-Caveat Lector-

[HardGreenHerald] # 8

"Unless someone like you cares a whole lot, nothing is going to get better.
It's not."
--Dr. Seuss, 'The Lorax'

--A RadTimes production--
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contents:
---------------

--High Alert Called on Trafficking in Wild Species
--Greenpeace Cofounder Supports Biotech
--Foot And Mouth Crisis Exceeds Fears
--Easts vanishing forests take a songbird with them
--Environmentalists Target Gun Rights
--Genetic pollution is threatening consumers' right to choose
--Human Being, or Human Folly?
--Off Road Vehicles Create Conflict in California

===================================================================

High Alert Called on Trafficking in Wild Species

<http://ens-news.com/ens/mar2001/2001L-03-08-01.html>

CAMBRIDGE, United Kingdom, March 8, 2001 (ENS) - Wildlife poachers and
smugglers, beware! TRAFFIC has mapped out a new three year strategy to
protect the most endangered wildlife and fragile ecosystems from predatory
traders.
Known for its in-depth reports on trafficking in endangered species based
on undercover work in the field, the wildlife trade monitoring organization
has chosen to focus on a small group of critically threatened species and
ecosystems.
Based in Cambridge, England, TRAFFIC is a branch of WWF-The Worldwide Fund
for Nature and IUCN-the World Conservation Union that works in cooperation
with the Secretariat of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species (CITES). This international treaty now includes more than 150
member countries.
At the same time, the group will be working to inform decision makers about
the impacts of trade on plant and animal species and motivating efforts to
guarantee the ecological sustainability of trade in wild species, says
TRAFFIC program director Stephen Nash.
Both African and Asian elephants, poached for their ivory, will receive
special attention from TRAFFIC
during the next three years. So will African and Asian rhinoceroses, sought
for their horns which are
used in Asian traditional medicines.
Tibetan antelopes, killed for their fine hair used in making shahtoosh
shawls are high on TRAFFIC's list of priorities, and so are the estimated
6,000 tigers that remain in the wild.
During the next three years, TRAFFIC will concentrate on policing the
illegal trade in marine and freshwater turtles, tortoises, sturgeons and
sharks.
The organization will also keep a close watch on trade in threatened trees
such as the bigleaf mahogany.
The needs of humans are not forgotten in the push to preserve wild species.
A major objective for the next three years is to ensure the security of
wildlife resources of particular value for food and medicine.
Nash said, "Our work will encourage governments, industry, consumers and
local communities to take appropriate actions to reduce threats to these
species. Our regional based programs will contribute to the development and
implementation of trade monitoring systems and trade management plans for
priority species."
"TRAFFIC will be evaluating local and national controls for threatened
species in trade, and pushing to strengthen them," he said.
The organization will focus on researching and understanding wildlife trade
processes that act on specific ecological landscapes, identifying threats
and root causes to biodiversity loss, and promoting appropriate solutions.
Over the next three years, TRAFFIC will be concentrate on coastal forests
and marine areas of East Africa, the Eastern Arc Mountains and Miombo
Woodlands of Africa.
Other high priority areas include the Lower Mekong River of Southeast Asia,
the vast Russian Far East, the Chihuahuan Desert of North America, the
Amazon Basin, and the Guyana Shield of northern South America.
This is an enormous task, and Nash says that international cooperation in
the regulation and management of use of wild resources is essential.
There are approximately 200 multilateral environmental agreements in
existence, many of which include provisions that regulate harvesting and
trade in wild species.
The organization will also monitor the application of certification and
accreditation schemes for wildlife products, and encourage international
development, finance and trade mechanisms that complement efforts to ensure
wildlife trade does not exceed sustainable levels.
Over the next three years, the TRAFFIC network will mainly direct its
efforts towards CITES, the Convention on Biological Diversity, the World
Trade Organization, and a variety of regional fisheries and timber trade
agreements.
-------------
Visit the TRAFFIC Network online at: http://www.traffic.org/
The IUCN website is located at: http://www.iucn.org/ The IUCN 2000 Red List
of Threatened Species can be found at:
http://www.iucn.org/redlist/2000/index.html
The World Wide Fund for Nature, known in North America as the
World Wildlife Fund, WWF, has an extensive website on threatened
species and ecosystems at: http://www.panda.org

