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-
- Thought all of you should know about this! Pass the word.
- From: Jk th Rppr <JkthRppr@aol.com>
- Return-path: <JkthRppr@aol.com>
- To: goofy7474@hotmail.com, ENDODOC100@aol.com, amdunlap@juno.com,
- jimflynn@earthlink.net, ASTROGIRL8@aol.com, Astrogrl83@aol.com,
- KTChica@aol.com, EricaMV97@aol.com, Skierelf@aol.com, SWIMMER202@aol.com,
- MTuffley@aol.com, DMCAMBO@aol.com, CMacLeod@aol.com,
- Belle90777@aol.com,
- Fjrdm1@aol.com, EMBO2000@aol.com, WookE41@aol.com, HHARL@aol.com,
- MANNDIEGO@aol.com, Ooliemo@aol.com, DDimmett@aol.com,
- Krieger@vin.wvc.net, LaffsOnYou@aol.com, thein1@juno.com,
- Dr0wnHerX@aol.com, STFORJEWEL@aol.com, StephanieBender@hotmail.com,
- JEDIDJT@aol.com, Kat92000@aol.com, Pyanfar7@aol.com, Sirch1241@aol.com,
- MK4ALL@aol.com, JREDBOA@aol.com, WAM929@aol.com, ASmith6771@aol.com,
- SwartzCR@aol.com, Stardust36@aol.com, Shuttle481@aol.com,
- JediofPi@aol.com, NextAnakin@aol.com, JAWARUGLY@aol.com,
- XPhile17@aol.com, Jesilu3374@aol.com, Gbrooks974@aol.com,
- MBobaFettB@aol.com, Reed3@aol.com, Palorius@aol.com, Meeeeeeee9@aol.com,
- Jedidog10@aol.com, CuPaJoEs@aol.com, KEVINWASH1@aol.com,
- Jago2680@aol.com, Jedistef@aol.com, ViperP911@aol.com,
- Albert8111@aol.com, DREDD4267@aol.com, HOLLYJEEN@aol.com,
- ROCCOCZ@aol.com
- Subject: Fwd: hacker-warning
- Date: Tue, 6 Jan 1998 22:46:26 EST
- Organization: AOL (http://www.aol.com)
- Mime-Version: 1.0
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-
- From: Troy3622 <Troy3622@aol.com>
- Return-path: <Troy3622@aol.com>
- To: JkthRppr@aol.com, PreferVac@aol.com, IcenData@aol.com, KTChica@aol.com,
- Skierelf@aol.com, Doobie6963@aol.com, HYPERTIFF@aol.com,
- Provoloni@aol.com, Ham19012@aol.com, Bonkers948@aol.com,
- SNUFFELUPA@aol.com, VENOM501@aol.com
- Subject: Fwd: hacker-warning
- Date: Tue, 6 Jan 1998 13:11:24 EST
- Organization: AOL (http://www.aol.com)
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: multipart/mixed;
- boundary="part2_884149255_boundary"
-
- From: Jules 9393 <Jules9393@aol.com>
- Return-path: <Jules9393@aol.com>
- To: ElmerFud7@aol.com, ENCOREDH@aol.com, GBC2@aol.com, Troy3622@aol.com,
- Sublim4092@aol.com, ZaoPD@aol.com, McFly45@aol.com, Cullen323@aol.com
- Subject: Fwd: hacker-warning
- Date: Tue, 30 Dec 1997 22:04:20 EST
- Organization: AOL (http://www.aol.com)
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: multipart/mixed;
- boundary="part3_884149255_boundary"
-
- From: Aufschnitt <Aufschnitt@aol.com>
- Return-path: <Aufschnitt@aol.com>
- To: GlamourSA@aol.com, Snowfl5652@aol.com, Adriana910@aol.com, LilBuddy4@aol.com,
- Peache2776@aol.com, Ally6682@aol.com, GapGirl950@aol.com,
- Jules9393@aol.com, DUchesSS99@aol.com
- Subject: Fwd: hacker-warning
- Date: Tue, 30 Dec 1997 20:03:17 EST
- Organization: AOL (http://www.aol.com)
- Mime-Version: 1.0
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-
- From: Leomyman <Leomyman@aol.com>
- Return-path: <Leomyman@aol.com>
- To: Aufschnitt@aol.com
- Subject: Fwd: hacker-warning
- Date: Tue, 30 Dec 1997 19:55:36 EST
- Organization: AOL (http://www.aol.com)
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: multipart/mixed;
- boundary="part5_884149255_boundary"
-
- From: Laxxman2 <Laxxman2@aol.com>
- Return-path: <Laxxman2@aol.com>
- To: Rockin02@aol.com
- Cc: Chris83720@aol.com, Bublegumm@aol.com, Impala620@aol.com, Supprcow@aol.com,
- Leomyman@aol.com, Luthrvivit@aol.com, Lissa4JC@aol.com,
- DarthKader@aol.com, RCS135@aol.com, Wellgo700@aol.com, LAFF11@aol.com
- Subject: Fwd: hacker-warning
- Date: Tue, 30 Dec 1997 19:04:33 EST
- Organization: AOL (http://www.aol.com)
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: multipart/mixed;
- boundary="part6_884149255_boundary"
-
- From: ILopez9269 <ILopez9269@aol.com>
- Return-path: <ILopez9269@aol.com>
- To: GAlexan735@aol.com, Supprcow@aol.com, Tempter718@aol.com, Aims2011@aol.com,
- AmbeeKat@aol.com, Bilabong0@aol.com, Crazy11001@aol.com,
- RAma101917@aol.com, T00tsieRll@aol.com, TWBB5@aol.com,
- PHSBallBoy@aol.com, Jasoneunic@aol.com, Rocketzip@aol.com,
- FlwrGrl89@aol.com, LogDog32@aol.com, Caseym8@aol.com, Megachip@aol.com,
- Laxxman2@aol.com, Tinyteen1@aol.com, Magic9251@aol.com, JLMAHAW@aol.com,
- LimitedTo0@aol.com, ZoneBone@aol.com, Fudge567@aol.com
- Subject: Fwd: hacker-warning
- Date: Tue, 30 Dec 1997 16:39:17 EST
- Organization: AOL (http://www.aol.com)
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- In a message dated 97-12-29 21:03:53 EST, you write:
-
- << Subj:Fwd: hacker-warning
- Date:97-12-29 21:03:53 EST
- From:ILoveLara2
- To:CORI CYPHE, DCama4960, ElleElle5, DanaGee101
- To:ERubio9186, Lemonade02, CeriBear, Stephhhhh
- To:Gumby1314, LuvNova74, ILopez9269, Bicrst8
- To:Stanman78, Bink128, SEEWA81, PEACHE294
-
-
- -----------------
- Forwarded Message:
- Subj:Fwd: hacker-warning
- Date:97-12-29 01:58:41 EST
- From:Truly said
- To:Localg18, TRIDDLE7, JVance1208, RCSSUV808
- To:Howdog70, RZXotik, RHKWOODS, GreenIs5, Q4e0tn15
- To:Truly said, Shamrk68, PiLaU78, ILoveLara2
- To:MerCat69, PTrost1
-
-
- -----------------
- Forwarded Message:
- Subj:hacker-warning
- Date:97-12-28 04:33:45 EST
- From:Willer5
- To:Bebebuff, Twiggy509, Frnchygrl, ScrubAide
- To:Truly said, Chilpepy, ShyHermit, MUCHTWOSEE
-
-
-
-
-
- If someone named SandMan asks you to check out his page on the WEB
-
- DO NOT!!!
