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238 lines
9.5 KiB
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238 lines
9.5 KiB
Plaintext
COUNTING ANIMALS, ONE BY ONE
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Will Babbitt's Bio Survey Violate Property Rights?
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By Charles Oliver
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In Los Angeles
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Investor's Business Daily
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October 22, 1993, Page 1
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========================================================================
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"Essentially, what they are proposing is that the government permanently
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keep track of almost every living thing in the United State. That isn't
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physically possible."
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Robert Gordon, Executive Director of the National Wildlife Institute.
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========================================================================
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Have you every wondered how many living things ther are in the U.S.?
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How many plants and animals -- trees, squirrels, cockroaches, etc. --
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share our homeland?
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There are perhaps 500,000 species in the U.S., and there are easily
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billions of living creatures. No one knows for sure how many.
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But if Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt has his way, we may one day
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know. Not soon, certainly, but eventually.
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Later this year, after Congress approves its final budget, the Interior
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Department will begin the National Biological Survey, an ambitious, some
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say impossible, attempt to catalog every nonhuman living organism in the
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U.S. The plan excludes only bacteria and other microorganisms.
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That mammoth undertaking has already generated quite a bit of
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controversy.
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Babbitt claims that the survey will both enrich our stock of knowledge
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of the natural world and make application of the nation's environmental
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laws more efficient.
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But critics of the survey worry about that second point. They fear
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that, in order to conduct the survey, government researchers may invade
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the privacy of private citizens.
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And they also are concerned that the data generated by the survey will
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make it easier for the federal goverment to take away the property
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rights of landowners under the guise of environmental protection.
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The National Biological Survey has sometimes been referred to as
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an enviromental census.
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But that label may not be quite right.
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The survey will not be a singular event or even a recurring count taking
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place evey 10 years like the census that counts the number of persons in
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the U.S.
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Rather, the more correct analogy would be to the National Geological
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Survey. Just as the geological survey is an ongoing effort to provide
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ever more acurate maps of the nation's natural resources, the biological
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survey will, its backers hope, be a perpetual effort to map the nation's
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ecosystems.
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Hope is the key word. The survey will be funded as an administrative
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effort of the Interior Department, operating at the discretion of the
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secretary.
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A bill that would make the survey a permanent federal agency with a
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presidentially appointed head was approved by the House of
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Representatives earlier this month. But the Senate is unlikely to act
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on the proposal until next year.
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Babbitt has indicated that he considers the survey possibly to be the
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most important program that he will initiate.
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Some in the environmental community agree.
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"Everyone stands to benefit from a more coordinated, more complete
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database," said David Wilcove, senior ecologist at the Environmental
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Defense Fund.
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"We will get a much better picture of which species are in decline and
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which are not," he said.
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"We'll be more able to devote resourses to those that are endangered and
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we can do so at an earlier stage when we have more options."
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The survey will begin with a budget of about $170 million and 1,700
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employees. The bulk of its funding and most of its employees will come
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from absorbing existing research projects from various Interior
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Department agencies.
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The first stage of the survey will involve compling and analyzing the
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data already collected by the federal government, state governments,
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universities and other private researchers and preparing a preliminary
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inventory of living things in the U.S.
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But eventually, the project will expand to count every organism on all
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U.S. public and private lands.
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With only one researcher for every 300 species, survey officials say
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they will have to rely upon outside sources -- universities, state
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agencies and various other think tanks -- for much of the actual
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legwork.
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Still, the task remains daunting.
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"We can't begin to overestimate the enormity of this project," said
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Robert Gordon, executive director of the National Wilderness Institute.
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Gordon contends that whatever data are gathered will be snapshots of
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particular moments in time -- not a comprehensive, good-for-all-time
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census.
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"The number of a given species in a given area is constantly changing.
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It's influenced by so many different things -- the weather, the presence
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of species that feed upon it or that it feeds upon. Point data are
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meaningless; what counts is direction," said Gordon.
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ONGOING EFFORT
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But that, say the survey's supporters, is exactly why it should be an
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ongoing effort, not a one-time count.
