| Part 7
– The Real Goals
We need a Federal Invasive Species program to stop
hydrilla and killer bees and fire ants and zebra mussels from ruining our
environment and endangering people and businesses. Sounds reasonable. Ever
ask yourself why the same reasoning doesn’t apply to the effects of
forced reintroductions by the Federal government of wolves and grizzly
bears in the West? The answer lies in the real goals of the groups that
generate and obtain passage of laws like the Endangered Species Act and the
intended Invasive Species Act(s?).
Any new Act will articulate a Federal interest in
"controlling" (i.e. managing) non-native species. It may propose
a "Clean List" of allowed species or it may propose a "Dirty
List" of targeted species. There will be money appropriated for
Federal agencies to "gear up" (new offices, regulation writers,
enforcers, etc.) to administer the program; money will be earmarked for
Federal land managing agencies; money will be earmarked for
"research" meaning Federal researchers, Universities, and
contractors; and finally there will be money for certain private lands
which will be skewed to folks like the Nature Conservancy and the remainder
used as a carrot for unnamed other private lands that will discourage
opponents by suggesting money they may get and also be a source of
influence-buying for Federal administrators at key times with key groups.
So what will all this accomplish? Necessary chemicals will still be
forbidden and does anyone think that will ever change unless opposed
head-on? Control methods will remain the same while bureaucrats, academics,
environmental groups and all the usual suspects will profit; but what
difference will all that make? Ask yourself what species have been saved
from extinction by the Endangered Species Act? For all the fuss over that
simple goal you must ask yourself what will result from an amorphous goal
of purifying the environment by selective vilification of certain plants,
animals, and their "ecological impacts?"
Here are some "real goals."
- Federal politicians hope to gain votes and other support from
environmentalists and others who look to benefit from passing Invasive
Species legislation.
- Federal bureaucrats will receive more employees, larger budgets and
therefore more opportunities for bonuses, promotions, and expanded powers
over private property to do more of the "important" things they
do that they believe are so vital.
- State bureaucrats see the opportunity for more money to replace the
cuts forced on them by a slow economy. Additionally, they look forward to
having some money to work with mainly urban environmentalists whose agendas
often conflict with the rural supporters of their Agriculture and Fish
& Wildlife agencies.
- State politicians want any extra money that allows them to soften
belt-tightening throughout other state programs.
- Chemical companies smell a bonanza in marketing current products on the
Federal tab.
- Seed companies likewise smell a bonanza marketing "native
seeds" at $3-400 per lb. To replace the better (erosion control, less
maintenance, less snow holding, etc.) roadside plants used today that sell
for a comparative pittance.
- Academics know that millions will be made available annually to
"develop" "biological" controls and
"investigate" ecological minutiae regarding non-natives and
native replacements. This will assure the need for paid testimonies,
speeches, more graduate students, and status that assures tenure and
increased pay and emoluments.
- The Nature Conservancy knows it’s friends in US Fish & Wildlife
Service and it’s members on The Hill (i.e. The US House and Senate) will
assure that Nature Conservancy lands are "improved" "the
firstist with the mostist" as the old saying goes.
- Cattlemen anticipate Federal grazing lands and private pastures will
benefit from increased damage control. However, they are sure to be
disappointed because of the next goal.
- Environmentalist and animal rights radicals are quietly watching like a
pack of wolves from the edge of the forest. Just as with the Endangered
Species Act, after passage they will descend on the agencies and the
courts. Their former employees and other sympathizers in the Federal
agencies will immediately begin to work with them
"telephonically" to write regulations that lay the groundwork for
expansion. Whether it is clean lists or dirty lists, the Federal
jurisdiction will be worded to allow the "right" judge to declare
Federal authority over non-natives either collectively or as the Federal
government names them (like Endangered Species.) Then the fun begins as
they sue to add this species necessary for waterfowl management, or to stop
this water control project because it spreads species XXX. The suits will
be aimed at further restricting access or uses on public lands. They will
aim to stop, disrupt, or make things too difficult to continue hunting,
fishing, trapping, pet ownership, dog or horse use, circus movements,
hiking, bike riding, rural living, logging, ranching, farming, etc. (this
last because new uses of Federal jurisdiction is a continuously evolving
matter.)
- Because of the foregoing point, "environmental lawyers" may
also look forward to salary and career enhancements of significant
magnitude.
There are some others like the Advisory Committees that will provide
employment for retired politicians and their friends and relatives but
space is limited.
All for what? To allow states to sell their Constitutional
responsibilities for some Federal dollars? For favored
"landowners" to get Federal money to make their property more
valuable when they sell it? For bureaucrats and academics to obtain more
security and pay? For Federal land managers to continue the fiction that
state exist around Federal properties rather than that Federal properties
exist within states? For environmentalists and animal rights radicals to
further their agendas? Today, states should continue to meet their
Constitutional responsibilities to manage damage from plants and animals in
their states. Private landowners should be encouraged by state authorities
to do what they can to minimize damages or to cooperate with state programs
designed to do so. Research at state Universities can be developed and
shared in concert with other states with similar issues. Control agents
from introduced flies for purple loosestrife to effective chemicals to
suppress fire ants near residences should be made available under more
responsible Federal regulations that serve only as impediments today.
Federalizing all of this won’t change the basics. Throwing Federal money
at it won’t make things better (remember the Endangered Species Act).
Federal responsibilities involve import, export, and interstate commerce
– not vilification and management of whatever species serves someone’s
nefarious purpose.
The worst results of these Federalizing proposals will be covered in the
next part, The Unintended Consequences. The subsequent article, What Must
Be Done will conclude this series. The effects of these proposals, added to
previous jurisdiction assumptions by the Federal government from the
Endangered Species Act and the Marine Mammal Protection Act to the Animal
Welfare Act, are a steady diminishment of the system of government that
made this country the greatest in the world. Part 8 will discuss this
issue. |