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Cousin Eddie goes to Washington (and Lansing, Madison, Columbus, ….)

Monday, July 18th, 2011

Takin' care of business, Cousin Eddie style.

National Lampoon’s “Vacation” series from Warner Brothers Pictures is vintage comedy that only National Lampoon could create.*   Perhaps the best (certainly the most memorable) caricature in the Vacation saga is   Cousin Eddie Johnson (played by Randy Quaid), a big, loveable, rough, simple, uncultured, unlucky bastard who bungles his way through life blissfully unaware that he is unaware of anything.  In Christmas Vacation ** Cousin Eddie arrives unannounced at the Griswold’s suburban home in a vintage (okay, old, beat up) motorhome, and comedy ensues.  Early on Christmas morning Chevy Chase’s character, Clark Griswold, steps out to get the paper and is soon joined on the front porch by his lovely wife Ellen, played by Beverly D’Angelo.

Ellen: What are you looking at?
Clark: Oh, the silent majesty of a winter’s morn… the clean, cool chill of the holiday air… an asshole in his bathrobe, emptying a chemical toilet into my sewer…
[Eddie, in the driveway, is draining the RV's toilet]
Eddie: Shitter was full.
Clark: Ah, yeah. You checked our shitters, honey?
Ellen: Clark, please. He doesn’t know any better.
Clark: He oughta know it’s illegal. That’s a storm sewer. If it fills with gas, I pity the person who lights a match within ten yards of it.

Classic!  Hilarious!

Who’s got the remote?  Fast forward 21 years.

In 2010 Cousin Eddie has become just a little bitter.  He’s become convinced by the boys he drinks beers with, Rush Limbaugh, and Fox News that a bunch of “over-educated idiots” somehow ended up running things.  Their thinking is that these eggheads have implemented a bunch of stupid rules and laws based on “science” that are really just designed to keep him and people like him down, over-tax Real Americans, kill business, and to teach his kids and grand-kids to be liberal eggheads, too.

So Eddie joins the Tea Party, a group of people just like him (except for all the oil millionaires, Wall Street Bankers, Fortune 500 CEOs, and the like.) to fight for the Founding Father’s Ideals – like lowering taxes in order to starve the evil federal government, privatizing education, breaking unions, relaxing regulations for the banking, energy and manufacturing sectors and instead relying on the honorable men and women in these industries practicing “personal responsibility” and “doing the right thing.”  These are all principles that Eddie has supported his entire life, he just needed Rupert Murdoch to come along and point that out to him.

Not only did Eddie join the Tea Party, they convinced him he was just the man to run for public office in these dark times, bankrolled his campaign, and he got his-self elected to public office!  Actually, a whole bunch of Eddies got elected to state and federal office in 2010.  At first they were worried that writing legislation would be a lot like homework, but to their happy surprise they found that they can just copy legislation already written by the smart people at the American Legislative Exchange Council, or ALEC.  (Hey!  Whata ya know?  It IS just like homework!)

The Nation’s John Nichols writes in a piece called “ALEC Exposed“,

Founded in 1973 by Paul Weyrich and other conservative activists frustrated by recent electoral setbacks, ALEC is a critical arm of the right-wing network of policy shops that, with infusions of corporate cash, has evolved to shape American politics. Inspired by Milton Friedman’s call for conservatives to “develop alternatives to existing policies [and] keep them alive and available,” ALEC’s model legislation reflects long-term goals: downsizing government, removing regulations on corporations and making it harder to hold the economically and politically powerful to account. Corporate donors retain veto power over the language, which is developed by the secretive task forces. The task forces cover issues from education to health policy. ALEC’s priorities for the 2011 session included bills to privatize education, break unions, deregulate major industries, pass voter ID laws and more. In states across the country they succeeded, with stacks of new laws signed by GOP governors like Ohio’s John Kasich and Wisconsin’s Scott Walker, both ALEC alums.

Among the primary targets of the new Eddies in Michigan and at the federal level is removing cumbersome environmental regulations that slow the speed of development and new construction or major renovation for roads, factories, mines, oil and gas wells, pipelines, and other power transmission corridors.

