Carl Pope: Wild America creeps back
Posted by: Aqua Blog Maven on July 3, 2009 at 6:33 amFrom Carl Pope at the Huffington Post:
For eight years under George Bush, America’s wilderness faced a systematic assault from the federal government. By the end of the first Bush term, more than 100 million acres that previously enjoyed federal protection had lost it.
Since last November’s election, the Bush legacy has been unraveling, and the progress on this front has been encouragingly swift. Last month the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) issued a biological function that will require fundamental changes in how the government operates California’s water system. The biologists concluded that salmon, steelhead, green sturgeon, and killer whales all would be at risk unless the amount of water that remains in the rivers and deltaic systems is increased — which means less diversion for irrigation.
“What is at stake here is not just the survival of species but the health of entire ecosystems,” said Rod Mcinnis, administrator of the NMFS Southwest Regional Office. In addition to mandating a reduction in irrigation supplies by another five to seven percent a year, NMFS made other suggestions: The boldest is to open up the Red Bluff Diversion Dam on the Sacramento River to allow Chinook salmon and sturgeon unimpeded passage upriver.
Read more from Carl Pope at the Huffington Post by clicking here.
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