As I am writing this article, congress is debating a Continuing Resolution to extend government funding for the rest of the year. By the time you are reading this article, voting may have taken place. My column last week spoke of the use of Facebook in discovering interesting articles. This week, Facebook and other social media applications were key tools in helping to spread awareness of the need to make phone calls to help protect our environment. The astonishing spread of calls for freedom and less restrictive government in the Mideast is also testament to the efficacy of these tools. All the coverage I have seen gives credit to usage of Facebook,twitter , and email in arranging and coordinating the protests, and in allowing unedited coverage of these events to spread worldwide.
The Long Island Sound Study is composed of groups from along the southern side of Connecticut and the north shore of Long Island who work together to protect the water quality of the Long Island Sound. There is a broad diversity of representation. Some of them members are locally based like Friends of the Bay or the Hempstead Harbor Protection Committee, there are municipal members like the Town of Oyster Bay, representatives from fishing associations, larger regional organizations like Citizens Campaign for the Environment, Audubon New York and Connecticut, and governmental agencies including the Environmental Protection Agency and the Dcpartment of Environmental Conservation. All of us work together to protect the Long Island Sound and its watershed areas.
Some of the larger organizations have staff members who closely follow what is occurring in Washington and report back to their constituents and to members of the Long Island Sound Study. This week the amount of urgent emails from environmental organizations was more than I have ever seen. An email Friends of the Bay sent began with “The environment is under assault in Congress right now”. These are difficult economic times, and tough choices have to be made. It seems though that cuts are not being made evenly, or with regard to damage that may be done that is irreversible. Once a habitat is destroyed, it is gone forever. As someone famously said “land – they aren’t making any more of it.”
One of the tables of funding appropriations that was circulated was astonishing to me:
SF Bay | $7m | $4.847m |
Puget Sound | $50m | $50m |
South Florida | $2.168m | $2.061m |
Mississippi River Basin | $0 | $6m |
Long Island Sound | $7m | $2.962m |
Gulf of Mexico | $6m | $4.464m |
Lake Champlain | $4m | $1.399m |
As you see, funding for the Long Island Sound was being cut by more than 50%, to 2.962 million. The most the sound ever received was $7 million. Our shellfishing industry alone contributes $7 million to our regional economy. $7 million was the most the Sound ever received.
Understandably, groups were very concerned about these deep cuts. It had been anticipated that funding would remain at the 2010 level, at $7 million. Emails were sent out by Audubon New York and Connecticut, requesting assistance in reaching out to legislators. Friends o f the Bay and Citizens Campaign for the Environment sent out eblasts to our membership and posted alerts on our Facebook pages, which were in turn shared by the Hempstead Harbor Protection Committee and Boating Times Long Island. I heard from representative’s assistants that they were receiving phone calls as a result of these cooperative efforts. In these very difficult times, when government agencies and non profit organizations are stretched to the maximum, cooperation and support is key to achieving goals. Public support is crucial. Your legislators need to know what is important to their constituents.
As part of this cooperative between organizations, Sean Mahar of Audubon New York provided the following talking points to use when calling legislators regarding this Continuing Resolution – these can also be used as the basis of a letter or an email to your representative. The Continuing Resolution may have already been decided as you read this column. It is still very important to let your legislators know that the environment (and the jobs produced or protected, tourism income, etc) is important to you.
“Across the nation, our important water ecosystems like the Great Lakes and Long Island Sound are under constant threat from pollution and habitat loss. We face a massive backlog of projects to clean up and restore these important engines of the regional and national economy.
The cuts proposed in this Continuing Resolution disproportionately target these important water and wildlife programs, that invest in programs that put people to work restoring the waters that millions of people depend on each day.
For example, in my district, Long Island Sound is a national economic and ecological treasure that contributes more than $8 billion per year to the regional economy from commercial and recreational fishing, ecotourism and other water dependent businesses. More than 28 million people, or nearly 10 percent of the population of the United States , live within 50 miles of Long Island Sound, and the resultant development has led to increasingly poor ecosystem health.
For the Sound, federal funding through the Long Island Sound Restoration and Stewardship Acts is desperately needed to reach the goals of the Comprehensive Conservation and Management Plan (CCMP) that has been developed by the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Long Island Sound Study (LISS). Yet this CR cuts this program by over 50%!
This attack by the House Republicans on environmental spending is the wrong course, and does little to put our nation on the road to economic and environmental recovery. Investments in local environmental restoration jobs that cannot be exported elsewhere must be prioritized and not undone when the demand for this funding could not be greater.
In New York alone, over $70 million worth of projects was applied for in the first year of funding through the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, and while the $20 million in funding received by the state is just beginning to yield dividends, we cannot afford to lose ground.
The longer we wait to reverse the decline of our coastal ecosystems like the Great Lakes, Long Island Sound, New York Harbor, and other of our nation’s great water ecosystems, the costs to bring these places back increase drastically, greatly decreasing the returns on our nation’s investment.
Therefore I urge you to vote against these cuts to the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, Long Island Restoration and Stewardship Acts and other EPA Water Programs are the wrong course, and amendments that would handicap the EPA to protect the water and air resources we all depend on.
In addition, I urge you to oppose the elimination of funding for the State Wildlife Grants Program, the nation’s core program for keeping species from becoming endangered and keeps people working to monitor and improve the habitats that our fish and wildlife rely on.
This proposed elimination comes at a time when bird and wildlife watching is the fastest growing outdoor recreation bringing in billions in revenue from this ecotourism. Our state wildlife agencies and organizations need this which every state and territory in the nation gets their share of the funding based on a formula. Therefore every state benefits and every state will be negatively impacted by this program’s elimination.
This is why I urge my colleagues to vote against this assault on environmental programs, and take a scalpel to our systemic budgetary problems, instead of a hatchet to funding for our forest, water and wildlife. The health of our economy, future generations and the planet depend on it.”
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