===================================================================

Greenpeace Cofounder Supports Biotech

<http://ens-news.com/ens/mar2001/2001L-03-08-09.html>

AUBURN, Alabama, March 8, 2001 (ENS) - Dr. Patrick Moore, ecologist and co-
founder of the international conservation group Greenpeace, stated Tuesday
that, "the campaign of fear now being waged against genetic modification is
based largely on fantasy and a complete lack of respect for science and
logic."
Moore joined more than 3,000 scientists from around the world in signing a
Declaration in Support of Agricultural Biotechnology, sponsored by the
nonprofit AgBioWorld Foundation.
"In the balance it is clear that the real benefits of genetic modification
far outweigh the hypothetical and sometimes contrived risks claimed by its
detractors."
Moore, who is now an environmental consultant, was a founding member of
Greenpeace. He served for nine years as president of Greenpeace Canada and
seven years as a director of Greenpeace International.
Moore broke with Greenpeace in recent years, accusing the group of
abandoning science and following agendas that have little to do with saving
the Earth. Reiterating comments he made to the New Zealand Royal Commission
on Genetic Modification, Moore said, "Genetic modification can reduce the
chemical load in the environment, reduce the impact on non-target species,
and reduce the amount of land required for food crops."
"There are so many real benefits from genetic modification compared to the
largely hypothetical and contrived risks that it would be foolish to ban
genetic modification," Moore added.
Other signers of the Declaration of Scientists in Support of Agricultural
Biotechnology, available at: http://www.AgBioWorld.org, include Nobel Prize
winners Norman Borlaug, James Watson, Paul Berg, Peter Doherty and Paul
Boyer. The AgBioWorld Foundation is a project of biologist C.S. Prakash,
director of the Center for Plant Biotechnology Research at Tuskegee
University.
Prakash serves on the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Agricultural
Biotechnology Advisory Committee and also on the Advisory Committee for the
Department of Biotechnology of the Government of India.

===================================================================

Foot And Mouth Crisis Exceeds Fears

Sixteen more cases of foot and mouth disease were recorded today amid
warnings of a "second wave" of the disease. The total number of
outbreaks now stands at 123, underscoring chief veterinary officer
Jim Scudamore's comments that there was no end in sight to the
crisis. The  epidemic, which is thought to have cost the economy more
than £1bn in 17 days, is also moving rapidly from sheep to cattle.

Full story - Guardian Unlimited
http://www.guardian.co.uk/footandmouth/story/0,7369,449240,00.html

Related story: Livestock ban 'to be eased' - BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/uk/newsid_1210000/1210371.stm

Comment: Too cool to be kind over nightmare for farming - Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/footandmouth/story/0,7369,448920,00.html

Audio: Nick Brown - BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/olmedia/1205000/audio/_1209499_foot17_brown.ram

Factfile: Foot and mouth disease - MAFF
http://www.maff.gov.uk/animalh/diseases/fmd/default.htm

Background: Foot and mouth latest - National Farmers' Union
http://www.nfu.org.uk/info/f&ml.asp

Special report: Foot and mouth disease - Guardian Unlimited
http://www.guardian.co.uk/footandmouth/

===================================================================

FRIDAY, MARCH 9, 2001

East's vanishing forests take a songbird with them

<http://www.csmonitor.com/durable/2001/03/09/p2s2.htm>

Cerulean warblers have declined by 70 percent since 1966.
But Fish and Wildlife says it can't take steps now.

