“We the People”
vs. those who want it all, and want it now |
February 8, 2012 |
By
Donna Capurso
Our community is being assaulted by the federal government through the US Fish and Wildlife Service and the US Forest Service. My grandfather used a term when I was growing up that I believe is the exact word to describe what is going on between the USFWS and the USFS.
The word is
“cahoots” which is defined for those not
familiar with its meaning as: “usually
used in the plural, and often used to imply that
the joint effort is unethical, shady,
questionable, or illegal; as, a shill in
cahoots with a
pickpocket, to serve as a distraction.”
I am posting a
number of articles dealing with the public land
use issues in north
When I attended
both the KVRI meeting on January 9 in Bonners
Ferry and the Coordination meeting with the
USFWS and the Bonner County Commissioners on
January 24 at
On January 3, 2012 the United States Forest Service (USFS) released their Draft Forest Plans and their Draft Environmental Impact Statements for the Idaho Panhandle National Forest (IPNF). These plans are designed to show how the USFS is going to “manage the usage” of the national forest for the next 15 years. All of the comments made here after will reference only the IPNF Plan but the principles will apply to the Kootenai National Forest (KNF) as well. The IPNF Draft Land Management Plan is a 442 page document and the IPNF DEIS is 563 pages.
Both documents are purposefully large, ambiguous
and difficult to understand, and get the “NoDoz”
out if you want to access them at:
http://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprdb5345952.pdf
http://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprdb5345951.pdf
and the
http://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprdb5345835.pdf
As a participant
in the beginning stages of the USFS revision
plan (2002-2004), and a
During the group discussions, most conclusions like, “more road access,” “more logging and mining,” “more snowmobiling and ATV riding” and other human activities were suppressed. When each group came back together, a lot of these comments were never shared. You can rest assured that anything having to do with more wildernesses and more species protection always made it to the top. All of the information was processed and rolled into a series of options, A B C D E etc.
In other words,
you could choose from A, no change from the 1987
plan (can’t be considered anyway because of
new
restrictions in the Endangered Species Act
“ESA”) or E, huge access restrictions. The USFS
wants to make you “feel good” by recommending B
or C, because it isn’t as bad as E.
Well,
all of the choices are bad!
It’s
obvious that the USFS no longer manages the
national forest with a resource based plan but
has switched to an ecology based plan.
It’s
common practice to encourage people to provide
written comments, telling them that their
comments will have an effect on the outcome of
the process, knowing all along that the various
plans are already decided.
These
comments are heavily solicited from outside the
affected area from those that don’t have any
stake in the outcome. The following is a quote
taken from the IPNF website that was added just
recently when the “open house” meetings were
scheduled:
“Please note that several local papers
inaccurately reported that ‘public hearings’
have been scheduled. No hearings or public
testimony is scheduled. Open House meetings will
be held to provide opportunities for members of
the public to ask questions about the
The USFS rationale and excuse is that there is no way to increase public usage because that would violate a number of provisions of the ESA. Most of the conclusions in this management plan are derived from the “opinions” of so called “experts”. Webster Dictionary defines an opinion as “a view or judgment formed about something, not necessarily based on fact or knowledge.”
So, how does being “in cahoots” work between the
USFWS and the USFS?
The USFWS “believes there are, or might
be,” 45 or 46 caribou in their planned Caribou
Critical Habitat plan.
What they don’t want you to know is that
all but possibly one or two of these caribou are
in
The USFS can then use the “opinion” of the USFWS as being factual and continue shutting down whatever little access we now have to our so called “public lands.” The USFWS can point the finger at the USFS saying that they weren’t responsible for shutting down our forests, and the USFS points the finger at the USFWS saying that they had to shut the forests down because of their designating the 375, 562 acres as Caribou Critical Habitat or for any other species that they can use in the name of the ESA.
As stated in
both meetings by the USFWS, they do not take
into account the predation of any possible
caribou that happens to wonder across our border
by the grizzly bear, the Canadian Gray Wolf or
the Cougar.
It is the goal of the extreme environmentalist to promote their own agendas and self interests to the detriment of all of us and our way of life.
One way they promote their “end justifies the means” philosophy is their abuse of the Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA). This act was intended to make the justice system more accessible to individuals of modest means, small businesses, and nonprofit organizations through limited recovery of their attorneys’ fees when they prevail in disputes with the Federal Government.
Idaho, along with eight other states, is saddled with the the U.S Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit which is full of activist judges who continuously hear and rule in favor of the extreme environmentalist. Subsidized by federal tax dollars, environmental groups are filing a blizzard of lawsuits that no longer yield significant gain for the environment. During the 1990s, the U.S. Treasury paid $31.6 million in legal fees for environmental cases filed against the government.
From 2003 through July, 2007, $4,716,264,730.00 (yes, that is billion with a "b") in total payments were paid in taxpayer dollars from the Judgment Fund for attorney fees and costs in cases against the federal government (www.maninnature.com/Bovines/Cattle/Cattle1d.html).
As long as the
extreme environmentalists are allowed to foster
their program of purity, the judges continue to
rule in their favor, and the federal government
agencies like the USFWS, USFS, EPA, etc., stay
“in cahoots”, you and me, our children and
grandchildren will be denied the ability to
engage nature as God intended.
So, let’s get back to the USFS’s forest plan. The USFS management plan is solely based on flawed opinion and assumptions regarding the ESA. As pointed out by Tony McDermott, IDFG, no plan will ever make any sense unless you evaluate all the predatory relationships between the species in the affected area (Grizzly Bear, Canadian Grey Wolf, Mountain Lion, etc.).
Excluding man from the equation is not the answer, or is it? If in fact the larger plan is to remove man from the area and create a “wilderness zone," then we are well on our way!
People need to
understand and educate themselves that this is
the single biggest reason why our economy is
dying and why there are no jobs here. Without
food, water and shelter, life cannot exist.
Natural resources make life possible.
Feeling a little overwhelmed by the Feds? You are not alone. So, what can “We the People” do?
·
Every time a
federal government agency comes to town and
dictates to us what they are going to do, we
need to invoke “Coordination.” Boundary, Bonner,
Kootenai, Benewah, and Shoshone Counties, along
with Eastern Washington,
·
The 105
legislators of the State of
·
Governor Otter
and Attorney General Wasden need to support this
effort.
·
When these
extreme environmental groups go to federal court
and sue, we need to counter sue at a higher
level to slow down this nonsense.
“We the People” have the right to use the
Equal Access to Justice Act. · A major overhaul in the ESA need to be completed, and soon. Finally, if
all else fails, “We the People” of the State of
It’s time to tell the Federal Government that we have had enough and we’re not going to take any more abuse from the “eco-terrorists” that have set their sites on north Idaho specifically, and our surrounding states. It took many years to get where we are today and it can’t be fixed overnight, but if we do nothing, we will have no one else to blame but ourselves. We have compromised ourselves into a corner with the Feds, the extreme environmentalists and the left wing of society until we have little choice left to us. “We the
People” are here to stay
and I have no plan to
just go away because the Feds say so.
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