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- <text id=91TT2565>
- <title>
- Nov. 18, 1991: Gobbling Up the Land
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 18, 1991 California:The Endangered Dream
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 83
- CALIFORNIA
- Gobbling Up The Land
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Making room for a stream of new arrivals has pushed nature to
- the wall
- </p>
- <p>By Eugene Linden--With reporting by Jeanne McDowell/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> The California gnatcatcher, a warbler-like songbird,
- nests along the coastal sage land in Southern California's
- Orange County, which happens to be some of the most expensive
- real estate on earth. Last July, when the state fish and game
- commission announced that it would consider listing the
- gnatcatcher as an endangered species, developers bulldozed
- hundreds of acres of the birds' remaining habitat so that the
- land would be exempt from any future protection. In September
- the fish and game commission, bowing to construction-industry
- arguments that protecting the gnatcatcher would cost the state
- $20 billion and 200,000 jobs, decided not to list the bird.
- Environmentalists hope the Federal Government may yet do so.
- </p>
- <p> So went the latest chapter in the often brutal conflict
- between development and protection of the environment in the
- increasingly tarnished Golden State. California leads the nation
- with 283 endangered, threatened or rare species, but despite
- various state and federal forms of protection, two-thirds of
- these species continue to decline.
- </p>
- <p> This destruction is occurring despite a concerted effort
- to prevent it. In the past 25 years, nearly 90% of the state's
- communities have imposed some form of restraint on growth, but
- urban and suburban subdivisions keep sprawling. The legislature
- passed laws in 1973 to ensure sustainable management of the
- forests, but timber companies have replanted new species
- instead of maintaining existing forests and have cut too often
- to permit the forest to regenerate itself. And though Los
- Angeles has made progress against smog, air quality has
- plummeted in other parts of the state.
- </p>
- <p> Frustrated with the legislature's inability--or
- unwillingness--to get the job done, citizens have passed
- ballot initiatives to protect the 1,100-mile coastline,
- establish a fund to buy habitat for mountain lions, and
- authorize a bond issue to provide funding for parks and wildlife
- habitat. But enforcement of these laws has been so ineffectual
- that some enviros (as they are called in California) have turned
- to the courts, suing to protect the delta smelt, salmon and
- other species. More radical groups like Earth First! resort to
- direct action: blockading logging sites and driving spikes into
- redwoods so that they will be dangerous to cut.
- </p>
- <p> Now the conflict over diminishing resources is scrambling
- the political map of California. Traditional allies such as
- agriculture and big developers frequently find themselves at
- odds. Some environmental groups have aligned with cities against
- agricultural interests to try to break big farmers' stranglehold
- on water supplies. Others have joined forces with surfers to
- fight pollution from pulp-paper mills and with commercial
- fisherman to end logging practices that destroy watersheds.
- </p>
- <p> As an unending tide of new arrivals pushes nature to the
- wall, California is awash with experiments to preserve its
- stunning natural heritage. The Wilson administration wants to
- establish regional councils that would draw representatives from
- all interests with a stake in an area in order to reach a
- consensus on how to protect different biological regions. Says
- Larry Orman, executive director of the Greenbelt Alliance:
- "Because we have such massive problems, I view California as a
- mirror to the future." The areas of dispute:
- </p>
- <p> LAND
- </p>
- <p> San Francisco architect Herbert McLaughlin coined the term
- "slopopolis" to describe the shapeless subdivisions that spring
- up to house California's surging population. Each year 50,000
- acres of cropland give way to housing tracts or shopping malls.
- Desert covers one-fourth of the state, but Jim Dodson, director
- of the California Desert Protection League, says two-thirds of
- those 25.5 million fragile acres has already been damaged by
- human use. Congress is debating whether to preserve threatened
- areas by creating a 1.5 million-acre national park in the Mojave
- and expanding the Death Valley and Joshua Tree national
- monuments into parks. But if Las Vegas proceeds with its plans
- to buy groundwater from central Nevada, the underground streams
- that flow westward to feed the oases in Death Valley may dry up,
- mooting any question of aboveground protection.