By Warren Richey ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

A little blue bird is sending a dire message to mankind.
But the US government says it is in no position to heed the warning.
Bird-watchers have long lamented the gradual disappearance of the cerulean
warbler, a colorful songbird that once was easily spotted in deep forests
throughout much of the Eastern half of the US.
Its numbers have declined by 70 percent since 1966. And ornithologists say
that unless something is done to prevent further degradation of old-growth
forests in the US and South America, the tiny cerulean warbler's song may
fall silent forever.
"Right now, there is no law or regulation specifically protecting the
cerulean's forest habitat," says Douglas Ruley, a lawyer with the Southern
Environmental Law Center, which is based in Charlottesville, Va. "If the
destruction of these forests continues, we will lose this bird in our
lifetime."
Last fall, a coalition of 28 environmental groups asked the US Fish and
Wildlife Service to list the cerulean warbler as a threatened species.
Including the bird on the endangered species list would trigger federal
protection, including safeguards to critical forest habitat under pressure
from lumbering and development.
But the Fish and Wildlife Service says it is unable to even read the
group's petition, let alone take action to protect the struggling species.
Since December, the service has confined its efforts - and its $6.3 million
budget - to carrying out court-ordered actions in scores of lawsuits
initiated by various environmental groups. The suits involve designating
critical habitat for plants and animals already on the endangered species
list. The net result is that there is no staff or money left to consider
placing new plants and animals on the endangered species list, officials say.
"We have a literal flood of litigation against us," says Hugh Vickery, a
spokesman for the Fish and Wildlife Service. He says the legal logjam has
stripped the agency of any discretion in determining how to respond to
cases like that of the cerulean warbler.
"We don't want to do this," Mr. Vickery says. "It is not a choice, it is
reality."
It is also a situation likely to trigger more litigation and an even bigger
logjam.
Mr. Ruley says the cerulean warbler coalition is considering filing its own
suit to force the government to protect the songbird.
"The cerulean warbler is really a good example of what we should be doing,"
he says. "Recognizing that a species is headed toward the brink, we should
get in there and arrest the decline by maintaining adequate forests for the
birds."
He adds, "If you do it now, you can do it more effectively and efficiently
than if you wait until the species is on the brink."
Cerulean warblers migrate between the Eastern US in the summer and the
slopes of the Andes Mountains in South America during the North American
winter.
The birds prefer to build their nests in old-growth forests with tall
canopies that offer camouflage and protection from predators.  Logging and
development have reduced such undisturbed nesting areas in the US.
In addition, the birds are under pressure in South America, where the
forested mountain slopes they prefer in Colombia, Bolivia, and Peru are
being denuded and replanted with coca plants for the illicit cocaine trade.
Conservationists hope that if the US government takes a leading role in
protecting cerulean warblers, it will help trigger international efforts to
save the embattled birds.
Marty Bergoffen of the Southern Appalachian Biodiversity Project in
Asheville, N.C., says the US government's first action must be to preserve
and restore large tracts of mature forest. "We have an ecosystem tottering
on the brink, and the cerulean warbler is an indicator of that," he says.
Mr. Bergoffen adds that many decades ago cerulean warblers were a common
sight in American forests, particularly in the Ohio and Mississippi River
valleys. But he says those days are gone.
"I have friends who like to watch birds who have been looking for the past
10 years and haven't seen a cerulean warbler."
-----------------------------------
For further information:
Cerulean Warbler Atlas Project Cornell (Click on Cerulean Warbler under the
"Previous Sounds of the Week" menu to hear the songbird.)
<http://birds.cornell.edu/sow/>
Cerulean Warbler Audubon <http://www.audubon.org/bird/watch/cer/cer.html>

