > Daniels Midland--protested > that low flows would disrupt summer navigation on > the lower Missouri. > (That's true, but the river's barges carry so little > cargo that it would > almost be cheaper for farmers to ship their grain by > FedEx.) The industry > also claimed that low Missouri flows would harm > navigation on the far busier > Mississippi. (Not true, even according to the > barge-friendly Corps.) > Meanwhile, the farm lobby took advantage of the > Midwest floods of 1993 to > claim that a spring rise would drown fields in the > lower basin. (The Corps > disproved that one, too.) The farmers also warned > that railroads would jack > up freight rates if they didn't have to compete with > summertime barges. > (True in theory, but how much competition do > railroads really face from the > seven towboats that work the Missouri?) The fiery > Senator Christopher "Kit" > Bond, a Missouri Republican, began crusading for the > status quo on Capitol > Hill. The laconic Senate Minority Leader Thomas > Daschle, a South Dakota > Democrat, fought back on behalf of upper-basin > states that support flow > changes to keep their lakes full for fishing, > boating, and tourism > interests. Their battles were fun to watch, with > both men occasionally > threatening to shut down the entire Senate if they > didn't get their way, but > they basically fought to a stalemate throughout the > '90s. > > It's worth noting--especially now that David Hayes, > former President Bill > Clinton's deputy Interior secretary, is representing > an environmental group > suing the Bush administration for dragging its feet > for three years on the > Missouri--that the Clinton administration dragged > its feet for almost eight > years. It was only after enviros threatened to sue > in 2000 to force > compliance with the Endangered Species Act that the > Fish and Wildlife > Service delivered its biological opinion, and it was > only after Election Day > that Corps generals agreed to obey it. But, when > Bond managed in that year > to slip language into a $23.6 billion energy and > water appropriations bill > that would have barred the Corps from spending any > federal money on flow > changes, Clinton (under pressure from Daschle) > vetoed the entire bill. And, > by the end of the Clinton years, sound science did > have its day: The Service > delivered an exhaustive jeopardy finding directing > the Corps to implement > flow changes by 2003, and the Corps finally promised > to devise a plan that > would restore a seasonal rise and fall to the river. > > But that promise no longer seems to matter. The > promises that matter now > were made in the heat of the 2000 campaign, when > Bush and Cheney both > visited the swing state of Missouri and pledged to > oppose flow changes. > Their commitment to the status quo was hailed by > Bond, the Missouri Farm > Bureau, the barge industry, and even then-House > Minority Leader Richard > Gephardt, a Missouri Democrat. And their > administration has maneuvered to > keep the Missouri as is, even though the National > Academy of Sciences, > America's paragon of sound science, endorsed the > Service's demand for flow > changes last year, calling for "immediate and > decisive" action to implement > "flow pulses that emulate the river's natural > hydrograph." > > The Bush administration, however, took immediate and > decisive action to > oppose those pulses. It could have easily ordered > the Corps to release water > for a "spring rise," then hold back water for lower > summertime flows. > Instead, the administration's Service agreed to a > yearlong delay while the > Corps devised a new long-term plan for the Missouri. > Enviros went to court > this summer and won an injunction requiring the > Corps to start lowering the > river immediately, but the administration simply > defied the order. Even > after the judge issued a contempt finding, the Corps > still refused to reduce > flows until there were only three days left in the > summer navigation season. > And, now that the summer battle is over, the Corps > is about to float its new > long-term plan to revive the river, which is equally > defiant of the best > available science and the Endangered Species Act. > > Army Corps officials in the Omaha district say they > have strict orders from > General William Grisoli, the commander of the > agency's northwest division: > Devise a plan that avoids a jeopardy finding for the > three species but > doesn't include a spring rise or low summer flows. > Those are difficult > orders to follow, since the Fish and Wildlife > Service has already ruled that > a spring rise and low summer flows are needed to > escape jeopardy, and the > Service, which must approve any Corps plan in a new > biological opinion, is > the final arbiter of the Endangered Species Act. It > is as if Grisoli has > ordered his underlings to avoid speeding > tickets--but has simultaneously > ordered them to drive no slower than 90 miles per > hour. > > So the Corps is choosing to drive like hell and hope > the cops look the other > way. Corps officials say their new plan, supposedly > based on mysterious "new > information," will not manipulate the Missouri's > flows in any way. Instead, > the Corps hopes to "reshape the river" by recreating > the fish and bird > habitats it has destroyed with its barge-oriented > water management. The > Corps intends to spend at least $42 million of the > public's money per year > to rebuild sandbars and remove vegetation on the > Missouri--tasks the river > used to manage on its own before the Corps came > along--in order to preserve > four to six weeks of summer navigation for an > industry that only generates > $7 million in private economic benefits during the > entire year. Recreation > produces about $90 million in annual benefits, and > the Corps has > acknowledged in the past that flow changes designed > to protect endangered > species would also boost hydropower, increasing the > river's overall economic > benefits. Still, Corps officials say they have high > hopes that the Service > will allow them to pursue their new plan without a > new jeopardy finding. > "We're just following the general's instructions," > says Larry Cieslik, the > Corps' chief of water management along the Missouri > Basin in Omaha. "We'll > see what the Service says." > > It's already clear the Service's biologists think > the plan will leave the > three species in jeopardy. The question is whether > they'll be allowed to say > so in their biological opinion of the Corps plan. At > a meeting of Missouri > Basin governors last month in South Dakota, John > Blankenship, a regional > Fish and Wildlife Service official, spoke way out of > school, saying the only > "new information" the Service has seen indicates > that the three endangered > species are even worse off than they were in 2000. > The pallid sturgeon, he > said, is likely to become functionally extinct by > 2008 without a significant > spring rise that would somehow cue its pallid > passions. The case for flow > changes, Blankenship said, is now stronger than > ever. > > But that burst of uncensored science did not jibe > with the Bush > administration's political message. George Dunlop, > the top administration > official at the South Dakota conference, denounced > flow changes as > "destructive," and Grisoli made it clear that his > order to resist them had > originated with Bush political appointees. > Meanwhile, although the Service > had proposed to send its biological opinion, or > "B.O.," of the new Corps > plan out for peer review before it is finalized, > Manson, the assistant > Interior secretary, recently sent an internal > e-mail, a copy of which was > obtained by The New Republic, announcing that any > "peer review, if > requested, will be done after the B.O. is > completed." Manson's e-mail also > warned Service employees not to speak out about the > Missouri or even to meet > with other agencies about their science, announcing > that Interior political > appointees would take over those tasks: "While the > B.O. is being prepared, > it is not appropriate for those engaged in that > effort to comment publicly > or to agencies other than the Corps about the > issues." "We've been gagged," > one Service official says. > > Manson, a former Superior Court judge in California, > pledges that sound > science will ultimately guide the administration's > decision. He says it's > simply inappropriate for biologists to blab publicly > before their work is > complete, just as it would be inappropriate for a > judge to comment on a > defendant's guilt before a trial was over. "I've > instructed the Fish and > Wildlife Service to let the science take them where > it will," Manson told > me. "I haven't instructed them to take any > particular path." But, given the > Service's earlier position that flow changes are > needed to avoid jeopardy, > Manson dropped some pretty strong hints about where > he thinks that path > ought to lead: "The president has said the species > can co-exist with > agriculture and navigation on the Missouri. I happen > to believe that's > probably true." > > Manson kept saying that the Service needs to "ferret > out the facts" and > "think creatively," but it's not clear what new > facts there are to ferret > out or why there's any need to get creative with > science that has been > endorsed by the National Academy. He cautioned that > Interior's final > decision should not be prejudged, but it's hard not > to prejudge at least a > bit after the Bush administration spent the summer > defying a court order for > flow changes and then ordered up a plan specifically > designed to exclude > them--especially since, this August, at a > $1,000-per-plate fund-raising > dinner that raked in more than $1 million for Bond's > reelection campaign, > the president declared that he still agreed with > Bond about the Missouri > River and emphatically disagreed with the judge. > "I'm going to tell the > president 'thank you' several times today," Bond > said. > > Missouri, after all, is still a swing state. And the > president did make a > promise. > > __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? The New Yahoo! 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