-
- It is at www.geocities.com/vienna/6318
-
- This page hacks into your C:/ drive. DO NOT GO THERE
-
- HE WILL REQUEST A CHAT WITH YOU....don't do it.
-
- FORWARD THIS TO EVERYONE...
- >>
- Date: Wed, 7 Jan 1998 13:01:36 -0600
- From: paulbog@jefnet.com (Rick Bogle)
- To: "AR-News Post" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Message-ID: <19980107130259349.AAA88@paulbog.jefnet.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
-
- The 150 Vilas Zoo monkeys could use a good word; their funding runs out
- February 1 and their future looks rough. Any effort would be valuable.
- These are the same monkeys the Wisconsin Regional Primate Research Center
- repeatedly denied using as a source for
- experimental subjects until an anonymous employee turned documents over to
- the Alliance for Animals detailing the use and sale of over one hundred of
- them. The center made over $200,000 in the hidden sales and now says they
- have no money to support the two colonies any longer. (Now that they can no
- longer use them as a source for experimental subjects or sale items.)
- One of the colonies is the oldest and largest group of stump-tailed
- macaques in the world. Stumps are listed (too) conservatively as
- threatened.
- Admittedly, the zoo is not the best place for them but the alternatives
- being suggested by the center are much worse.
-
- Rick
-
- Chancellor David Ward
- UW Madison
- Bascom Hall, Room 161
- Ph: 608-262-9946
- Fax: 608-262-8333
-
- Dr. Joseph Kemnitz/Acting Director
- WRPRC (Wisconsin Regional Primate Research Center)
- 1210 Capital Court
- Madison, WI 53715
- Ph: 608-263-3588
- Fax: 608-263-4031
-
- Jonathon Becker, Chair
- Dane County Board
- 210 Martin Luther King Blvd.
- Madison, WI 53703
- Ph: 608-266-4360
-
- Dave Zweifel, Editor
- Capital Times Newspaper
- PO Box 8060
- Madison, WI 53708
- Ph: 608-252-6414
- Fax: 608-252-6445
-
- Frank Denton, Editor
- Wisconsin State Journal
- PO Box 8058
- Madison, WI 53708
- Ph: 608-252-6119
- Fax:608-252-6104
-
- Kathleen Falk, Dane County Executive
- 210 Martin Luther King Blvd.
- Madison, WI 53703
- Ph: 608-266-4114
- Fax: 608-266-2643
- Date: Wed, 07 Jan 1998 14:20:07 -0500
- From: leah wacksman <lcw2t@avery.med.virginia.edu>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Fish turn tables on trawler
- Message-ID: <34B3D567.D980861C@galen.med.virginia.edu>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- The following appeared in today's (Jan 7) Daily Progress of
- Charlottesville, Va:
-
-
- Caught fish turn tables on trawler
-
- OSLO, Norway - A school of herring caught in a trawler's net refused to
- give up without a fight - and sank a 63-foot boat.
-
- The trawler Steinholm was fishing off Norway's northern coast when it
- made a hugh catch of the fish. When the crew tried to haul in the net,
- the entire school of herring swam for the bottom and capsized the ship,
- the Oslo newspaper Dagbladet reported Tuesday.
-
- "I have been fishing since I was 14 and I have never seen anything like
- it," skipper Geir Nikolaisen, 49, was quoted as saying.
-
- Crew members tried to cut loose the net but were forced to abandon the
- capsized ship, which sank in 10 minutes.
- Date: Wed, 7 Jan 1998 11:38:43 -0800
- From: LCartLng@gvn.net (Lawrence Carter-Long)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Newswire: Scientists call for ocean protection
- Message-ID: <199801071938.OAA13775@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Scientists call for ocean protection
- Wednesday, January 7, 1998
-
- At a kick-off conference for the United Nation's
- International Year of the Ocean Tuesday in
- Washington, D.C., more than 1,600 marine
- scientists and conservationists from 65
- countries warned the world's governments and
- citizens that the oceans are in trouble and
- called for immediate action to prevent further
- damage.
-
- "The sea is in real trouble, much more trouble
- than we previously thought," said Elliot Norse, a
- marine ecologist who founded the Marine
- Conservation Biology Institute in Redmond,
- Wash. "We must act now, not 20 years from
- now or 10 years from now if we are to prevent
- further degradation of the marine environment,"
- he told the conference at the Capitol.
-
- The warning released at the conference,
- Troubled Waters: A Call for Action, summarizes
- the threats to marine species and ecosystems
- which include overexploitation of species, physical
- alteration of ecosystems, pollution, alien species
- from distant waters disrupting local food webs and
- global atmospheric change.