===================================================================

Environmentalists Target Gun Rights

<http://www.gunowners.org/opagn0201.htm>

by Larry Pratt
Feb. 2001

If anti-gun zealots in government are frustrated that they have not yet
been able to completely infringe on our right to keep and bear arms, the
United States Forest Service (USFS) has found a politically correct issue
to use against gun owners.
In Azusa, California, there is a shooting range in the city's mountain
suburb. The Burro Canyon Shooting Park opened with a bang in November, 1993
on a 76 acre allotment near the Angeles National Forest.
Since the Shooting Park is on land unconstitutionally owned and
administered by the United States government, Burro Canyon operates with a
permit from the USFS, itself an unconstitutional agency desperately in need
of elimination.
About a year ago, the USFS discovered that the railroad ties in use at the
range had to be removed because the creosote in them was disturbing the
pristine environment of Burro Canyon. This creosote is apparently different
from that in the telephone poles all over other federally protected land.
Well, the railroad ties went, but trouble was just starting. Through an
alleged irregularity in the deeding of the 76 acres for the Shooting Park,
in spite of the USFS's earlier approval, the Rangers managed to whack the
Shooting Park down to four acres.
Then the Shooting Park was told to be sure that all that horrible human
activity that occurs there would not endanger any exotic plants. You see,
the natural habitat must not be disturbed. By the way, the Burro Canyon
Shooting Park sits on top of a landfill.
By October of 2000 the USFS discovered that shotgun shells are an
environmental threat, and the Shooting Park was not picking them all up.
Next the USFS decided that there was too much picnicking going on, so the
picnic tables had to go. Ooops - haven't you gotten rid of all those metal
plates the cops used for their long range practice? "Why, you're not in
compliance. Those plates are polluting the pristine Canyon."
Finally, after months of a death-by-a-thousand-cuts, the Burro Canyon
shooting park closed on January 2, 2001.
The anti-gun nuts in the bureaucracy have managed to squelch constitutional
freedom under the guise of protecting the environment.
Doesn't this make you want to go hug a tree?

===================================================================

International Federation of Organic Agricultural Movements

March 9th 2001
PRESS RELEASE

Genetic pollution is threatening consumers' right to choose

Despite the organic movement's stringent efforts to keep GMOs (genetically
engineered /modified organisms) out of organic production, some US organic
farmers have found their corn (maize) crops, including seeds, to contain
detectable levels of genetically engineered DNA.

"Those who claim ownership rights to these genes should be held liable for
their uncontrolled spread in the environment and into our food," says
Gunnar Rundgren, President of the International Federation of Organic
Agriculture Movements (IFOAM), which unites 730 member organisations in 103
countries.

The organic movement is firm in its opposition to any use of GMOs in
agriculture, and organic standards explicitly prohibit their use.  The
farmers, whose seed is contaminated, have been under rigid organic
certification, which assures that they did not use any kind of genetically
modified materials on their farms. Any trace of GMOs must have come from
outside their production areas.  While the exact origin is unclear at this
time, it is most likely that the pollution has been caused by pollen drift
from GMO-fields in surrounding areas.  However, the contamination may have
also come from the seed supply.  Seed producers, who intended to supply
GMO-free seed, have also been confronted with genetic pollution and cannot
guarantee that their seed is 100% GMO-free.

"This is more evidence that GMOs are polluting the environment in a way
that is outside the control of society or the companies that have released
these GMOs, and we are outraged.  It means that consumers could soon be
deprived of their right to choose GMO-free food, if this unwanted spread of
genetically altered genes is not stopped," Gunnar Rundgren continues.

Organic products remain the best option for consumers who wish to avoid
GMO-food and resist their use in agriculture.  Organic farmers and
independent certification agencies will take all reasonable measures to
prevent contamination.  However, IFOAM, organic farmers and certifiers can
not do this job alone. Unless action is taken immediately, it may soon be
impossible to produce uncontaminated organic corn crops in the US.  This is
equally true for conventional farmers who want to produce corn without GMOs.

