Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

The General is Back at the Front


New Orleans’ battalion of online revolutionaries convened for the eighth annual Rising Tide event at Xavier University on Saturday with a surprisingly traditional hero headlining as keynote speaker. United States Army three-star General Russel Honoré, who was thrust into the vacuum of leadership to establish order out of chaos after Hurricane Katrina, allied with the blogging community.
At the Superdome, the general had commanded weapons be lowered and infants be lifted from the arms of struggling mothers, quickly transforming an enforcement operation into a humanitarian mission. Progress was finally made with the addition of strong leadership.
At Rising Tide last weekend, Gen. Honoré could easily have been mistaken for a conventioneer, dressed in a plain black business suit and patriotic necktie. But standing beneath a projection of the famous painting of George Washington crossing the Delaware River, the bloggers saw a clear resemblance.
During the Revolutionary War, soldiers didn’t have proper weapons, uniforms or boats. (Presumably, bloggers have only the weapons of words.) Most of Washington’s troops were AWOL and that general crossed the Delaware in a tiny boat from TOPS program, Honoré said. (TOPS stands for “take other people’s stuff” – a disaster tactic that was adopted once more when the levees broke.)
While touting his new book, “Leadership in the New Normal,” the now retired general described how bloggers can learn from the Katrina experience, applying those lessons to the current fight to preserve safe water, safe air and safe food. Environmental justice is his new battle cry.
The general does not object to business, including tourism, but “if you break it, clean it up.”
Lobbyists changed the language of the Clean Water Act so now the EPA literally has to be invited into the state.
Louisiana is so business- friendly, our government allows industry to self-regulate, he said. In the old plantation system, owners lived on the land being cultivated. Now, companies despoiling the land and water are not even based in the United States, he added.
“If the oil and gas business is doing so much for the state of Louisiana, why are we the poorest in the union?” he demanded. (Filmmaker Spike Lee raised the same question.) Oil that contaminates the Gulf of Mexico will ultimately destroy our seafood, the general said. Chefs must begin to understand that.
“This fight for equity is a war you can win because you are on the right side,” the general told the rapt audience.
 “Every generation has something big to do,” Honoré said. “Do you want South American shrimp? Chinese crawfish?” The crowd’s anwer was a resounding “no.”
“This is our war. This is what this generation has to do.”
Get involved in environmental and social justice, he told the audience. Bloggers are the underground revolutionaries, the community you don’t see.
“What’s going to make a difference are citizens with a common purpose. We can do better and what’s going to cause that to happen is leadership.”
When questions were opened to the attendees, a blogger stepped to the microphone. Run for governor, he pleaded.