-
- Overfishing has decimated commercial fish populations
- and caused the collapse of many fisheries worldwide,
- including cod fisheries in New England. Fishing methods
- such as bottom trawling have crushed and buried
- bottom-dwelling species by scouring a vast area of
- seabed. Coastal development has consumed mangrove
- forests and salt marshes. Coral reefs and marine mammals
- are falling victim to new diseases, perhaps caused
- by pollution. And global warming has reduced the sea's
- productivity off Southern California and contributed to
- the steep decline of salmon in the North Pacific.
-
- "A recent New York Times poll found that only 1 percent of
- Americans consider the environment the most important
- problem facing our country," said Norse. "Because few of
- us spend much time below the surface, it is easy to
- overlook signs that things are going wrong in the sea. But
- the signs are increasingly obvious to the experts."
-
- "The scientists who study the Earth's living systems are
- far more worried than the public and our political leaders.
- That's a wake up call that nobody can afford to ignore,"
- said Norse
-
- Dr. JoAnn Burkholder of North Carolina State University,
- who discovered the linkage between coastal pollution
- and outbreaks of fish-eating Pfiesteria piscicida, said
- "It's hard to imagine that farming on land and building in
- cities could harm the marine environment and fishermen,
- but it does. The tons of sewage produced by millions
- of people don't just go away when we flush... a lot of it
- winds up in our coastal waters. And construction,
- agriculture and logging send clouds of choking
- sediments and excess nutrients into marine waters,
- smothering sensitive habitats. What we do on land
- profoundly affects life in the sea."
-
- "If it's business as usual," said Dr. M. Patricia
- Morse, a marine biologist from Northeastern
- University, "we'll see more declines in corals,
- fishes, marine mammals and seabirds. That
- spells disaster for industries like fishing and
- tourism that depend on healthy marine life, and
- for every human on Earth, because we all use
- goods and services provided by the sea every
- day. Oceans regulate our climate, provide a
- breathable atmosphere and break down
- wastes. Coastal wetlands protect our shores
- from flooding and storm damage, improve water
- quality and provide crucial habitat for fishes
- and other marine life. When we destroy these
- ecosystems, we lose both their products and
- services."
-
- The call for action includes the elimination of
- government subsidies that encourage overfishing,
- pollution reduction, the establishment of new marine
- protected areas, and a White House Conference
- on the marine environment.
-
- "A White House Conference on the Marine
- Environment would help to highlight what's
- known about marine environmental problems
- and to address the most pressing ones. The
- International Year of the Ocean provides
- the ideal opportunity to move forward in protecting,
- restoring and sustainably using life in the sea,"
- said Norse.
-
- For more information, contact Dr. Elliott A. Norse,
- MCBI, (703)276-1434
-
- Copyright 1998, Environmental News Network
-
- ==================
-
-
- Lawrence Carter-Long
- Science and Research Issues, Animal Protection Institute
- email: LCartLng@gvn.net, phone: 800-348-7387 x. 215
- world wide web: http://www.api4animals.org/
-
- "I will permit no man to narrow and degrade my
- soul by making me hate him." - Booker T. Washington
-
- "...the above also applies to women. However, I haven't
- quite made up my mind just yet about politicians or talk
- show hosts." - Lawrence Carter-Long
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Wed, 07 Jan 1998 14:00:29 -0600
- From: Steve Barney <AnimalLib@vaxa.cis.uwosh.edu>
- To: AR-News <AR-News@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [US] [Fwd: Catholics Fight Factory Farms! (fwd)]
- Message-ID: <34B3DEDD.EF7FACDA@uwosh.edu>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: multipart/mixed; boundary="------------4FFDB06E7B7BD2FECA7372A1"
-
- --
- Steve Barney, Representative
- Animal Liberation Action Group
- Campus Connection, Reeve Memorial Union
- University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
- 748 Algoma Blvd.
- Oshkosh, WI 54901-3512
- UNITED STATES
- Phone:920-424-0265 (office)
- 920-235-4887 (home)
- Fax: 920-424-7317 (address to: Animal Liberation Action Group, Campus
- Connection, Reeve Union)
- E-mail: AnimalLib@uwosh.edu
- Web: http://www.uwosh.edu/organizations/alag/Return-path: <owner-wisc-eco@igc.org>
- Received: from igc7.igc.org (igc7.igc.apc.org)
- by VAXA.CIS.UWOSH.EDU (PMDF V5.1-7 #17145)
- with ESMTP id <01IS2E4MQ1JK00J52Q@VAXA.CIS.UWOSH.EDU>; Tue,
- 6 Jan 1998 18:22:38 CST
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- ; Tue, 06 Jan 1998 18:08:25 -0600
- Date: Tue, 06 Jan 1998 18:08:25 -0600
- From: jepeck@students.wisc.edu (John E. Peck)
- Subject: Catholics Fight Factory Farms! (fwd)
- Sender: majordomo@igc.org
- X-Sender: jepeck@students.wisc.edu (Unverified)
- To: wisc-eco@igc.apc.org, corporations@envirolink.org, pw-list@igc.apc.org
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-
- Subject: Factory Farm Moratorium Call from NCRLC <NCRLC@aol.com>
-
- Please distribute!
- ******************
-
- A Statement from the Board of Directors of the National Catholic Rural
- Life Conference
-
- December 18, 1997
-
- An Immediate Moratorium on Large-scale Livestock and Poultry Animal
- Confinement Facilities
-
- Confined Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) have become a national
- issue. A new hog plant in Utah will produce more animal waste than the
- animal and human waste created by the city of Los Angeles; 1,600
- dairies in the Central Valley of California produce more waste than a
- city of 21 million people. The annual production of 600 million
- chickens on the Delmarva Peninsula near Washington, D.C. generates as
- much nitrogen as a city of almost 500,000 people.
-
- In North Carolina, 35 million gallons of animal waste were spilled in
- 1995, killing 10 million fish. In 1996, more than 40 manure spills
- were recorded in Iowa, Minnesota and Missouri, double the number
- reported in 1992. Earlier this year, microbe pfiesteria associated
- with the poultry industry killed 30,000 fish in the Chesapeake Bay and
- another 450,000 fish in North Carolina attributed to hog waste.
