About Me
- Judy Chaffee
- This site is the inspiration of a former reporter/photographer for one of New England's largest daily newspapers and for various magazines.
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Administration Bans Uranium Mining in Northern Arizona -- Candles and log fires were good enough for the Founders -- by John Hayward, Human Events
Interior Secretary Ken Salazar just
announced a 20-year ban on new uranium mining operations in northern Arizona,
ostensibly out of concern for contaminating the water in the Grand Canyon
tourist area, although Interior’s own analysis found no conclusive evidence that
such a risk existed.
Testifying before the House Natural Resources, National
Parks, Forests, and Public Lands subcommittee, Bureau of Land Management
Director Bob Abbey said the draft report stated “there was incomplete and
unavailable information that added uncertainty to the analysis and cited
potential risk from mining.” This was good enough to pull the trigger on the
uranium mining industry. The area covered by the ban contains 40% of America’s
domestic uranium resources, according to a statement from the House
subcommittee. Up to a thousand jobs and $29 million in revenue could be at
stake, and the nuclear power industry needs that uranium.
Chairman Rob Bishop (R-UT) of the House
Natural Resources subcommittee was angered by the Interior Department's decision:
It is unconscionable that the
Administration has yet again caved to political pressure from radical special
interest groups rather than standing up for the American people. Banning access
to the most uranium rich land in the United States will be overwhelmingly
detrimental to both jobs in Utah and Arizona and our nation’s domestic energy
security. While I’m disappointed that the Administration has again allowed
politics to usurp sound science, unfortunately I am not surprised.
The Administration spent nearly
three years conducting an extensive study on the impact of mining in the region,
done in addition to many other past studies, which resulted in ‘incomplete and
unavailable information’. In light of these findings, or lack thereof, there is
clearly not enough evidence to justify this radical decision. Lacking the
scientific evidence to support this ban, the Administration opted to bypass
congress in order to unilaterally impose bad policy.
It’s a pattern we’ve come to
expect from the President. When he and his cabinet want to enact their radical
political agenda, they often do so without public input or consideration for
those who will be harmed the most. As history has proven, production of our
abundant domestic resources and environmental stewardship are not mutually
exclusive. We can achieve both for the benefit of all.
As we have done to address so many
other inanely wrongheaded decisions that have come from this Administration,
we’ll fight this one too. I will work with my colleagues in both the House and
the Senate to ensure that the Administration is held accountable for ignoring
the priorities of the American people.
According to a report from Reuters, left-wing groups applauded the decision:
"One of the things President
(Barack)Obama's going to be remembered for is protecting the Grand Canyon," said
Jane Danowitz of the Pew Environment Group, a non-profit organization that has
pushed for the mining moratorium.
"Despite considerable pushback
from the industry and even some in Congress, he didn't punt and he didn't blink
and he went and issued the longest moratorium that he could under his executive
authority," Danowitz said in a telephone interview.
The Pew group,
the League of Conservation Voters and the Center for American Progress applauded
the decision as protecting the Colorado River watershed, which supplies drinking water for 25
million people.
The main health risk from uranium
mining is water contamination.
Grand Canyon tourism generates
$687 million in annual revenue, according to the Outdoor Industry Association,
and creates more than 12,000 full-time jobs, the University of Northern Arizona
said in a 2005 study.
"Do you want mining in the
vicinity of a tourist destination that's visited by 5 million people every
year?" Danowitz said. "No, I think is the answer."
That wasn’t the question. The question was whether the
uranium mining operations actually posed a threat to the watershed, not whether
contaminating it would be undesirable. Instead of a sober discussion of the
risk factors, we get big, scary numbers about how many people drink from the
local water supply, and how much money the tourism industry generates. There
are already uranium mines in the area, and the new moratorium doesn’t shut them
down, but somehow tourists are overcoming their fear of being eaten by giant
radioactive scorpions and visiting the Grand Canyon.
There are situations when jobs, income, and resources might
need to be sacrificed in the name of public health, but nothing about this
particular Interior action seems like a careful measurement of risk and
consequence. It sounds more like an easy way to curry favor with extremist
groups, coupled with this Administration’s default stance of shutting down any
exploitation of energy resources that could slow down the big solar panel and
electric car transformation they are so eager to impose on Americans. Besides,
uranium is scary, and fear is always a reliable solvent for reason.
CLICK HERE TO READ ARTICLE
Sphere: Related Content
Labels:
Arizona,
Ban,
banning access,
contaminating,
evidence,
Interior Department,
Ken Salazar,
Rob Bishop,
uranium mining,
water
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)











































































0 comments:
Post a Comment