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"Essentially, what they are proposing is that the government permanently
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keep track of almost every living thing in the United States. That
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isn't physically possible," Gordon said.
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The EDF's Wilcove concedes that it will be "a long, long time before we
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have an accurate inventory of every plant and animal."
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"But we'll be learning more and more about more and more species as we
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go along, and that will be enormously helpful. Information can be
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significant, even when it isn't complete," Wilcove said.
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Opponents of the survey worry about what that information will be used
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for.
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"A lot of people are concerned that the survey will be used as a cover
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for national land-use planning," said Ike Sugg, an environmental analyst
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at the Competitive Enterprise Institute.
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Not so, said Trudy Harlow, a spokesperson for the Interior Department.
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"The survey is nonadvocacy and nonregulatory. All it will do is collect
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information.," she said.
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REGUALTION NIGHTMARE?
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But even something as benign as information is generated within a
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context, says Robert Gordon.
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"And the context of the national Biological Survey is a vast array of
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federal environmental rules -- the Endangered Species Act, wetlands
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regulations, the national Natural Landmark Program and other rules. The
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survey is obviously intended to strengthen the enforcement of such
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regualtions," Gordon said.
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"Ignorance isn't a tool," countered David Wilcove. "The survey is
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taking a lot of heat from people upset with the nation's environmental
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laws. But if those laws are their real concern, they should address
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those laws and try to change what they think is wrong with them, not
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attack information gathering."
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In any event, Babbitt and the survey's supporters say, there's no reason
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to suppose that the survey will lead to greater environmental regulation
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until the data are collected.
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In fact, they say, the data could lead to a relaxation of environmental
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rules in some cases.
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"It's certainly possible that we could learn that more species are
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endangered than we thought and that they need protection, but it's also
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possible that we could learn that some species aren't in as much trouble
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as we thought," Wilcove said.
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COUNTERING CRITICS' SUSPICIONS
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But the suspicions of the survey's opponents were strengthed by two
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suggestions made by Interior Secretary Babbitt.
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The first was that the survey be exempt from the Freedom of Information
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Act. The second was that those collecting data for the survey not have
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to get written permission from private property owners before venturing
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onto their lands.
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Interior's Harlow says Babbitt's intent isn't secrecy at all costs.
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"We want an exemption from the Freedom of Information Act simply because
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it's difficult to protect a very limited species if people know where it
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is," Harlow said.
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"For example, if we announced that the last few members of, say, a given
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species of cactus could be found in a certain location, someone would
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try to dig them up. We wanted to prevent those kinds of situations,"
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harlow said.
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And the survey has no plans to violate anyone's property rights, she
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contends.
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"We would abide by the same requirements that other researchers must,
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and that's oral permission of landowners," Harlow said.
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TRACKING SPECIES
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"Tracking some species can involve crossing numerous parcels of land. I
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know of one case in which researchers tracking a parrot species had to
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cross 1,500 (individual private) parcels," she said.
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"If you tell people what you want, they'll usually give you permission
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and the work can be done quickly," she added. "But having to get
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written persmission fromeach and every property owner would slow things
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down too much."
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Earlier this month, a bill that would make the National Biological
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Survey a permanent federal agency came to the floor of the House, where
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members succeeded in adding several amendments addressing landowners'
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fears.
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One amendment requires the survey to catalog all federal lands before
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looking at private property.
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Another requires researchers to get written permission from landowners
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before surveying private property.
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And a third amenment forbids the survey from using volunteers to collect
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field data on private lands.
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While these amendments made the bill more palatable to those concerned
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about protecting property rights -- enough so that it passed in teh
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House -- they don't completely allay their fears.
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Critics of the survey point out that they still have no idea what the
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Senate version of the bill -- or more important the final law -- will
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look like. It may not incorporate the protections placed in the House
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bill.
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Moreover, their central concern -- that the data gathered by the
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National Biological Survey will be used as the basis for further
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restrictions on private property -- cannot be remedied by anything short
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of defunding the survey.
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