- Pfiesteria grow in waters with excessive nutrients. In the Gulf of
- Mexico, animal waste has helped to create a "dead zone" of up to 7,000
- square miles. The Center for Disease Control has just released a
- report attributing foodborne diseases to food industry consolidation
- and the decrease in effective microbe resistance in humans from the
- antibiotics used to industrialize animals for confinement facilities.
-
- The National Catholic Rural Life Conference (NCRLC) has for 75 years
- been a voice for participative democracy, widespread ownership of
- land, the defense of nature, animal welfare, support for small and
- moderate-sized independent family farms, economic justice, rural and
- urban interdependence. Such values are drawn from the message of the
- Gospel and the social teachings of our Church. Furthermore, we see
- such values best represented in the agricultural arena by what is
- called sustainable agriculture.
-
- In the light of present concerns about the industrialization of
- agriculture and environmental pollution as represented especially by
- the hog industry, the NCRLC supports efforts for a national dialogue
- on Confined Animal Feeding Operations and their impacts on water
- quality, the environment, and local communities. Too much time has
- elapsed and too much damage has been done without an adequate national
- dialogue on these issues.
-
- As a first step, the NCRLC supports a moratorium on the expansion and
- building of new farm factories and calls for a serious consideration
- of their replacement by sustainable agricultural systems which are
- environmentally safe, economically viable, and socially just. While
- the federal government, the states, and local communities reassess the
- structure of agriculture, such a moratorium seems especially urgent.
- Without a moratorium, the number of CAFOs will continue to
- proliferate, causing a significant increase in the devastating
- pollution, health, and social impacts by these confinement facilities
- across the country.
-
- Included among the states currently dealing with CAFO issues are:
- Alabama, Georgia, Kansas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky,
- Minnesota, Nebraska, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota,
- Texas, Utah and Washington. Legislators, judges, and local citizens
- groups are reviewing the legal safeguards at every level to ensure
- clean water, a safe environment, food safety, and social justice. Such
- efforts are beginning to pay dividends:
-
- In Indiana, for example, an administrative law judge has shut down a
- proposed confined feeding operation.
- In Kentucky, the attorney general has ruled that large operations
- are not exempt from local ordinances saying they are "not reasonable
- or prudent, accepted and customary."
- After two years of difficulties, North Carolina has imposed strong
- restrictions on confinement operations.
- South Dakota citizens recently secured sufficient signatures
- (31,000) to hold a statewide referendum proposing an anti-corporate
- farming law similar to Nebraska's.
- All but two of the 20 counties in Kansas had voted against new
- corporate hog farms.
- At the federal level, a new bill has been introduced to regulate
- CAFOs and a federal summit is being proposed to discuss animal-waste
- management.
-
- As the livestock industry has been restructured, a growing dependence
- has developed on enormous open-air lagoon waste storage and liquid
- manure application systems. These systems have been prone to breaks,
- spills, and runoff into surface water and seepage into ground water.
- The Clean Water Act is again to be renewed after 25 years. While
- reforms of that Act are being developed, a moratorium on CAFOs is
- needed to forestall potentially devastating effects.
-
- We challenge the notion that CAFOs, particularly hog factories, are a
- boon to local economies. Studies have shown that for every job created
- by a hog factory, three are lost. Every year, hog factories put almost
- 31,000 farmers out of business, out of their homes, and out of their
- communities. In 1990, there were 670,350 family hog farms; in 1995,
- there were only 208,780. Between 1994 and 1996, approximately 4,439
- family farmers were displaced by the expansion of the top 30 pork
- producing companies, according to a recent study done by Successful
- Farming. While concentration in pork production grows, independent
- family farmers are being forced out. The same can be said about dairy,
- beef, and poultry farming.
-
- NCRLC invites others to join the call for a moratorium and the
- replacement of factory farms by a sustainable agricultural system.
- The National Catholic Rural Life Conference is a membership
- organization grounded in a spiritual tradition which brings together
- the Church, care for creation and care for community. The NCRLC
- fosters programs of direct service and systemic change. As an educator
- in the faith, the NCRLC seeks to relate religion to the rural world;
- develops support services for rural pastoral ministers; serves as a
- prophetic voice and as a catalyst and convener for social justice.
-
- John E. Peck c/o UW Greens, 731 State St., MN 53703 #608-262-9036
-
- "This cause is not altogether and exclusively a women's cause. It is the
- cause of human brotherhood, as well as human sisterhood, and both must rise
- and fall together." - Frederick Douglas on women's rights, 1848
-
-
- Date: Wed, 07 Jan 1998 13:29:32 -0800
- From: Karen Purves <samneph@earthlink.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Follow Up on Ted Nugent court date???
- Message-ID: <34B3F3BC.1509@earthlink.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- An article appeared in the Chicago Tribune which said that attorneys for Ted
- Nugent were due in court this past Monday, January 5, regarding a complaint
- that he failed to accurately report the number of deer on his game preserve
- in Michigan. Apparently he could lose his permit and spend time in jail.
-
- Does anyone know what happened in court?
-
- Thanks.
-
- Karen E. Purves, M.A.
- API--Midwest Regional Office
- 3540 N. Southport Ave., Suite 254
- Chicago IL 60657-1436
- ph: 773/975-7840
- fax: 773/975-7924
- email: samneph@earthlink.net
-
- Date: Wed, 07 Jan 1998 14:50:32 -0600
- From: Steve Barney <AnimalLib@vaxa.cis.uwosh.edu>
- To: AR-News <AR-News@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [US] EDITORIAL [Fwd: "Regulating factory farms"]
- Message-ID: <34B3EA98.68DF7316@uwosh.edu>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
- Content-transfer-encoding: 8bit
-
- -- Editorial from Capital Times (Madison, WI)
- [Image]
-
- Editorial
-
- Regulating factory farms
-
- January 2, 1997
-
- The good people of Green County have just finished a long and frequently
- bitter argument about whether to allow a huge hog farm to begin operating
- near Albany.
-
- Yet no one is really satisfied with the conclusion of that argument.
-
- The decision of the Green County Board of Adjustment to permit the hog farm
- has neighbors of the facility furious, and it's hard to argue with them.