The problem of pollution not only has direct consequences for organic
farmers; it also means a dramatic loss of the cultural heritage of
agricultural varieties, which has huge implications for populations around
the world.  For thousands of years, humans have selected and bred natural
varieties adapted to unique climatic zones and regional properties, in
order to provide us with quality food.  It is the aim of organic
agriculture to preserve this natural way, based on sound scientific and
ecological principles.

IFOAM calls on governments and regulatory agencies throughout the world to
immediately ban the use of genetic engineering in agriculture and food
production, while there is still a chance to stop this unwanted pollution.
IFOAM further holds genetic engineering industries responsible for the
damage they have inflicted on organic farmers.  Governments are therefore
urged to pass legislation that makes GMO companies liable for all genetic
pollution caused by the products they own.

Anaheim/USA and Tholey-Theley/Germany
----

Contact for further information:

Northamerica: Suzanne Vaupel (email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
phone/fax:+1-916-444-1877)

Annie Kirschenmann (email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] phone: +1-701-486-3578/fax-3580)

Latinamerica: Alberto (Pipo) Lernoud (email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] phone
+5411-48621424/fax -47775082)

Europe: Luise Lutikholt (email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] phone
+31-30-2339970/fax -2304423)

Asia: Prabha Mahale (email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] phone
+91-124-6388900/fax -6388769)
Australia: Liz Clay (email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] phone+221-634-1837/fax
+221-956-4202)

===================================================================

Human Being, or Human Folly?

<http://www.wirednews.com/news/culture/0,1284,42338,00.html>

Reuters
Mar. 9, 2001

Hundreds of couples have volunteered for an experiment to create the first
cloned child despite strong religious and scientific opposition, a team of
scientists said on Friday.

Since the international team said in January it would work to produce the
first human clone, between 600 and 700 couples have come forward and the
number is rising, said American doctor Panayiotis Zavos.
"Interest has come from all over, from Japan to Argentina, from Germany to
Britain," Zavos told reporters after saying his team was ready to start
cloning in the next few weeks, principally to help infertile couples bear
children.
"Being infertile is like a stop sign," he said. "You face the deficiency and
ask God 'Why me? Why do I have to go and get sperm cells from someone else
in order to have a child?'"
Zavos, attending a cloning conference in Rome, deflected mounting criticism
of his plans, saying people would eventually get over opposition to human
cloning.
"Historically, this is normal but once the first baby is born and it cries,
the world will embrace it," he said.
"Now that we have crossed into the third millennium, we have the technology
to break the rules of nature."
But the proposal has come under serious fire from mainstream scientists and
religious groups. On Friday, Father Gino Concetti, a moral theologian whose
views are thought to reflect those of Pope John Paul II, reiterated the
Vatican's position.
"These proposals contradict the truth of mankind, man's dignity, man's
rights ... especially the right to be conceived in the human way," Concetti
said.
Italian team member Severino Antinori, who gained notoriety by helping a
62-year-old woman give birth, also sought to dispel the flood of
disapproval.
"Cloning may be considered as the last frontier to overcome male sterility
and give the possibility to infertile males to pass on their genetic
pattern," he told a packed auditorium of scientists and journalists.
"Some people say we are going to clone the world, but this isn't true....
I'm asking all of us to be prudent and calm. We're talking science, we're
not here to create a fuss."
Bishop Elio Sgreccia, head of the John Paul II Institute for Bioethics at
Rome's Gemelli Hospital, said human cloning raised profoundly disturbing
ethical issues.
"Those who made the atomic bomb went ahead in spite of knowing about its
terrible destruction," he said. "But this doesn't mean that it was the best
choice for humanity.
"The forecasts (about human cloning) sadden us but don't scare us," he said,
adding it would be a betrayal if the Roman Catholic Church's voice was not
heard in the debate.
Scientists have also slammed the plan. A director of Rome's La Sapienza
university wrote a letter disapproving of the cloning conference being held
in one of its halls.
"I consider it disgraceful ... and I dissociate myself from the meeting,"
professor Ermelando Cosmi wrote.
Scientists have warned that 97 percent of animal cloning attempts have been
unsuccessful and that those embryos which survive to birth are often
deformed.
Dr. Ian Wilmut, who created Dolly, the world's first cloned sheep, said it
took 277 attempts to get it right.
Zavos said that might not be the case with humans, firstly because they were
a different species and secondly because the embryos would be scrutinized
for any deformity.
The team said it would start work within weeks but would not say where they
will set up their cloning laboratory, citing security reasons. When the team
announced their plans in January, they said they would work in a
Mediterranean country.
Zanos added they had "unlimited funds" from private donors but again would
not elaborate.
"We have plenty of money, I can assure you. There are no financial
restrictions," he said.
Zavos said he believed that governments should develop further legislation
on human cloning to keep it under control but at the same time said his
experiments should not be subject to government scrutiny.
"We don't want the government involved in this project," he said. "This is a
high-tech, serious project and we're not going to bring in the technocrats
if they are not needed."
Last year, Britain proposed allowing human cells to be cloned for research
purposes while other European countries, including Spain and France, have
banned human cloning altogether.
Predominantly Roman Catholic Italy has looked into the therapeutic cloning
of stem cells in order to combat degenerative diseases like Parkinson's and
Alzheimer's.
"The genie is out of the bottle," Zavos said. "We need to make sure it is
bottled and disseminated responsibly."