However,  The National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), The Clean Air Act of 1970 (CAA), and the Clean Water Act of 1972 (CWA) were all adopted, in large part, to slow the speed of new construction or major renovation for roads, factories, mines, oil and gas wells, pipelines, and other power transmission corridors!  That was one of the primary  goals of environmental regulation.  To turn off the bulldozers and  provide adequate  time for regulators, concerned citizens, neighbors, and other interested parties to comment and study the potential impacts – both planned and unforeseen – of the proposed work in a logical, organized way so that a sound recommendation could be made to permitting entities and political units BEFORE the whatsit is built.  These laws were passed after the Love Canal toxic waste dump was exposed, the Santa Barbara oil spill was daily TV for weeks in 1969,  Lake Erie was declared dead, some rivers caught on fire (including Detroit’s Rouge River),  and our national symbol nearly became extinct in the lower 48.  These events and more like them made it pretty clear to nearly all Americans that if we left environmental review and enforcement up to the individual states, local political pressure would trump the common good and the situation would continue status quo.

Just for fun, here’s a quote from Fred L. Hartley, then president of the Union Oil Co., who owned and operated the well that blew-out off of the California coast coating miles of California beaches with tar and killing seals, dolphins, whales, birds, and assorted marine life.

“I don’t like to call it a disaster, because there has been no loss of human life.  I am amazed at the publicity for the loss of a few birds.” 

Isn’t that cute?  But it is illustrative of the mind set then.  There was man, and there was nature.  If nature got in man’s way, nature had to go.  Unfortunately, “They’re baaack!”

Right now a very worrisome series of events are taking place, seemingly in concert.  These include the US House of Representatives passing H.R. 2018 – The Clean Water Cooperative Federalism Act of 2011, by a 239-184 vote.  (Just 16 Democrats supported the bill, and only 13 Republicans voted against it.)  H.R. 2018 would gut the Clean Water Act and, as the EPA said in their analysis of H.R. 2018, “The bill would overturn almost 40 years of Federal legislation by preventing EPA from protecting public health and water quality.”  You can read the details yourself in the Library of Congress site on-line here.

In Michigan Senate Bill 272 was passed along party lines in May.  If this becomes law it would require, in part, that no state rule shall be more stringent than an applicable federal rule, and that agencies adopting rules that might cost small business money should exempt small businesses from the rule.  Does this mean that if a giant corporation wanted to get rid of a thousand drums of toxic sludge it could farm the job out to a small business who could then just pour the drums out into a stream, because as a small business they are not regulated?

Yeah, I don’t know either.

The combined impact of these laws would be disastrous for Michigan and the Great Lakes.  If the federal EPA is not allowed to enforce the CWA or force states to do so, and the state agencies in Michigan are prohibited from doing anything more stringent than that, what happens to the people and natural resources of Michigan and the entire Great Lakes region?

If the Eddies get their way, we’re all headed back to 1969.

                                   

* “Lampoon” as a verb means to ridicule or make fun of, and is the opposite of “applaud,” approve,” praise” or “support. ” As a noun it means parody or satire, both of which require that you have to start with something real that we understand in order for the lampoon to work.  (See Swift, JonatonA Modest Proposal)

** Christmas Vacation.  Dir. Jeremiah S. Chechik. Perf. Chevy Chase, Beverly D’Angelo and Randy Quaid. Warner Bros. Pictures, 1989.

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Great Lakes Freighters, Environmental Quality, and Protectionist Policies

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

Public Domain Photo from NOAA Archives

There are two types of commercial freighters that use the Great Lakes for moving bulk goods like iron ore, crushed limestone, and grain.  Salties, or the ships that come down the Saint Lawrence Seaway from the Atlantic Ocean; and Lakers, which are properly called boats and spend their working lives entirely in the Great Lakes.  (You can learn more about them at BoatNerd.com.)

In a post in 2009 titled, Just How Dirty Are Great Lakes Freighters? , I talked about the air pollution problems of Great Lakes Freighters.  Emissions of sulphur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) were addressed by US and Canadian governments for the Salties recently, but many of the Lakers were given a pass.  Ironically, the Salties already had cleaner burning power plants, and are by and large a newer fleet for a couple of reasons.