- The 20-acre factory farm will produce a staggering 950,000 gallons of waste
- per year.
-
- Ask yourself: Would you really want to live next door to 1,300 breeding
- sows, 450 replacement gilts, hundreds of piglets and all of the waste they
- produce -- particularly if you knew that, in other parts of the country,
- such facilities have been tied to environmental and economic catastrophes?
-
- In defense of the nine farmers involved, however, they are hardly the
- faceless bureaucrats of uncaring agribusiness. Rather, they say, they are
- family farmers who are simply trying to stay afloat in an increasingly
- difficult market -- a market dictated by foolish international trade
- agreements and even more foolish rewrites of federal agricultural policies.
-
- What is most frustrating about the whole Green County battle is that it is
- not an isolated occurrence. Across Wisconsin in the past year, we have
- witnessed debates over factory farming in its many incarnations -- but
- particularly as it affects the pork industry.
-
- Today, those battles play out on the county level. But that fact denies the
- reality that decisions made in Green County affect not just the citizens of
- that county but also the citizens of more populous neighboring counties
- such as Dane and Rock.
-
- What is called for is a statewide approach to an issue that stretches far
- beyond the boundaries of individual counties.
-
- Wisconsin should develop standards by which factory farming proposals can
- be assessed. And those standards should place an emphasis on the dual
- responsibilities of keeping small farmers on the land and protecting the
- environment that surrounds that land.
-
- Let us know what you think
- E-mail: tctvoice@captimes.madison.com
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Subscribe to the print version of The Capital Times
-
- ⌐ 1998 The Capital Times
-
- If you have any questions or comments about this site, please email us.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- -- End
-
- Steve Barney, Representative
- Animal Liberation Action Group
- Campus Connection, Reeve Memorial Union
- University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
- 748 Algoma Blvd.
- Oshkosh, WI 54901-3512
- UNITED STATES
- Phone:920-424-0265 (office)
- 920-235-4887 (home)
- Fax: 920-424-7317 (address to: Animal Liberation Action Group, Campus
- Connection, Reeve Union)
- E-mail: AnimalLib@uwosh.edu
- Web: http://www.uwosh.edu/organizations/alag/
- Date: Wed, 7 Jan 1998 16:31:35 -0600 (CST)
- From: Suzanne Roy <idausa@ix.netcom.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Coulston Calls AIDS "Silly"
- Message-ID: <199801072231.QAA29467@dfw-ix10.ix.netcom.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- In Defense of Animals
- 131 Camino Alto, Suite E
- Mill Valley, CA 94941
- 415/388-9641
-
- NEWS RELEASE
- DATE: January 7, 1998
-
-
- HEAD OF AIDS TESTING LAB CALLS FOR PATIENT QUARANTINE
-
- Recipient of $8 Million in Federal AIDS Research Funds Says AIDS Is "Silly"
- Disease
-
- A toxicologist whose private foundation has received more than $8 million
- in federal AIDS research funds has called for the quarantine of AIDS
- patients. In the December 30, 1997 Wall Street Journal, the toxicologist,
- Frederick Coulston, called AIDS a "silly disease" and suggested that its
- victims display "quarantine" signs.
-
- "It is appalling that an individual with such a derisive view of AIDS has
- been entrusted with federal funds earmarked to fight this tragic disease,"
- said Suzanne Roy, Program Director of In Defense of Animals (IDA), which has
- been investigating Coulston's non-profit corporation, The Coulston
- Foundation (TCF), for several years. TCF has a long record of violating
- federal animal welfare laws, and with over 600 chimps, is by far the largest
- captive colony of chimpanzees in the world.
-
- TCF's federal AIDS support comes in the form of a multi-million dollar
- subcontract with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to house and care
- for HIV-infected chimpanzees. The subcontract is currently being looked
- into by the office of U.S. Rep. Carolyn Maloney, a member of the House
- Government Reform and Oversight Committee, for possible price-gouging.
-
- Coulston's comments about AIDS were made in a Journal article about the
- fate of 144 chimpanzees who are about to be divested of by the Air Force.
- Coulston is vying for "ownership" of the chimpanzees, as is a coalition of
- animal welfare organizations, led by chimpanzee experts Drs. Jane Goodall
- and Roger Fouts.
-
- In press reports, Coulston has also claimed to have discovered the
- hepatitis B vaccine as well as a vaccine against malaria. Neither claim is
- substantiated by scientific evidence. In fact, no vaccine against malaria
- even exists, nor does Coulston have a single hepatitis-related scientific
- publication. In addition, Coulston, who also has no AIDS-related scientific
- publications, was roundly criticized last year when he claimed on CNN that a
- vaccine tested at his laboratory was "the answer" to AIDS. Coulston has
- espoused many non-scientific beliefs, such as his statements that nicotine
- is not addictive and does not affect health; that lead levels in the blood
- do not cause brain damage; and that DDT is one of the greatest inventions of
- man and does not thin bird eggs.
-
- Coulston, who controls almost one-half of the entire U.S. chimp population,
- has also espoused fringe views regarding humans' closest genetic cousins,
- repeatedly stating his desire to use chimpanzees as living blood and organ
- banks and to test toxic chemicals.
-
- TCF has also repeatedly violated federal law. The foundation is currently
- under official investigation by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
- for negligent chimpanzee deaths in 1997, despite its 1996 pledge to cease
- and desist violating the Animal Welfare Act as part of its $40,000
- settlement of formal USDA charges for previous animal welfare violations.
- TCF is currently being sued by several ex-employees for sexual harassment.
- TCF's lawyers failed in their attempt to dismiss the lawsuit, which alleges,
- among other things, that Coulston's son Craig, who is TCF's Vice-President,
- touched the breasts of one plaintiff, and put another in a bear hug and
- demanded that she kiss him.
-
- "It is high time that the NIH explain why it is subsidizing a private
- business that cannot seem to comply with federal law and whose leader
- continues to espouse anti-scientific, fringe views," said Roy.
-
- In Defense of Animals is a national animal advocacy organization with over
- 70,000 members based in Mill Valley, California.
