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by Arcturus
x/p'd from Constellations
Streams and mountains never stay the same. (Gary Snyder, from Mountains and Rivers Without End, 1996)
Judge Karlton, who presided over the lengthy litigation, is a classic old school 'liberal' judge, not shy of controversial, bold rulings. Not too long ago, he infuriated the O'Reilly/FreeRepublic crowd by ruling that school district policies requiring kids to pledge allegiance under god violate the Establishment Clause separating church and state. A 2004 settlement allowed "over 150,000 undocumented immigrants to apply for legal resident status under a one-time amnesty program that became law in 1986" -- applicants the INS had turned away by invoking a "rule that disqualified those who had briefly traveled abroad during the period of required residence for the amnesty."
Karlton's ruling on the San Joaquin last August forced the government, valley agri-business (colloquially known as "farmers" in most reports), environmentalists, & fishermen to sit down together and hammer out a restoration plan for the river. "The judge said he had a meat cleaver to deal with the issue. He advised us to apply a scalpel -- a negotiated settlement. And we agreed with him." Kole Upton, "chairman of the Friant Water Users Authority and a San Joaquin Valley farmer." Chinatown memorialized the death of the Owens River which remains a trickle of its old self; the San Joaquin is a waterway of much greater magnitude. It headwaters in some of the High Sierra's most spectacular terrain, runs 350 miles to the Golden Gate, and could once accomodate steam paddleboats. The proposed settlement agreement awaits the judge's approval, while "[c]oncurrently, the parties are seeking congressional approval of legislation authorizing the Secretaries of Interior and Commerce to implement the settlement. A draft of this authorizing legislation was negotiated by the parties and incorporated into the settlement." The 18 year old court battle started when the:
NRDC led a coalition of 13 conservation and fishing groups in suing the bureau over its operation of the federally-owned dam and the renewal of water supply contracts for the Friant Water Users Authority, which represents irrigation districts on the east side of the San Joaquin Valley. The suit charged the bureau with violating Section 5937 of the California Fish and Game Code, which requires that "[t]he owner of any dam shall allow sufficient water to pass over, around or through the dam, to keep in good condition any fish that may be planted or exist below the dam." The lawsuit was first filed in 1988, making it one of California's longest running water disputes. [snip] "'One reason that NRDC took on this case and focused so much time and energy on it over the years is because it was one of the most egregious examples of environmental harm caused by a federal water project." Hal Candee, co-director for the NRDC's Western Water Project
major river restoration accord - "salmon heard nightly splashing" | 0 comments (0 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
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