  1. The more straightforward reason is simply that fresh water isn’t as corrosive as salt water, so metal lasts longer on Lakers.
  2. The less intuitive reason is that it costs a fortune to make changes to a Laker due to cabotage laws.  On the Great Lakes in US waters this is governed by Section 27 of the Merchant Marine Act, 1920, known as the Jones Act.

The Great Lakes Maritime Task Force, (GLMTF) encourages  “Strict adherence to all existing cabotage laws.” in a position paper found here>  In that same paper they describe how the Jones act works.

BACKGROUND: Section 27 of the Merchant Marine Act, 1920 and other laws mandate that all cargo moving between U.S. ports be carried in vessels that are U.S.-owned, -built, and -crewed. Section 27 is generally referred to as the Jones Act. The Passenger Vessel Services Act (PVSA) sets the same requirements for the transport of passengers between U.S. ports. Other statutes apply the same ground rules to towing, dredging and salvage in U.S. waters.

They go on to point out that 54 other countries, including Canada, have cabotage laws.

This was an issue addressed by Congress in the late 1700′s, so it’s been on the books in one way or another for a long time.  But why do we need a protectionist law of this sweeping scope?  Again I’ll let the GLMTF explain that.

BENEFITS TO THE NATION: Total Jones Act commerce routinely tops 1 billion tons and 130 million passengers each year, yet the freight charges total less than 1 percent of the nation’s transportation bill. Nationwide, the Jones Act fleet has more than tripled in size since 1965 to 39,000-plus vessels and has quadrupled its productivity. The cabotage laws further ensure the United States has the ships, skilled mariners, and shipyards needed to supply American troops during a national emergency.

BENEFITS TO GREAT LAKES REGION: The cabotage laws are, first and foremost, guarantees that domestic waterborne commerce is carried in vessels built to the world’s highest safety and environmental protection standards and manned with crews whose skills and expertise are certified by the U.S. Coast Guard. Further, by guaranteeing a level playing field among the various transportation modes, Great Lakes Jones Act operators have been able to assemble the world’s largest and most diverse fleet of self-unloading vessels without one penny of Federal subsidies, either direct or indirect. For example, one iron ore cargo delivered in a 1,000-foot-long Jones Act “Laker” keeps a major steel mill in operation for 4-plus days. A single coal cargo in a 1,000-footer produces enough electricity to power a metropolitan area the size of Greater Detroit for a day.

But I take exception with their assertion that “The cabotage laws are, first and foremost, guarantees that domestic waterborne commerce is carried in vessels built to the world’s highest … environmental protection standards….”  No they’re not!  They are air pollution nightmares!

The EPA proposed designating the entire Great Lakes region as an Emmisions Control Area (ECA) because our air quality sucks in several areas and these areas aren’t separated by much distance.  According to the GLMTF

By declaring the Lakes an ECA, the EPA was banning the use of residual fuel on vessels by 2012. (Other users such as greenhouses could continue to use high-sulfur fuel.) This meant that 13 U.S.-Flag Lakers that carried 19 million tons of cargo in 2008 (nearly 20 percent of the U.S.-Flag total for the year) faced extinction. The EPA so misunderstood the realities of the marine industry that it did not know that what it proposed – burning distillate fuel on a steamship – could lead to an explosion and loss of life. The only option available to vessel operators would be converting the steamers to diesels, but that was an expensive proposition – the cost ranges from $15 million to $22 million per vessel – and physically unattainable by the 2012 deadline. The engines on large commercial vessels are all built to order, and the whole re-powering process can take nearly 30 months even if financing can be arranged.

These steamships are among the oldest ships in commercial use today anywhere.  The St. Mary’s Challenger is 115 years old!   So, because the EPA didn’t understand “the realities of the marine industry” these ships were given exemptions in a deal brokered By Congressmen Oberstar and Obey.

I take a different view (surprise!).  I’m disappointed that the owners and operators of the 110 or so Lakers in the Great Lakes Maritime fleet don’t understand the public health and environmental realities of releasing millions of tons of pollutants, including CO2, SO2 and NOx, into the air and waters of the Great Lakes region.  The cost in environmental impacts, human suffering and health care cost will run many millions of dollars beyond the cost of new engines.  But the Lakers’ owners don’t have to pay that bill.