Friday, February 3, 2012

Man Vs. Frog in St. Tammany


nola.com

Mississippi gopher frog could hop into St. Tammany

Christine Harvey, The Times-Picayune 
Edward Poitevent just doesn't get it. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is proposing to designate a considerable chunk of land his family owns in eastern St. Tammany Parish as critical habitat for the Mississippi gopher frog, an endangered species of which only 100 adult frogs remain.
gopher-frog.jpgView full sizeThe Mississippi gopher frog is stocky, is about three inches long, and ranges in color from black to brown or gray, according to the Fish and Wildlife Service. It is covered with dark spots and warts. And it needs protection, the service says.
Yet, none of them live in St. Tammany Parish. In fact, no one has seen a gopher frog in the wild in Louisiana since 1967.
And that's part of what Poitevent -- whose family is the largest landowner in St. Tammany -- finds so confounding.
If the federal government decides to designate his property -- nearly 1,650 acres of timberland along Louisiana 36 north of Slidell -- as a home for the gopher frog, he would have to jump through extra regulatory hoops when it comes time to develop the land.
Officials with the Fish and Wildlife Service said last week that those hurdles would not keep Poitevent from developing his land as he sees fit. Poitevent disagrees, suggesting that the designation would severely curtail his use of his land and result in a potential loss of income as high as $36 million, and that the proposed rule does not take an economic analysis that the service conducted into consideration.
map-frog-112011.jpgView full size
The federal government has not offered to pay Poitevent in exchange for the designation. But officials at Fish and Wildlife said the designation will have no effect on Poitevent's plan to develop the land. And, they said any further action, such as creating and maintaining the habitat, and moving the frogs there, would be voluntary on Poitevent's part and come at no expense to him.
The designation simply would mean that the Fish and Wildlife Service has found new and proper places for the frog to live -- following a recent agreement that requires an expanded habitat for the endangered species. It doesn't mean that frogs take over the land.
A stocky, wart-covered frog
The Mississippi gopher frog is stocky, is about three inches long, and ranges in color from black to brown or gray, according to the Fish and Wildlife Service. It is covered with dark spots and warts.
Though the gopher frog once lived throughout the area between the Mississippi River in Louisiana and the Mobile River in Alabama, the only frogs known to exist today are located in Harrison County, Miss., near Saucier, about 20 miles north of Gulfport.
That habitat is threatened by natural processes, such as genetic isolation, floods and drought, as well as by planned residential development and highway expansion, and a proposed reservoir, according to the Fish and Wildlife Service.
The Fish and Wildlife Service is under a court order to find new critical habitat for the endangered frog, leading biologists to look to the lands where the frog previously was known to exist.
Last sighting was in 1965
The last time anyone saw a gopher frog in St. Tammany was in 1965, in one of several connecting ponds on the Poitevent tract south of Louisiana 36, said Linda LaClaire, lead biologist with the Fish and Wildlife Service in Jackson, Miss. She visited the site earlier this year and was surprised to find the ponds still in place and continuing to provide the very specific hydrological environment that the Mississippi gopher frogs need to live and breed.
In addition to the Poitevent land, the service would like to designate 5,300 acres in southern Mississippi as new critical habitat for the gopher frog, though more than half of the land, including locations within the DeSoto National Forest, already is owned by the federal government.
Cary Norquist, assistant field supervisor with the Fish and Wildlife Service in Jackson, said the biologists are required to look at both occupied and unoccupied lands under the Endangered Species Act. Whether a landowner is agreeable is not part of the decision-making process, she said.
Poitevent said he thinks the entire designation process is a waste: Why should the government spend time and money on studies and on drafting proposals if he has no intention of making life comfortable for gopher frogs on his property?
The family business
William James Poitevent established the family business -- a lumber mill -- in Pearlington, Miss., before the Civil War, and his son, John, continued to grow the mill through the early 20th century, eventually acquiring 80,000 acres in Hancock County, Miss., and on the north shore of Lake Pontchartrain.
John Poitevent's son, Eads Poitevent, shuttered the operation in Pearlington and opened a new, larger mill in Lewisburg, along the lake near Mandeville, in 1913. The mill closed during the Great Depression, and after World War II, the next generation of Poitevents, including Edward Poitevent's father and uncle, left St. Tammany Parish and made New Orleans their home.
Having left the lumber business, the family decided in 1953 to execute a long-term timber lease, with that lease belonging since the mid-1990s to Weyerhaeuser Co., based in Washington state. After selling and donating various parcels through the years, including 20,000 acres for the Pearl River Wildlife Management Area, the Poitevent family now owns roughly 45,000 acres, all in St. Tammany Parish.