- </p>
- <p> California's coastline has inspired more efforts at
- protection than any other region. But the 1976 California
- Coastal Act, which defined wetlands, agricultural lands and
- scenic routes and called for local governments to devise plans
- to protect their coastal areas, has been more an aesthetic than
- an ecological success. The Natural Resources Defense Council
- documented more than 300 beach closings in the state last year,
- including some in supposedly pristine parts of Mendocino County
- in the north. To a degree, economics abets preservation of the
- coast: its scenic beauty generates more than $30 billion in
- tourist revenues. In addition, communities in the water-starved
- state are reducing pollution as they try to reclaim every drop
- of waste water. Even so, the pressures on the coast will
- continue to grow.
- </p>
- <p> WATER
- </p>
- <p> The heart of California's freshwater system is the
- Sacramento Delta, where salt water from San Francisco Bay mixes
- with 40% of the state's freshwater flowing down from the Sierra
- Nevada through a vast web of wetlands and islands. The U.S.
- Environmental Protection Agency says this watery corridor is the
- most important estuary on the West Coast of the Americas because
- it provides a critical stopping point for birds on the Pacific
- flyway and a vast nursery for fish. But the area is also the hub
- of a huge network of dams, canals and pumps that divert water
- to irrigate the Central Valley and supply 18 million users in
- the semi desert southland. The price of this growth has been a
- series of ecological calamities.
- </p>
- <p> Because their peaty soils oxidize when exposed to air,
- delta islands converted to farmland have been sinking, leaving
- humans and wildlife increasingly vulnerable to flooding in the
- next earthquake. Giant pumps powerful enough to reverse the
- flow of the Sacramento River stun and kill young striped bass
- and other fish. Encroaching urbanization, flooding, and
- conversion of marshes to farmland have destroyed 90% of the
- state's wetlands, most of which were linked to the estuary. As
- freshwater is diverted into canals, the zone where freshwater
- and salt water meet has moved upstream, starving young staghorn
- sculpin that in turn were food for blue herons and snowy egrets.
- Roughly 90% of the state's commercial Chinook salmon catch
- depends on the estuary, but more than half the salmon swimming
- up the Sacramento River to lay eggs are blocked by the Red Bluff
- Diversion Dam. Those that get by are often unable to spawn in
- overheated waters coming from drought-stricken Shasta Lake. The
- San Joaquin River is entirely diverted for irrigation as it
- emerges from the Sierra Nevada. When it resumes downstream near
- the Kesterson Reservoir, selenium-poisoned waters flow into it
- from the Westlands agricultural district.
- </p>
- <p> The problems have been compounded by a five-year drought.
- In 1990 the state created a water bank that allowed cities to
- bid for some agricultural water. Some environmentalists support
- the scheme--and are being criticized for it. "The enviros have
- been pimps for water marketing," says environmental consultant
- William Kier. He notes that Yuba City uses less than 10% of its
- water entitlement from the New Bullards Bar Reservoir, then
- sells the remainder to Southern California rather than allow it
- to replenish the fragile delta system.
- </p>
- <p> Rehabilitating the region will not be easy, but the Sierra
- Club Legal Defense Fund and others have sued the EPA to force
- the state to protect fish like the delta smelt. Efforts are
- also under way to restore flow to the San Joaquin and Trinity
- rivers. Water consultant Mark Reisner and the Nature Conservancy
- have worked with rice growers, the most water-intensive
- farmers, to promote a plan to store water on paddies, creating
- wetlands and riverside habitat during the winter. Perhaps the
- most important aspect of Reisner's project is that it has got
- the warring water users to talk to each other.