-
- The Coulston Foundation can be reached at 1300 La Velle Rd., Alamogordo,
- NM 88310, 505-434-1725 (ph), 505-437-9897 (FAX), coulston@zianet.com (email).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Wed, 7 Jan 1998 16:04:02 -0800
- From: LCartLng@gvn.net (Lawrence Carter-Long)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Newswire: Tiger mauls circus trainer (US-FL)
- Message-ID: <199801072355.SAA17777@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- Updated 4:50 PM ET January 7, 1998
-
- Tiger mauls circus trainer
-
- ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Reuters) - A trainer with the Ringling
- Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus was mauled by a tiger
- Wednesday and hospitalized in serious condition, police said.
-
- The trainer was identified as Richard Chipperfield, a member
- of one of Britain's oldest circus families.
-
- His brother and fellow trainer, Graham Chipperfield, killed
- the tiger with a shotgun after the attack, St. Petersburg police
- spokesman Bill Doniel said.
-
- The "Blue" unit of the circus is performing in St. Petersburg
- through Sunday in the opening stop on its 1998 tour. Doniel
- said the attack occurred in the ring at the Bayfront Center in
- St. Petersburg.
-
- The trainers and about 14 tigers were posing for publicity
- photos when one of the animals bit Richard Chipperfield
- in the head.
-
- Other performers rescued him and he was treated by
- paramedics and taken to a hospital. Doniel said police
- were still investigating the circumstances of the attack.
-
- "We're investigating what appears to be an accident," he
- said.
-
- He said the victim's brother was "extremely upset."
-
- Graham Chipperfield has been with the Ringling Bros
- circus since 1993 and Richard had just joined the show
- in December.
-
- In an interview with the St. Petersburg Times last week,
- Richard Chipperfield was quoted as saying, "Tigers are
- dependable and elegant animals. I have fallen in love with
- them. They are so splendid."
-
- But he said he knew they were still dangerous wild
- animals.
-
- ⌐ 1997 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.
-
- Lawrence Carter-Long
- Science and Research Issues, Animal Protection Institute
- email: LCartLng@gvn.net, phone: 800-348-7387 x. 215
- world wide web: http://www.api4animals.org/
-
- "I will permit no man to narrow and degrade my
- soul by making me hate him." - Booker T. Washington
-
- "...the above also applies to women. However, I haven't
- quite made up my mind just yet about politicians or talk
- show hosts." - Lawrence Carter-Long
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Wed, 07 Jan 1998 19:38:34 -0500
- From: Mesia Quartano <primates@usa.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: (FR) Forbidden Food
- Message-ID: <34B4200A.797E4400@usa.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- >From Greenlines:
-
- Friday's New York Times reports the theme of a $3,000 a plate dinner
- held last month in Bordeaux, France, was "forbidden food." Sworn to
- secrecy, many of the world's most famous chefs and restaurateurs dined
- on a songbird, the ortolan, and a woodcock -- both protected species.
- "You know the French," said Maguy Le Coze, owner of Le Bernardin in New
- York who attended the dinner, "French people like to break the law." The
- article did not say if Ms. Le Coze dined on the two protected species or
- perhaps others consumed by the elite attendees.
-
- Date: Wed, 07 Jan 98 17:00:14 -0800
- From: "Paul Wiener" <paulish@cyberjunkie.com>
- To: "AR-News (to post)" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Fwd: OS/2_Warp_FM_Delivery:=> VOLUME 3 OS/2 WARP FM January 1998
- Message-ID: <199801080100.SAA13526@smtp04.primenet.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
-
- ==================BEGIN FORWARDED MESSAGE==================
- _______________________________________________________________
-
- OS/2 WARP FM Transmitting 100% Pure Java Energy
- _______________________________________________________________
-
- _________________________________________________________________________
- VOLUME 3 OS/2 WARP FM January 1998
- http://www.software.ibm.com/os/warp/warpfm
- _______________________________________________________________________
-
- What's Queued Up?
-
- E-Business Potential in Manufacturing
- Looking Eastward: Interview with IBM's Software GM for Asia Pacific
- TIBCO's MarketSheet for Java: WARP FM January Application of the Month
- On the Air with Donn Atkins
- OS/2 In the Most Unexpected Places
- Are We There Yet?
- Information Briefs
- WorkSpace On-Demand for the Year 2000
-
-
-
- E-Business Potential in Manufacturing
-
- Early January is the target for Ralston Purina to go live with its
- newly rewritten Packview application, a Java 1.1-based program that
- will play a critical role in the packaging of dog and cat food
- products. While implementing mission critical Java software marks a
- significant milestone for Ralston and the industry, using this
- building block is only a small step when compared to the vast
- potential created by incorporating the advanced technology and
- out-of-box thinking of e-business.
-
- <snip>
- The melding of the world's economies is triggering demand for new
- ways to gain palpable productivity improvements. This implies that
- companies go beyond their boundaries to redefine processes and
- interactions. Jitu Desai, Managing Principal for E-Business Strategy
- in IBM's Manufacturing Consulting Industry Solution Unit (ISU), says,
- "Enterprises can experience enormous benefits through the systematic
- and aggressive application of emerging e-business strategies based on
- increasingly-available and fast-maturing network computing principles
- and technologies." He see the potential for manufacturing
- organizations to significantly lower manufacturing and distribution
- costs, dramatically reduce cycle times and increase global sales.
-
- Networking for Cost Reductions
- Inventory management is a logical place to start when considering
- lowering costs. Extranets, enterprise-to-enterprise connections
- based on Internet technology, provide an excellent way to link a
- company with its suppliers. A direct link creates the opportunity to
- restructure inventory management systems through a variety of
- methods. For example, connecting a supplier directly to the
- real-time data in the inventory monitoring systems enables "pull"
- replenishment systems, where a supplier can replace parts as used.
- An improved connection between parts suppliers and manufacturers can
- reduce lead time requirements and subsequently inventory levels.
-
- Although Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) has been used for
- inter-enterprise communication for a while, Internet technology now
- standardizes how companies connect to one another. Integrating a new
- supplier into the extranet is a much simpler undertaking with a
- standardized technology rather than a proprietary set-up unique to a
- specific manufacturer.