===================================================================

Off Road Vehicles Create Conflict in California

By Cat Lazaroff

     DAVIS, California, March 9, 2001 (ENS) - Many public lands in
     California, ranging from national forests to wilderness areas, are
     becoming too damaged - and in some cases too dangerous - for the
     public to enjoy, finds a first of its kind report. The study by the
     California Wilderness Coalition blames dirt bikes and other off road
     vehicles for damaging and despoiling the state's public lands.

     Based on an exhaustive examination of state and federal records, the
     68 page study by the Davis based California Wilderness Coalition
     contains numerous on the ground case studies of areas throughout
     California that have been spoiled by off road vehicles (ORVs).

     "It was shocking to unearth the widespread, off road vehicle damage to
     our deserts and forests," said Teri Shore, report author. "With so few
     wild places left to find peace and quiet, and so many animals
     disappearing from our landscape, it's time to reign in the motorized
     takeover of Californian's favorite places."

     The report concludes that California's public resources, including
     soil, watersheds, habitat and water quality, are being severely
     degraded by poorly managed off road vehicle use. In addition, the
     outdoor experiences of numerous hikers, campers, equestrians and
     skiers are being ruined by conflicts with dirt bikes, snowmobiles and
     other ORVs, the report charges.

     California contains a diverse range of natural habitats, ranging from
     a mountains to forests, rocky shorelines to desert lands. The Golden
     State is also among the most traveled regions of the U.S.

     tortoise

Crushed desert tortoise in the Desert Tortoise Natural Area in the Mojave
desert (Photo by Kristine Berry)

     Each year, millions of tourists visit California to enjoy its scenic
     treasures. But many find it impossible to escape the din of motors,
     either on roads or off.

     "No corner of the state has been spared the destruction of natural
     places by out of control off road vehicle use," said author Shore.
     "It's tragic how much permanent damage has been done to our lands by
     unmanaged off road use."

     RIDING LEAVES PERMANENT SCARS

     Motorized off road vehicles are made to be ridden in the backcountry.
     But their tracks are visible for generations, and their impacts often
     permanent.

     Hundreds of thousands of these vehicles travel California's
     backcountry each year. When irresponsibly used, or improperly managed,
     they cause damage to sensitive soils, degrade critical wildlife
     habitat, trespass onto private property and closed areas, and shatter
     the quiet.

     In the Jawbone and Dove Springs open riding areas, 20 miles north of
     the town of Mojave, decades of overuse have cleared topsoil from some
     areas, leaving behind bare bedrock. All but the largest shrubs have
     been stripped from more than 1,000 acres, and another 500 have been
     completely denuded.