Advocates of the Jones Act say that it is a national security necessity.  But for the shipping industry on the Great Lakes its in the same class of national security imperative as the giant anti-terrorist fences around every rural airport in the country.

The Act stipulates that cabotage be restricted to American Flag vessels, built in America, owned by Americans, and crewed by Americans.  It further requires work on these vessels be done in an American Shipyard.  But hey!  54 other countries (including our neighbor to the north, Canada) have all the same requirements, so we are just following internationally accepted standards.  And Canada is about to launch some new Lakers.

  • Canadian Mariner – built by Chengxi Shipyard of Jiangyin, China and schedule for delivery after April 2011 for Seaway Marine Transport.
  • Equinox Class – a new class of lake freighter (5 ordered from Mingde Shipyard of Nantong, China) and expected to enter service in 2013-2014 for Seaway Marine Transport.   -from Wikipedia

Oops!  Canadian shippers must not realize that when they buy Chinese boats, the Terrorists win.

Still, I understand that given the Jones Act’s requirement for work to be done in an American Shipyard, and the cost that comes with using an American shipyard, it may not be financially realistic to retrofit these old steamers.  But rather than give them pollution exemptions, why not give the ship owners Jones Act waivers and let them buy engines someplace else?  Or, they can cut the steamers up and make tug/barge combinations out of them, as has been done with other obsolete boats.  Or if supporting the national economy, security, and shipyards are more important, buy shiny new boats built in American shipyards to meet 21st century safety and environmental standards, and then cut the old boats up.  Make it a floating “cash for clunkers” initiative.  There isn’t a boatyard in any community in the country that wouldn’t jump for joy at getting that work today.

And while they are at it, build them to treat their ballast water so that they will cease to move alien invasive species (AIS) around within the Great Lakes system.  Because, even though these nasties come in with the salties, and the GLMTF supports requiring foreign salties to treat their ballast water, they oppose requiring Lakers to do the same because, well, the AIS are already in the lakes, and they are going to infest the entire system eventually anyhow, so why should they spend money to forestall the inevitable?

Well, because the lakes are enormous, and it isn’t a foregone conclusion that once an AIS shows up in Cleveland it is going to spread to Chicago and Duluth on its own.  Lakers provide a direct path for AIS from port to port.  They need to stop it and join the fight against the invasives that are choking the life out of the lakes, displacing native species, and costing industry, government, utilities, and private citizens billions of dollars annually.

The Jones Act certainly has some good points, but we can’t let an entire industry hide behind it in order to avoid meeting “…the world’s highest safety and environmental protection standards….”  That was not the reason the Act was adopted.

Clean, abundant freshwater is going to become increasingly valuable as it becomes more rare globally.  Soon having the largest pool of freshwater on the planet will be much more important to our national health and security than protecting a handful of old boats, no matter how cool they are.  But we must protect that water now, while we still can.  We can only do that by protecting or restoring the Great Lakes ecosystem, and that requires we eliminate threats to that ecosystem first.  It shouldn’t matter if those threats are land or water based, they all need to be addressed sooner rather than later.

That is a matter of national security of the most basic kind.

 

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Great Lakes Restoration Initiative Feedback

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

Here are my recommendations to the GLRI folks.  You can give them your ideas at http://greatlakesrestoration.us

  • Construct wetlands to filter run-off and address water quality issues from urban and agricultural areas.  Use remediated brownfield sites where possible.
  • Develop and implement a comprehensive restoration plan for coaster brook trout throughout their historical range (not just Lake Superior).
  • Thoroughly regulate the practice of Hydraulic Fracturing in minerals extraction to eliminate both water quality and withdraw quantity issues, and to protect the public’s health, safety and property.
  • Work to prohibit metallic sulfide mining near waters tributary to the great lakes.  The lakes have no buffering capabilities and leachate washing into the lakes will have devastating effects.
  • Develop ballast water discharge and invasive species regulations with real teeth. Develop comprehensive control and eradication plans for invasive alien species in the great lakes.  Yes this is a huge job and will cost well into the billions of dollars.  Shoulda regulated ballast water and planned for invasion through the Welland canal.  Too late to go back and do that, and we do not accept “Woops!”  as an acceptable response.  RESTORE the lakes.  Don’t just work on them, FIX THEM!