-
- E-business methods can also lead to inventory reductions when applied
- to forecasting. Rather than basing order quantities for long lead
- time items on weakly supported data, the Internet can serve as a
- means to gather actual requirements from customers. Properly
- applying this type of information -- that is data solicited directly
- from the people who sell or actually use the products -- can
- significantly improve forecast accuracy. Not only do better
- forecasts mean less waste, they also mean fewer lost orders caused by
- low stock levels.
-
- Saving Time with Flexible Communication Capabilities
- Cycle time pertains to nearly every aspect of a manufacturer's
- business including new product development, production and response
- to customer requests. Consequently, converting any of these areas
- into an e-business can yield significant savings and/or op
- portunities.
-
- For example, end-to-end new car development time can take anywhere
- from 36 to 60 months. Restructuring communications between key
- groups using network computing technology can be one of the
- mechanisms for compressing development time to 24 months. An int
- ernational company headquartered in the Far East created a common car
- platform for global use on a number of models. The implementation of
- e-business principles and technologies facilitated the re-engineering
- that lead to the cycle time reductions. Creating process
- improvements by leveraging an intranet or products like Lotus Notes
- eliminates extraneous steps, enables spontaneous responses to
- inquiries and permits parallel rather than serial processing.
-
- Network technology also can reduce the time it takes for a
- manufacturer to respond to customers. Orders that come directly from
- the consumer are inherently faster and more efficient than using an
- intermediary -- as long as the mechanism for direct orders ensures
- that all the required information is gathered and submitted correctly
- and securely at the right time. Since the necessary ingredients to
- ensure this are available, the Internet has the potential for
- eliminating the middleman in a number of transactions between buyers
- and manufacturers -- which also reduces costs for both the customer
- and the vendor. The savings are so significant that a well-known
- computer hardware vendor currently using the web for 10-15% of its
- total sales intends to increase the percentage to 30% in 1998.
-
- Innovative Paths to Market Growth
- And finally, e-business can spur growth in a number of directions.
- By using the Internet as an alternate sales channel manufacturers can
- extend beyond their traditional sales regions. The Internet also
- creates new ways to advertise. Recently, the John Hancock insurance
- company realized a five percent "click-through" rate to its home page
- by using a series of interactive Java applications as part of its web
- advertising campaign. Prior to this, the insurance and financial
- services company had experienced only a three percent rate. And in
- both cases, the rate is significantly higher than the typical direct
- mail response.
-
- The latest network technologies are not only creating new advertising
- techniques and marketing channels but they also are changing the
- entire concept of products. For instance, as the automobile industry
- begins to enhance cars with software and networking capabilities for
- downloading audio and video information, a car can become an
- entertainment center as well as a transportation vehicle. This
- metamorphosis from one form to another is true of many consumer items
- like televisions. What used to be a one-way medium for entertainment
- and news is steadily moving towards being a two-way communication
- device for selectively gathering information and for buying goods and
- services. As the nature of products change and become more diverse,
- the market for those products also diversifies and therefore grows.
-
- Although the role of technology has always been to expand
- ===================END FORWARDED MESSAGE===================
-
-
- ___________
- Paul Wiener
-
- got_the_T-shirt@been-there.com
- paulish@cyberjunkie.com
- paulish@thepentagon.com
- paulish@usa.net
- tinea-pedis@bigfoot.com
- KJ6AV@callsign.net
- - --------------------------------------------------------
- http://www.netforward.com/cyberjunkie/?paulish
-
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-
-
- Date: Wed, 07 Jan 1998 22:07:05 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Wall Street Journal article on BSE
- Message-ID: <199801080308.WAA15032@mailnfs0.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- The Wall Street Journal Interactive Edition -- January 7, 1998
- Mad Cows, Scared Bunnies
- By PAUL LEVY, London
-
- The 12 days of Christmas are still a reality here. The
- feasting that started on Christmas Eve continued
- through the New Year celebrations, and eased off
- only after Twelfth Night.
-
- But the British food chain is in a twist. The good news,
- as every traveler knows, is that the restaurants of the
- capital city are hot. The standard of eating out is
- so high that the French now come here to dine
- as well as to see the sights.
-
- And the nature of restaurant food is changing. There are
- even reports, such as the one that appeared in this
- newspaper late last year, proclaiming a new interest
- in organ meats in "between 25% and 30% of London's
- 600 biggest and fanciest restaurants." This statistic is
- the more remarkable because most offal has to be imported:
- Bovine brains, sweetbreads and livers of British origin
- have been forbidden since March 1992. Rabbit is the
- chicken of the '90s, and its presence on every self-respecting
- London eatery's menu is a sure sign that the place considers
- itself home to New British Nosh. Odder still, we're eating Thumper
- at home:á The Tesco supermarket chain's sales of rabbit have doubled
- in the past 12 months.
-
- The same supermarket says we're eating Bambi too, and told
- the (British) Times that it is thinking of "asking farmers to consider
- stocking herds of deer to supply the rapidly growing market."
- The Safeway chain has stocked wild Scottish venison for three years,
- and "Sainsbury's has recently increased its intake of venison from
- English deer parks."
-
- But the real action is feathered, especially partridge and pheasant.
- Both these birds are hand-reared by gamekeepers but released
- into the wild before being shot. The economics of the great sporting
- estates means that the birds are cheap once they reach the
- game merchant's. Last week I paid about $6 a bird for partridge
- (and the three pellets of shot I chomped on proved they were not farmed)
- and under $5 for each pheasant that will feed two people, and is
- therefore as cheap as chicken. They will get even less expensive
- as the game season continues.
-
- The reason British eating habits are reverting to those of their
- (middle-class)
-
- ancestors is, of course, fear, and it is a wonder that vegetarianism
- hasn't become chic. The bad news is mad cow disease--the
- bovine spongiform encephalopathy )BSE) scandal. On Dec. 22,
- Jack Cunningham, the agriculture minister, said: "The scientific
- evidence we now have provides convincing evidence that the agent
- which causes BSE is the same as that which causes the new variant
- of Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease."