Much of the remaining Poitevent land sits dead-center in the parish, where officials believe the greatest growth is poised to occur. And cutting through the center of the parish like a knife: Louisiana 36, which runs east-west between Covington and Hickory, or nearly the parish's entire length.
The land in question -- that which the Fish and Wildlife Service is keen to designate for the gopher frog -- straddles Louisiana 36 about two miles west of Hickory. Though not an immediate hotspot for development, the parish has zoned the land within and adjacent to the proposed critical habitat for residential development and for a traditional neighborhood development, which typically includes homes, businesses, schools and other amenities.
Encroaching civilization
And in the past decade, development has become more prevalent in the central part of one of the state's fastest growing parishes, with a new high school on Louisiana 1088 south of LA 36, two new distribution centers -- one open and another under construction -- along Interstate 59 in Pearl River, and the proposed -- though stalled -- University Square project on Louisiana 434 between Louisiana 36 and Interstate 12.
gopher-frog-landowner.jpgView full sizeEdward Poitevent stands amid family-owned timberland along Louisiama 36 northeast of Lacombe that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service wants in an attempt to recreate a critical habitat for the Mississippi gopher frog.
"Civilization is lapping at the shores of this land," Poitevent said. "And given our experience with Katrina, we know that the higher shores are the place to be."
The Wildlife and Fisheries Service is accepting public comment on the plan through Nov. 28, then LaClaire said she will make the recommendation that she thinks is best for the conservation and recovery of the frog. The secretary of the U.S. Department of the Interior will make the final call on the matter, with any new rule appearing in the Federal Register by June, she said.
However, the designation of a critical habitat doesn't actually mean that the frogs will once again populate the Poitevent tract. It is still Poitevent's land, and he has the ultimate say-so about what happens next, LaClaire said.
For instance, Poitevent would have to allow the Wildlife and Fisheries Service to plant the longleaf pine that helps makes up the gopher frog's habitat and to schedule burns at the site to maintain an open canopy, she said. Then and only then would the service move the frogs to the tract and execute a long-term management agreement assuming responsibility for maintaining the habitat.
But that's not likely to happen. As it stands now, Poitevent believes the act of simply designating his land as critical habitat for the gopher frog will trigger a "no-soil disturbance" rule that will prevent him from developing some or all of the nearly 1,650 acres in the future.
Norquist said that's simply not true, adding that it's a common misperception that a landowner will no longer be able to touch his land once the designation is in place. However, she said that having the designation would require Poitevent to go through an extra step during the development process should the project require a federal permit, such as a permit to fill wetlands, or involve the use of federal funding.
"To come onto land where the species doesn't exist and where the habitat is long gone is nonsensical," Poitevent said, noting that the longleaf pine that once stood on the site was cut decades ago.
Poitevent has enlisted officials at nearly every level to help stop the Fish and Wildlife service from designating his land as new habitat for the gopher frog. Sen. David Vitter has posed questions to the service on his behalf, and the St. Tammany Parish Council passed a resolution outlining why it thinks the designation would be detrimental to the future of development on the north shore.
A lawyer by trade, Poitevent has spent considerable time and effort drafting comments to the Fish and Wildlife Service and hopes it will make a difference as the matter makes its way up the chain of command. Mike Wolff, a spokesman for lease-holder Weyerhaeuser, said the company knows about the proposal, is reviewing it and also expects to file comments with the service by the comment deadline.
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Christine Harvey can be reached at charvey@timespicayune.com or 985.645.2853.

© 2012 NOLA.com. All rights reserved.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

The Gulf is important to us all















I've been reading about the long-term environmental effects of the BP spill. Y'all realize we're all affected by this disaster, right? You like shrimp in yo' gumbo? Enjoy a dozen raw oysters? I read somewhere they found oil in crabs. So far, no known effects on the fish because they could swim away, but nobody knows for sure.

Let's not forget the marshes and the impact of the oil floating up against the grasses. Marshes slow the speed of hurricanes. Scientists are studying the bird population, in particular, the brown pelican, which had just come off the endangered species list.


Every year, the average amount of coastal land lost in Louisiana is four times the blast area of the Hiroshima bomb, said Alexander Kolker, an adjunct professor and research scientist at Tulane University. Ninety percent of U.S. coastal wetland loss has been in Louisiana, home of fisheries and thousands of migrating birds.

Beyond the immediate BP oil disaster, the long-term history of impact to Louisiana’s coastal zone is “turning out to be the more important story,” said Kolker, who teaches Earth and Environmental Sciences. This history includes previous oil spills, natural hydrocarbon seeps and a landscape that loses nearly 24 square miles of land every year.

You can help Be The One.