Caribou Gear

Dubya tries to Sneak it Past on Freaky Fridays with the Bush administration

JoseCuervo

New member
Joined
Feb 26, 2003
Messages
9,752
Location
South of the Border
Just so you know what is happening to your Public Lands...

rolleyes.gif
mad.gif
eek.gif
confused.gif


Freaky Fridays with the Bush administration
by Ray Ring

Officials deliver bad news on the environment when no one is listening
On Friday, Oct. 10, the Bush administration made it easier for mining companies to dump tailings on federal land. The timing of the announcement fit what environmental groups call the “Friday Follies.”
“It’s a very effective strategy, a very cynical strategy,” says Rob Perks of the Natural Resources Defense Council in Washington, D.C. “It’s sneaky.”

When the Bush administration does something that’s bad for the environment, it’s often rolled out on a Friday, Perks says. That makes it difficult for news organizations to cover, because reporters and editors are already busy doing work for weekend publication or broadcast. And there is less chance for follow-up coverage, because newsroom staffing is at its thinnest on Saturdays and Sundays.

Administration officials “don’t want (news) coverage,” Perks says. “Friday is always a terrible day for coverage, and the fewest people read newspapers on Saturdays, so (even if a story does get cranked out) fewer people are going to see it.”

Perks’ group has compiled a list of more than 100 environmental policy rollbacks by the administration, and at least 58 have come down either on Fridays or just before holidays.

Examples include the Environmental Protection Agency’s relaxation of “New Source Review” air pollution regulations (two decisions on Fridays in October and November, 2002, then another on New Year’s Eve); the EPA’s reduction of wetlands protection (Friday, Jan. 10); the administration’s settlement of a lawsuit over wilderness in Utah, which opens the door for development (Friday, April 11); and the Department of Energy’s decision to spend billions on new nuclear weapons (Friday, June 6).

“The administration announces policies when they’re ready to be released, no matter what the issue is,” says Jimmy Orr, a White House spokesman.

But journalists see a pattern, too. “It does seem like there have been a lot of big decisions and announcements made not in prime time — late on Fridays, or as holidays approach, or at odd hours, late in (any) afternoon,” says Eric Pianin, a Washington Post reporter who covers the environment. “I don’t think it’s all orchestrated or all intentional, but (sometimes it is), and it forces you to scramble, or perform triage.”


A gift to the mining industry
The administration’s latest “Friday folly” — the rollback on mine tailings — arrived in an Interior Department press conference at 5 p.m. East Coast time, just before the three-day Columbus Day weekend.
The news was leaked to an Associated Press reporter a few hours in advance, so an AP story was available for publication around the country on Saturday. But the news still didn’t get much play. The Los Angeles Times was apparently the only major paper that wrote its own story. The tailings policy grows out of a new interpretation by Interior Department lawyers of the 1872 General Mining Act. In 1997, the Clinton administration’s Interior solicitor, John Leshy, held that the Mining Act limited how much land companies could claim for mill sites: only five acres for every 20 acres mined. The limit was applauded by environmentalists, because modern mill sites typically include massive tailings piles, machinery, roads and power stations.

But in 1999, industry complaints about that limit prompted its allies in Congress to exempt existing mines, through a rider attached to a bill for the Kosovo war and Honduran hurricane victims (HCN, 6/7/99: Miners sneak a rider onto an appropriation for war). The Oct. 10 announcement goes much further: Roderick Walston, Interior’s current deputy solicitor, says the Mining Act does not limit mill sites for new mines, either. Assistant Secretary of the Interior Rebecca Watson, a former industry lobbyist, says the change will likely encourage mining exploration. “It’s not a rollback of environmental regulations,” says Russ Fields, president of the Nevada Mining Association, because mines must still satisfy federal and state pollution laws.

But environmental groups say the change will allow giant mines to get even bigger. “Now, if a new mine wants 100 acres or 1,000 acres (for tailings and milling), they can have it,” says Lexi Shultz of the Mineral Policy Center.

As for the timing of the announcement, the Interior Department says it was orchestrated by Democratic Sen. Harry Reid and Republican Rep. Jim Gibbons, both from the mining state of Nevada. But the Friday pattern continued uninterrupted: The next Friday, Oct. 17, the Environmental Protection Agency announced that it won’t regulate potentially toxic dioxin compounds in sewage sludge used as as farm fertilizer. And on Friday, Oct. 24, Interior’s opinion on tailings was entered into the Federal Register, closing off any chance for public comment.

“This administration believes the less information the public has, the better,” Perks says. “Every Friday is Friday the 13th with the Bush administration.”
 
Environment aside, the accusation regarding "Freaky Fridays" is petty at best. That's one of the older tricks in the book and has been practiced for years.

The rest, however, is very interesting.
 
Yes, the Clinton administration did the same thing. Bad news or controversial stuff was announced on Friday, often too late for the news media to react in time for the evening broadcasts or Saturday AM papers. As Darren pointed out - it's an old trick and nothing that hasn't been done before.
 
It does my heart good to see some of the restrictions lifted so as to start using some of the natural resources of this great country to the betterment of all, including these hippicrites that are against any extraction at all even though their whole lives are wrapped up in using them so intrinsically that they can't even imagine life with out this stuff!!!
biggrin.gif

It makes me very glad to have some one in the White house that is not going to cow-tow to every little whiny liberal-socialist-communist group that comes along just to get a few votes…
wink.gif
biggrin.gif
 
Yep, I have been falling behind because of work and am trying to get caught up...
I see you had nothing to say!!!
rolleyes.gif
 
Gunner- Mind if I take a run at this one?
No, Bush is far too busy kowtowing to the business community to waste his time with those little "special interest groups"- like the rest of the country.
 
I think you need to run for president...
rolleyes.gif

Then we can change the world and make it a utopia for every one to live in...
tongue.gif
 
Elky,

Yuke is Canadian so he can't run for president. But he already lives in utopia. They have no mines up there, never cut down a tree, few dams, and the hunting and fishing is awesome!

Paul
 
I know where he is from, I was being facetious...
wink.gif

He can't do any thing in his own country because they have been trashing it on a huge scale, and no amount of spouting will fix it, he has to come down here where people will listen to the ranting of the ignorant and let their minds be swayed by such drivel nonsense...
rolleyes.gif
 
Oh, I have little doubt that, in the U.S., people are only too willing to listen to the rantings of the ignorant- look no further than your White House.
As for Canadian politics, believe me, I do what I can- the Liberals are the biggest bunch of losers I've seen since the last RNC (McCain, of course, excluded). At a local level, I'm in the PAC of the Yukon Employees Union, trying to get shit done. Start small, then go large. I've also petitioned against the dumb-assed Gun Control Legislation- not because I think they are trying to take away all our guns (they aren't), but because it's a stupid, ridiculously costly idea. On an International level, why, I've got this little forum right here.
As for our taxes, yep, they are awful high- and totally worth it. Our medical system is second to none, as everyone has an equal crack at it- it's not "the rich come first" like your system.

<FONT COLOR="#800080" SIZE="1">[ 12-14-2003 21:38: Message edited by: Yukon Hunter ]</font>
 

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
113,582
Messages
2,025,906
Members
36,237
Latest member
SCOOTER848
Back
Top