----- forwarded message -----
Date: Sat, 10 Aug 2002 08:45:57 -0500
From: Teresa Binstock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: U.S. Seeks to Limit Conservation Law for Oceans

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/08/10/politics/10NAVY.html

August 10, 2002; NYTimes

U.S. Seeks to Limit Conservation Law

By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE


WASHINGTON, Aug. 9 -- The Bush administration is arguing that a major
environmental law does not apply to the vast majority of oceans under United
States control, a move that environmentalists say could allow military
maneuvers, oil and gas pipelines, commercial fishing, ocean dumping and scores
of other activities to escape public environmental review.

In a federal court case in Los Angeles that involves the testing of a new type
of sonar system by the Navy, the Justice Department said that the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 -- landmark legislation that requires federal
agencies to review the environmental implications of their projects -- did not
apply beyond the nation's territorial waters, which traditionally extend three
miles from shore.

That view is being challenged by the Natural Resources Defense Council, which
asserts that in addition to the territorial waters, the act covers all activity
within the nation's "exclusive economic zone," which extends 200 miles from
shore.

A decision in the case is expected later in the summer.

Environmentalists say that barring application of the act in these zones would
open up the oceans to unregulated activity that could damage them and destroy
marine life.

In addition to the sonar project, which they say could disorient and kill whales
and dolphins, they say other unregulated activity would include commercial
fishing for depleted species, proposals for liquified natural gas plants and
pipelines, and other energy projects.

Offshore oil and gas drilling would not be affected by the administration's
position because another law, the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act,
specifically requires that the environmental law apply to such activity.

At issue is the National Environmental Policy Act, often referred to as the
Magna Carta of environmental law. Signed by President Richard M. Nixon on Jan.
1, 1970, the act requires all federal governmental actions to be reviewed and
analyzed for their effect on the environment.

In an indication of the importance of the matter, the White House Council on
Environmental Quality convened with ranking officials from five agencies and
departments to discuss the implications of the Justice Department's position
both before the department filed its brief and then again this week,
administration officials said. They plan to discuss it further in September.

Administration officials said there was little disagreement at the meeting,
which was first reported today by The Times-Picayune of New Orleans, about the
administration's approach. And the Justice Department has argued in the sonar
case that federal agencies should decide case by case whether to apply the
National Environmental Policy Act in the oceans.

But e-mail messages written before the meeting suggested that officials from the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration disagreed with the Navy.

One message written by a Navy official hailed the "good news" that the Justice
Department agreed with the Navy, "over NOAA objection," that the environmental
law "does NOT extend beyond the limits of our territorial waters."

Administration officials said that the Justice Department position and the
meeting did not represent a change of policy, but environmentalists disagreed.

"This is a major policy change," said Andrew Wetzler, a lawyer with the Natural
Resources Defense Council in Los Angeles. "For the first time, the White House
is considering stepping in and seeking to impose the Navy's restrictive view of
the statute on the entire federal government."

The Navy has long believed that the act does not extend to activities conducted
within the nation's "exclusive economic zone," which stretches 200 miles off all
coastal waters and thus covers more than one million square miles off all
American coasts, including those of Alaska and Hawaii. The Navy appears to be
the driving force behind the Bush administration's discussion of whether to
apply that concept to all federal activity in the zone.

Administration officials believe that the environmental act is too restrictive,
that it spawns nettlesome lawsuits and that most ocean activity is already
regulated by an executive order signed in 1979 by President Jimmy Carter,
according to administration officials and internal e-mail correspondence that
was obtained by environmental groups opposing the administration's view.

Environmental groups assert that the Carter executive order is too weak to
guarantee enforcement. They say it does not provide for lawsuits or public
review, meaning that an array of damaging activities could take place far out at
sea without public knowledge or recourse.

Michael Jasny, a senior policy analyst at the Natural Resources Defense Council
in Los Angeles, said that the National Environmental Policy Act "depends on
public comment and public scrutiny and judicial review for its effectiveness,
and if you do away with it, all of that would be lost -- we'd have no public
accountability" about military and industrial activities in the oceans.

Tim Eichenberg, a lawyer with Oceana, a group in San Francisco dedicated to
preserving the oceans, called the executive order "a very poor cousin" to the
policy act.

"The executive order doesn't provide for public input or any analysis of
alternatives and it doesn't allow for judicial review -- there is no recourse for
the public," he argued.

Administration officials said that their position in the California case did not
represent a change of policy. They said that the National Environmental Policy
Act, signed into law before the United States established its exclusive economic
zones, was never intended to apply to the ocean beyond the territorial waters
and did not apply now.

But an internal Navy document contradicts that view, noting that the Justice
Department and the Council on Environmental Quality in the Clinton
administration "pressed to apply N.E.P.A. worldwide."

Senator John Kerry, the Massachusetts Democrat and chairman of a subcommittee on
oceans and fisheries, issued a statement saying: "I am incredulous that the Bush
administration may actually be considering rolling back central environmental
protections of our oceans and marine environment. The National Environmental
Policy Act is the cornerstone of protection for our citizens and natural
resources -- and new limits on the law would have profound impacts on coastal
issues from fisheries management to marine protection to ocean dumping."

Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company


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