-
- He announced a public inquiry into the causes of the disease and the
- government's handling of the crisis it caused, to be chaired by an
- Appeal Court Judge, Lord Justice Phillips, to be concluded by the end of 1998.
-
- That was only sensible. A few weeks earlier he had done something daft,
- banning the sale of beef on the bone (only 5% of beef sales) because the
- suspected agent was found in bone marrow. The government's advisory
- committee had calculated the risk of getting CJD thus, said the Times of
- Dec. 4: "six animals this year and three next--out of 2.2 million cattle
- slaughtered--could pose a risk." Your chances of winning the lottery or
- being struck by lightning are considerably higher, but it is now illegal to
- buy
- oxtails, T-bone steaks or marrow bones.
-
- The day after the ban went into force, I bought 12 pounds of oxtails, three
- enormous T-bone steaks, and three ribs of beef at very reasonable prices,
- and the butcher (whom I will not of course name) gave me enough marrow
- bones to make gallons of stock. A near-universal black market has grown
- up. By Dec. 20, the Daily Mail sent reporters to 110 shops, chosen at
- random, in 11 different areas of Britain, to buy beef on the bone. They
- found "plenty of traders ready to risk unlimited fines and up to two years in
- jail." A common ploy was to ring the contraband up as "sausage."
-
- Though any Englishman tucking into his traditional Sunday lunch of rib
- roast of beef and Yorkshire pudding must have committed a crime to
- procure it, there is very little chance of anyone being prosecuted. Steve
- Butterworth, of the Institute of Trading Standards Administrators, noted
- that the only way butchers could be caught was if his colleagues were to
- work undercover and pose as customers: "But we have had no new
- money to go with the new responsibilities, so it is unlikely councils will be
- going out to make test purchases." The maddest thing of all is that the
- bones do not have to be removed at the abattoir. The law is broken only
- when the butcher actually sells beef on the bone, and it is not an offense to
- display the banned cuts.
-
- Maybe this laughable situation will alter the British attitude toward home
- cooking. Despite the improvement in London restaurants, it is the
- Englishman's stinginess and indifference about food that are responsible for
- BSE. Cheap food has been the policy of every government since the war.
- And while there are no reliable current statistics, it is evident even now,
- despite a genuine surge of interest in organically produced food, that the
- British spend a much lower proportion of their disposable income on food
- than do their counterparts in most of Europe. The present theory of the
- origins of BSE is that it was caused by feeding the processed remains of
- ruminants to cows as a way of keeping down the cost of feed and of beef
- (though in fact, so far, BSE has been found only in ancient dairy cattle
- used to make the cheapest processed meat products). The Labor
- government acknowledges that the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and
- Food has always acted on behalf of producers, sometimes at the expense
- of consumers, and has determined to split up MAFF.
-
- Perhaps a genuine Ministry of Food can persuade Britons that
- you get what you pay for. No bull.
-
-
- Date: Wed, 07 Jan 1998 22:25:50 -0500
- From: jeanlee <jeanlee@concentric.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Endangered Species Recovery Act
- Message-ID: <34B4473E.1D54@concentric.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- Hi All-
-
- I'm reposting the following two letters since the legislators are back
- and will be voting on these bills. I've printed out the two letters I
- wrote and invite you to copy (or customize) and mail them. The first is
- to your senators regarding S.1180. This is Sen. Dirk Kempthorne's bill
- and is NOT supported by plant and animal lover organizations. It's been
- described as jeopardizing the mission of the ESA to recover species in
- peril. It has 9 cosponsors.
-
- The second letter is to your representative, H.R. 2351, and is the bill
- animal rights people and most environmentalists support. It's
- described as reaffirming and strengthening the nation's commitment to
- animals and plants and balances that with landowners' rights. It now
- has 88 cosponsors!
-
-
- Dear Senator:
-
- I don't think there's much disagreement that the Endangered Species Act
- (ESA) needs improvements to make the law work better for people as well
- as wildlife. Unfortunately, S. 1180, The Endangered Species Recovery
- Act, sponsored by Senator Dirk Kempthorne (R-ID), not only fails to
- include many of these needed improvements, it erodes existing
- protections that are essential to the survival of species:
-
- ~S. 1180 will allow private landowners and federal agencies to lock in
- long-term habitat conservation plans that exempt them from further
- conservation obligations and make future land management adjustments
- nearly impossible - even where the survival of the species is at stake,
- ~Make it harder for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and National
- Marine Fisheries Service to hold other agencies accountable for actions
- that jeopardize species and result in critical habitat destruction,
- ~Add significant new bureaucratic burdens to the listing and recovery
- planning process, thus ensuring that scarce agency resources will be
- stretched even thinner and that the backlog in listings and recovery
- planning will increase, and
- ~Allow industry representatives to have a greater role in key ESA
- decision making while excluding other citizens from this process.
-
- These are my very serious concerns about S. 1180 - special access for
- special interests, taxpayer subsidized habitat destruction, roadblocks
- to recovery, and weakened protections for species on public and private
- lands. This jeopardizes the mission of the ESA to recover species in
- peril.
-
- I urge you to oppose S. 1180 when it comes before you on the floor of
- the Senate.
-
- Sincerely yours,
-
-
-
- Dear Congressman/Woman:
-
- I don't think there's much disagreement that the Endangered Species Act
- (ESA) needs improvements to make the law work better for people as well
- as wildlife. The ESA is one of the FEW laws that exist on the federal
- books to protect animals.
-
- H.R. 2351, The Endangered Species Recovery Act, sponsored by Rep. George
- Miller, (D-CA), would reaffirm and strengthen the nationÆs commitment to
- wildlife and to protect our childrenÆs future. This bill would conserve
- declining species before they near the brink of extinction, place a
- deadline on listing decisions for candidate species, and provide
- economic incentives to encourage voluntary conservation.
-
- It is estimated that we are losing approximately 100 species every day.
- Rather than weaken protection for fragile plants and animals, Congress
- should strengthen protection so that species do not slip through
- loopholes and cracks.
-
- H.R. 2351 also does a good job of protecting the concerns of landowners
- and business interests. I urge you to cosponsor this crucial
- legislation.
-
- Sincerely yours,
-
-
-
- </pre>
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