     The use is so heavy that, according to one report, after a rainfall,
     "the water formed a thick slurry of the loose soil, which flowed out
     over the canyon floor much like a lava flow, burying plants and
     trapping burrowing animals." Another study found that some upper
     slopes lost as much as one foot of surface soil over 13 years due to
     motorcycle use.

     Wildlife has largely disappeared as well. Off road vehicles race
     across the land, crushing desert tortoises and their burrows, and
     impacting the kangaroo rat and pocket mouse populations as well.

     In the Algodones Dunes of southeast California, considered
     California's off roading mecca, out of control ORV use has turned
     dangerous. Hundreds of thousands of off roaders visit the Algodones
     Dunes each year, creating a land management and public safety fiasco.

     On crowded holiday weekends, lawlessness escalates to the point where
     near riot conditions prevail.

     The dunes have become unsafe for family recreation activity due to the
     use of drugs and alcohol, and the problems of lawlessness that occur
     with such use, according to a Bureau of Land Management report. BLM
     rangers have been threatened and deliberately run over.

     "The problem has advanced to the stage that the normal, law abiding
     citizens are fearful of using the area," said a recent BLM report.

     ORV RULES HARD TO ENFORCE

     Off road vehicle users regularly disregard the law and trespass into
     wilderness and other closed areas, as well as onto private property,
     the study found. Irresponsible off road vehicle use poses special
     problems for law enforcement, and irresponsible riders are extremely
     difficult to catch.

     The case studies featured in the report describe damage to
     California's natural areas, but also detail how California residents,
     visitors and landowners are literally being run out by off road
     vehicles.

     "The very places where California residents and visitors go to enjoy
     the peace and quite of the great outdoors are the same places where
     the silence is shattered by noisy dirt bikes and aggressive all
     terrain vehicles," said California Wilderness Coalition executive
     director Paul Spitler.

     In the Lake Tahoe Basin, for example, illegal off road riding is
     rampant, the Coalition found.

     In recent years, land managers in the basin have reported increased
     complaints about riding close to or inside residential areas, trespass
     into closed areas and wilderness, destruction of wet meadows and other
     highly sensitive areas, and new trails being cut into rehabilitated
     trails and roads.

     According to the U.S. Forest Service, off road vehicle users have
     created new, unauthorized routes, creating erosion and sedimentation
     that may further diminish the clarity of California's most famous
     lake.

     At the Knoxville Recreation Area, near Clear Lake, federal officials
     have abandoned their management and law enforcement responsibilities,
     opening the door to widespread abuse and lawlessness.

     For more than 15 years, the remote chaparral hillsides and serpentine
     barrens of Knoxville Recreation Area have been subjected to mostly
     unregulated motorcycle riding, four wheeling and random target
     shooting.

     Appliances, TVs, computers and other large items have been found blown
     up and riddled with bullet holes. Long time landowner Jim Erasmy warns
     his wife and women in general not to hike the area alone.

     "Families come to the Knoxville area thinking that they have a safe
     place for their children to learn to ride. Instead they've entered an
     area with no rules, no road signs, and no real BLM presence," said
     Erasmy. "The risk of getting shot while riding off road vehicles,
     hiking, horseback riding ... is a real and ever present danger."

     Sometimes, ORV use may have disastrous effects. The Willow Fire, which
     burned 63,000 acres in and around San Bernardino National Forest and
     destroyed several homes in 1999, "was strongly suspected to be from
     OHV riders leaving an unattended campfire," according to a government
     report.

     WINTER PROVIDES NO RELIEF

     Each winter, the Reds Meadow area of the eastern Sierra Nevada becomes
     a popular snowmobile playground. Numerous snowmobilers ignore the
     rules and cross into campgrounds, wilderness areas and even Devil's
     Postpile National Monument. In most cases, the offenders are never
     cited or even confronted by law enforcement officers.