- </p>
- <p> FORESTS
- </p>
- <p> The state's 32.5 million acres of forest continue to
- shrivel. In the north, loggers blame environmentalists for
- "locking up" ancient forests by suing to protect the spotted owl
- and otherwise halt timbering, but with 90% of the original
- stands of redwood and Douglas fir already cut, loggers really
- have only themselves to blame. Says Richard Wilson, newly
- appointed head of the department of forestry and fire
- protection: "The loggers put money into buying more old growth
- rather than regrowing cut forests, and the trees are not there
- to feed the mills." To maximize short-term profits, many
- companies cut the trees at ever briefer intervals. "The M.B.A.s
- have turned forestry into a mining exercise," laments Wilson.
- </p>
- <p> Roughly half the remaining ancient redwood forests have
- some form of protection, and the state is negotiating with the
- Pacific Lumber Co. to buy the 3,000-acre Headwaters Forest south
- of Eureka, the biggest remaining privately owned stand of
- ancient redwoods. This forest became a rallying point for
- environmentalists when Pacific Lumber doubled the cutting rate
- of its 1,000-year-old trees to service debt incurred in an Ivan
- Boesky-arranged leveraged buyout of the company by the Maxxam
- Corp.
- </p>
- <p> Legal protection alone may not guarantee survival for
- ancient forests. The National Audubon Society charges that the
- U.S. Forest Service has allowed logging concerns to clear-cut
- sugar pine and cedar trees around giant sequoias in the 13,400
- acres of groves it controls. This deprives the big trees of a
- protective windbreak, increases erosion and eliminates habitat
- for other creatures. Audubon's Dan Taylor says worsening air
- pollution drifting into the Sierra Nevada also threatens the
- sequoias.
- </p>
- <p> Sooner or later, Californians will have to face the dire
- consequences of their activities. Resources secretary Douglas
- Wheeler predicts that the time will come when large companies
- begin to flee California because of ecological as well as other
- problems. "The point at which a major company gets fed up with
- bad air, scarce water, housing prices and traffic, and talks
- about future capital spending in Colorado or Arizona is the
- point at which you get a political response," he says.
- </p>
- <p> Wheeler believes voters and environmentalists alike have
- become exhausted by the treadmill of lawsuits and initiatives.
- In 1990 voters defeated almost every proposition on the ballot,
- including a 1,600-page environmental package nicknamed "Big
- Green." As an alternative, Wheeler has been promoting a series
- of regional agreements among developers, environmentalists and
- other interests. He is currently attempting to negotiate a plan
- that would provide a haven for the gnatcatcher as an alternative
- to endangered-species protection. Though deeply suspicious of
- a state government that in the past has acted only when it was
- forced to, a number of environmentalists are willing to give
- this approach a try. Californians are beginning to realize that
- they must find some common ground if they are to arrest the
- slide.
- </p>
- <p>ENVIRONMENTAL TROUBLE SPOTS
- </p>
- <p> Los Angeles Basin
- </p>
- <p> Eight million cars, trucks and other vehicles help make the
- region's air the dirtiest in the nation.
- </p>
- <p> Sacramento Delta
- </p>
- <p> The most important estuary on the West Coast has been clogged
- by an array of dams, canals and pumps that divert water to
- irrigation projects and homes in Southern California. Several
- species of fish and birds have been put at risk.
- </p>
- <p> Death Valley
- </p>
- <p> As Nevada experiences dizzying growth, its residents put new
- demands on groundwater, threatening to exhaust the underground
- sources of the oases in the fragile Death Valley ecosystem.
- </p>
- <p> North Coast and Sierra Nevada Forests
- </p>
- <p> With most of the original stands of redwood and Douglas fir
- already felled, timber companies battle with environmentalists
- over the remainder. Critics charge the U.S. Forest Service with
- permitting ruinous clear-cutting on public lands, endangering
- surviving giant Sequoias.
- </p>
- <p>ATTITUDES TOWARD GROWTH
- </p>
- <p> Proportion saying there has been "too much" of this type of
- growth in their community:
- </p>
- <table>
- <tblhdr><cell><cell>Statewide
- <row><cell type=a>Population<cell type=i>66%
- <row><cell>Commerical<cell>31%
- <row><cell>Multi-unit housing<cell>42%
- <row><cell>Single-family housing<cell>26%
- </table>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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