In regard to the question of how many acres of
Iowa native prairie would be protected by Sodsaver if Governor
Culver signed onto it, the answer is about 5,400 acres. Keep in mind that
only one portion of Iowa (the Des Moines Lobe) is eligible for
the current weakened optional Sodsaver, after the original
mandatory national Sodsaver was eviscerated by
Congress.
As a side note, that the evisceration happened
via conference committee makes it worse, in my opinion. If you're
going to vote to have taxpayers subsidize environmental destruction,
at least have the guts to cast that vote openly.
While 5,400 acres isn't a lot of land, those acres comprise much of the
last native prairie in the Lobe. As a number of organizations and individuals
have already expressed to Governor Culver, it would be
much better to give some protection to those 5,400 acres than no
protection.
There's also the ethical issue. As taxpayers, we
conservationists should not be required to help subsidize the
destruction what's left of Iowa's native prairie
heritage.
On a personal note, I am fortunate enough to own a few acres
of high-quality virgin mesic prairie, potentially very good corn
ground. Of course I will never plow them (shudder),
and will protect them permanently. But if I theoretically did want to
turn that irreplaceable piece of loveliness into more corn, it
would be outrageous to expect any Farm Bill money to help. As far as I
know, Sodbuster would apply to my prairie if Culver signed on. Fine
with me. In fact, wonderful.
Cindy
Cindy
Hildebrand
[log in to unmask]
57439 250th St.
Ames, IA
50010
"Ours is not the task of fixing the entire world all at once,
but of stretching out to mend the part of the world that is within our
reach." (Clarissa Pinkola Estes)
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