"The Threatened 13"
"The Threatened 13" are The Wilderness Society’s list of worst budget cuts proposed by House leadership. That list includes:
1.Eliminating the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF). According to the Department of Interior’s budget brief for 2012, the $675 million that it requested for public land conservation “will contribute an estimated $1.0 billion in economic output and support about 7,600 jobs … Activities funded under the LWCF will continue to ensure public access to the outdoors, preserve natural resources and landscapes, and protect irreplaceable cultural and historic sites.”
2.Stopping science in its tracks. Driven by radical ideology, not proven facts, the House majority has decided to deny the existence of global warming by eliminating funding for climate change science. The legislation would cut at least $123 million for climate research -- funding needed to assess our vulnerability to climate disruptions and to develop the tools needed to adapt to climate extremes.
3.Eliminating forest planning that keeps the damage caused by offroad recreational vehicles under control. This impairs public safety for all national forest users and threatens drinking water resources, big game species, and other key resources.
4.Eliminating the EPA’s authority to hold polluters accountable when they foul our air and poison our water.
5.Closing National Parks and Wildlife Refuges.
6.Cutting back on forest rangers, youth outdoor education, and law enforcement.
7.Limiting access to hunting and fishing – slashing the local jobs those activities create. Putting off maintenance projects, fighting invasive plants, restoration work, timber cutting, and managing wildfire.
8.Putting off maintenance projects, fighting invasive plants, restoration work, timber cutting, and managing wildfire.
9.Preventing federal agencies from moving forward with their responsibility to protect wild lands, wildlife habitat, and watersheds.
10.Eliminating the Department of Interior’s ability to inventory, monitor and protect potential new Wild Lands (Wilderness areas).
11.Failure to adequately fund the Legacy Roads and Trails Remediation Program, which would threaten drinking water supplied to 66 million people. The cut could also eliminate up to 2,500 jobs. The program funds road and trail improvements, maintenance work and road removal projects that improve the health of local watersheds.
12.Revoking the President’s ability to keep our wild places safe by using the Antiquities Act, which has protected iconic places like the Grand Canyon.
13.Weakening of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). NEPA is the most important conservation law that ensures that federal agencies take a careful look at the effects of their actions on the environment and that the public has an opportunity to provide input and information to federal decision makers. Without NEPA, the public’s ability to protect their communities would be largely silenced.
“Congress shouldn’t take the budget axe to our favorite lands,” Rowsome said. “These lands protect our supplies of clean drinking water, provide places for us to get outdoors and save habitats for all kinds of wildlife. They deserve all the protection we can give them.”
1.Eliminating the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF). According to the Department of Interior’s budget brief for 2012, the $675 million that it requested for public land conservation “will contribute an estimated $1.0 billion in economic output and support about 7,600 jobs … Activities funded under the LWCF will continue to ensure public access to the outdoors, preserve natural resources and landscapes, and protect irreplaceable cultural and historic sites.”
2.Stopping science in its tracks. Driven by radical ideology, not proven facts, the House majority has decided to deny the existence of global warming by eliminating funding for climate change science. The legislation would cut at least $123 million for climate research -- funding needed to assess our vulnerability to climate disruptions and to develop the tools needed to adapt to climate extremes.
3.Eliminating forest planning that keeps the damage caused by offroad recreational vehicles under control. This impairs public safety for all national forest users and threatens drinking water resources, big game species, and other key resources.
4.Eliminating the EPA’s authority to hold polluters accountable when they foul our air and poison our water.
5.Closing National Parks and Wildlife Refuges.
6.Cutting back on forest rangers, youth outdoor education, and law enforcement.
7.Limiting access to hunting and fishing – slashing the local jobs those activities create. Putting off maintenance projects, fighting invasive plants, restoration work, timber cutting, and managing wildfire.
8.Putting off maintenance projects, fighting invasive plants, restoration work, timber cutting, and managing wildfire.
9.Preventing federal agencies from moving forward with their responsibility to protect wild lands, wildlife habitat, and watersheds.
10.Eliminating the Department of Interior’s ability to inventory, monitor and protect potential new Wild Lands (Wilderness areas).
11.Failure to adequately fund the Legacy Roads and Trails Remediation Program, which would threaten drinking water supplied to 66 million people. The cut could also eliminate up to 2,500 jobs. The program funds road and trail improvements, maintenance work and road removal projects that improve the health of local watersheds.
12.Revoking the President’s ability to keep our wild places safe by using the Antiquities Act, which has protected iconic places like the Grand Canyon.
13.Weakening of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). NEPA is the most important conservation law that ensures that federal agencies take a careful look at the effects of their actions on the environment and that the public has an opportunity to provide input and information to federal decision makers. Without NEPA, the public’s ability to protect their communities would be largely silenced.
“Congress shouldn’t take the budget axe to our favorite lands,” Rowsome said. “These lands protect our supplies of clean drinking water, provide places for us to get outdoors and save habitats for all kinds of wildlife. They deserve all the protection we can give them.”
Labels: The Wilderness Society’s list of worst budget cuts proposed by House leadership The Threatened 13
1 Comments:
Dear Kevin,
Your representative is voting TODAY on cuts to the environment!
Make sure they oppose these dangerous attacks: send a letter NOW.
Hurry – there's no time to lose!
Yesterday, the House voted to cut billions from essential environmental programs – and today they will vote on even more aggressive attacks on the environment.
Your representative will be voting today on proposals that would prevent the EPA from regulating greenhouse gas emissions, offshore drilling permits, and mountaintop mining removal.
Tell your representative to vote NO on environmental attacks today - send them a letter NOW!
These are some of the biggest energy and environmental policy votes in years – and they're following on the heels of yesterday's votes to slash billions from programs that will protect our environment and our health. In addition to the $3 billion in cuts to the EPA already passed, the House is considering completely defunding key research and climate programs.
The EPA has saved millions of lives over the past 40 years through protections to our health. These cuts are coming from pollution-friendly politicians influenced by Big Oil and Coal, and are not being made with the interests of the American public at heart.
If they succeed, we will be vulnerable to dirtier air, toxic water, and irreversible damage to the environment. But the attacks could work unless we take a stand now.
Make sure your representative knows that attacks to the environment are dangerous and unacceptable: send them your letter before they vote on more cuts today.
Yesterday's cuts clearly demonstrate that the new Republican majority is doing everything in their power to clear the way for Big Oil and Coal - making our efforts to protect the environment more important than ever.
Thanks for your help and support.
Sincerely,
Mike Town
Director, SaveOurEnvironment.org
info@saveourenvironment.org
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