I don’t know if anybody is going to read these things, or if they are like the old cartoon of the office suggestion box with a pretty sign and mail-slot on one side of the wall and a paper shredder on the other.

It is such a joke that they are making all this hoopla about a couple hundred million dollars when the task will run into the hundreds of BILLIONS at the least.  (Too bad the Great Lakes aren’t as important as Iraq to the well being of our nation, eh?)

If the federal government were a dog owner and the Lakes their dog, it would be as if they refused to feed us or take us to the vet, let us suffer with poisonings and parasites of all kinds, kicked us whenever they felt like it, and let their friends treat us as poorly as they pleased.  Then they throw us a Milk Bone from time to time and expect us to be satisfied and the ASPCA to leave them alone.

What jerks.

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“You can’t always get what you want.”

Monday, May 17th, 2010

To paraphrase Sir Mick,

You can’t always get what you want.
But if you try sometime, you just might find,
You get what you measure.

If you are going to change something, build something, or fix something it sure helps if at the beginning of the enterprise you have a good idea of what the desired outcome is beyond simply different or “better.”  Today we commonly refer to these as “metrics,” (we’ve never used them since the Carter administration, might as well recycle the word.)  These are measurable benchmarks that let you know how your effort is going, and they don’t have to be fancy or esoteric.

However, “TBD” (to be determined), “Unknown,” and “XXX” aren’t really good metrics, and in the case of the most recent draft I have read of the The Great Lakes Multi-year Restoration Action Plan suggest to me that there was either not a consensus or not enough resources were brought to bear on the problem.  It could also be that the metrics were developed but the authors felt silly writing them down, or didn’t want to appear greedy, or knew that it wouldn’t fly with their bosses.  I don’t know.

I do know that unless you have quantifiable goals (Dang!  I’m sounding like an engineer.  That scares me!) and a road map for achieving those goals you are going to waste time and money just tinkering.  Any success is going to be fortuitous.  We don’t have the time or money to rely on fortune, because there is any number of problems in view now and just over the horizon that keep putting us further behind environmentally.  There is no shortage of plans for commercial and municipal uses for the Great Lakes’ resources and there needs to be a well designed (and well funded) solution for answering each of these.

It is easy to pay lip service to Great Lakes restoration.  But without adequate money and human resources for planning and implementation it will not be successful.  Chesapeake Bay and The Everglades have received a lot more attention and money than the Great Lakes have, and they still have  problems, as  Gary Wilson has pointed out over at The Great Lakes Town Hall.

I was involved in government long enough to understand that one way to diffuse an angry mob is to make a grand promise; based on future revenues.  Then you are “listening to your constituents,” but not really committing to doing anything to stop the wheels of commerce or shine a light on a problem you don’t want to think about.  That the funding is going to remediate an important problem, and will create a gazillion jobs in the process isn’t seen as important.

An example is the Land and Water Conservation Fund Act of 1965,  passed “to stimulate a nationwide action program to assist in preserving, developing, and assuring to all citizens of the United States of present and future generations such quality and quantity of outdoor recreation resources as may be available and are necessary and desirable for individual active participation.”  But there is no requirement to expend funds beyond what congress feels like in a given year.  Its primary source of funding is the off-shore oil revenues collected by MMS, and has an annual funding cap of $900 million, but has only reached that cap twice in 45 years.  Usually, it gets a few bucks and the federal side gets pork barreled and the state side is not worth fighting over.  To date it has provided $3.7 billion, but had it put up the $900 Million annually as originally envisioned by the parks and conservation constituencies it would have provided $40.5 Billion by now.  It isn’t that the outer continental shelf doesn’t provide enough oil revenue to fully fund this program; it’s just that for congress, it isn’t a priority.

So we need the best planning possible, which isn’t going to help without a reliable funding stream. To date we have not seen significant funds being devoted to the Lakes Ecosystem.  We are just handed a few bucks and told that we should, “endeavor to persevere.”

We deserve, and must demand, better.

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