     Dozens of other violations have been reported to the Inyo National
     Forest, including willful trespass into wilderness, Devil's Postpile,
     and closed campgrounds; destruction of property; damage to vegetation;
     and physical threats to area residents.

     Tops of trees were snapped off. Campgrounds, signs and private
     property were routinely wrecked by rogue riders. Sometimes the
     polluting machines crashed and overturned into creeks and streams,
     spilling gas and oil into waterways.

     Bob Sollima, caretaker at Reds Meadow, describes the scene he
     witnesses in winter.

     "It seems that all the snowmobile pilots had 'moto-jump mania,'
     getting air off anything including buildings and vehicles. In one
     winter, I tallied damages to fences, hitch rails, a stone barbecue, a
     roof, my truck, windshield, two tree squirrels, a pine marten, and a
     fire hydrant [that] was sheared off," Sollima said.

     "Some of the snowmobile abuses I've seen in the Reds Meadow Valley
     over the years, in times of low snowpack, are environmental damage to
     treetops, meadows, trails, creeks, lakes and the river," Sollima
     continued. "I've seen two snowmobiles stuck in the San Joaquin River,
     two submerged in Sotcher Lake and three overturned in creeks, spilling
     gas and oil into the water."

     A PLAN FOR THE FUTURE

     A recent ORV policy issued by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management is
     "absolutely toothless," doing little to correct existing problems,
     charges Coalition executive director Spitler.

     "We have done what the federal land management agencies have long
     failed to do: document the severe and widespread environmental impacts
     of unmanaged off road vehicle use," said Spitler. "Just as you would
     not allow a dirt bike to tear up your front yard, we should not allow
     dirt bikes and other off road vehicles to destroy California's unique
     national forests and other public lands."

     The Coalition's report presents a 15 point plan for creating a more
     balanced and fair off road vehicle policy in California. This plan
     aims to:

       * Minimize damage to California's landscapes,
       * Reduce conflicts between motorized recreationists and other public
         land users,
       * Prevent the harassment of landowners by motorized recreationists,
       * Reduce illegal riding and trespass into wilderness areas, and
       * Balance motorized recreation with other public land uses, such as
         hiking, horseback riding, mountain biking, hunting, fishing and
         camping.

     The plan proposes federal reforms, state legislative reforms and state
     administrative reforms aimed at determining appropriate ORV use and
     mapping approved areas, enforcing existing rules, and restoring
     damaged areas.

     California's state government should increase state funding for
     repairing ORV damage and preventing future damage, the report
     suggests. Currently, the state provides millions of dollars each year
     to support the acquisition, development and operations of ORV
     facilities and areas on federally managed lands, through its ORV
     grants program.

     But some of the responsibility for paying for ORV damages should fall
     on the users themselves, the Coalition proposes. Registration fees for
     ORVs should be linked to emissions levels, the report argues.

     Higher emission vehicles - usually older models with less efficient
     engines - should be charged higher fees. The group says that this
     would create a positive incentive to reduce emissions from ORVs.

     "This report documents for the first time how people and places across
     the state of California are suffering from out of control off road
     vehicle damage," said author Shore. "The deserts and forests that we
     all love and want to enjoy are being scarred forever and may never
     recover from decades of irresponsible off road vehicle use."

     The report and supporting materials are available online at:
     http://www.calwild.org/pubs/reports/orv/presscenter.htm

===================================================================
"Treat the Earth well. It was not given to you by your parents.
        It was loaned to you by your children."
                -Kenyan Proverb
======================================================
"We cannot solve the problems that we have created with the same
        thinking that created them."
                -Albert Einstein
======================================================
"The idea of wilderness needs no defense, it only needs defenders."
        -Edward Abbey
______________________________________________________________
To subscribe/unsubscribe, send appropriate email to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.
______________________________________________________________

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html">Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to