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Archive for January, 2013

Gov. Christie Launches Re-Election Campaign in Belmar

January 10th, 2013 No comments

 Belmar Boardwalk Rebuilding Just the First of Many Sandy Photo Op’s

Gov. Chris Christie, joined by Belmar Mayor Matthew Doherty, center, pulls a lever on a pile driver to push the first pile into the ground. (source: KEVIN R. WEXLER / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER). Source: Bergen Record

[Update: 1/15/13 – Charlie Stile of Bergen Record nails exactly what we argue: Christie’s videos blurring the boundaries of official and political – end]

Governor Christie didn’t wait for the dust to settle on his State of the State self- promotion yesterday, before heading out to the shore to kick off his re-election campaign at the rebuilding of the Belmar Boardwalk.

The Democrats must just love this photo! Chris Christie – the hard hat labor champion of the working man and construction unions! Hahaahahaaha!

Suck on that Steve Sweeney!

And there’s a whole lot more where that came from, as billions of taxpayer bailout dollars flow in block grants into Governor Christie’s NJ Rebuild Czar’s Office, no strings attached.

Sweet!

We can look forward to a spring, summer, and fall of Christie doing tons of shore ribbon cutting events.

Nice job fellas! You just keep up that bi-partisan “working for the greater good of NJ” bullshit.

And if I read a press release from some environmental group declaring victory because the original plans to build with tropical rainforest hardwood ipe were abandoned, I surely will throw up. Talk about missing the forest for the trees …

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Christie Delivers Sickening Sandy Self Promotion and Denial In State of the State

January 9th, 2013 No comments

Gov. Ignores Wake up Call on Global Warming, Coastal Vulnerability & Lax Regulation

Christie Doubles Down on Rebuild Czar & Deregulation

We have created a cabinet-level position to coordinate the State’s efforts across every agency – and Marc Ferzan is here today – ready to work with you on this restoration effort.

We have directed our Department of Environmental Protection to streamline approvals for restoring critical infrastructure. ~~~ Gov. Christie State of the State Address

[[Update: 1/15/13 – Charlie Stile of Bergen Record nails exactly what we argue: Christie’s videos blurring the boundaries of official and political – end]

 

Just a quickie this morning – I’m bedridden today, too sick to move.

While it looks like nobody in media picked up on the glaring contradiction in Gov. Christie’s speech (i.e. it was government, science, regulations, and public sector workers that responded to Sandy, the same things he bragged about slashing) at least Charlie Stile at the Bergen Record finally woke up to the obvious: Christie Using Bipartisanship as political strategy

Governor Christie issued a concise warning to any Democratic foes who might try to exploit superstorm Sandy’s recovery for political gain: Don’t go there.

“You see, some things are above politics. Sandy was and is one of those things,” Christie said during what could be described as his State of Sandy address to a joint session of the Legislature on Tuesday.

We had a very similar take, just 3 days ago, see: Gov. Christie Shamelessly Exploiting Sandy for Personal Benefit.

But in addition to simply criticizing the Governor’s obvious political game, we wrote about the Governor’s policy record that he is trying to hide  – the substance of which we predicted (correctly) would be ignored by media. So we will repeat that today in hopes that someone in media, the Democratic Party, or the environmental community will latch on to it and hold Christie accountable:

In addition to the Gov.’s  rank political exploitation of the Belmar Boardwalk, there is the simply astonishing hypocrisy of Gov. Christie demanding federal taxpayer dollars to restore beaches that his Administration is reducing public access to (see: Environmental groups sue NJ DEP over new beach rules that could limit access).

On top of the crude political exploitation, demagoguery, and the  hypocrisy, there also is the fact of the Gov.’s actual policy record, which directly contributed to the Sandy problems (for investigative news on the Christie record,see:

And we’ve been writing about this disgusting political game since day one.

I wrote about the Gov.’s use of bi-partisanship and empathy as political cover at the very first Senate hearing on Sandy back on November 26. I wrote:

Today’s Ocean County setting and opening hearing was transparently a partisan forum to promote and lionize the Governor, and allow – for the cameras – the Democrats to emulate the empathy and leadership of the Big Dog.

Republican Hack Senator O’Toole, at the outset, made the “criticism is out of  bounds” the focus of his opening satement:

During the opening remarks, Senator O’Toole criticized the Assembly Speaker for criticizing NJ Transit’s actions, while suggesting that any criticism of State policy or the State response was an inappropriate partisan attack on Governor Christie, who O’Toole claimed did a spectacular job.

I am a critic and I deeply resent that.”

I even spoke to Chairman Sarlo to complain about that after the hearing concluded.

So, the basic political and policy questions remain disappointingly unaddressed:

  • Will Democrats and Legislators allow the Gov. and his Rebuild Czar to unilaterally control the game?
  • Will the media engage the substance of the Governor’s policy record on issues related to Sandy, from Climate change, through vulnerability assessment and planning, through regulatory oversight at DEP?
  • Will environmental groups engage at all, or continue to cower and hide behind meaningless principles?
  • Why are we rebuilding in locations and patterns we know will be washed out by sea level rise and future storms?
  • Will there be a real debate on a Coastal Commission?
  • Will anyone write about or work on President Obama’s Executive Order on Sandy Rebuild? The total blackout on that is allowing the insane Rebuild Now! juggernaut to gain momentum, unchallenged.

We can’t continue to carry that debate alone here at Wolfenotes – someone out there needs to step up. You know who you are.

 

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New DEP “Pocket Ranger” Park App A Move Toward Privatization and Commercialization

January 7th, 2013 No comments

Parks provide solace, nature, reflection, and escape from the commercial high tech world

NO ADVERTISING WANTED!

 

As part of the Christie Administration’s Parks Privatization plan, the DEP is touting a new smartphone app for State Park users:

13/P2) TRENTON –The Department of Environmental Protection has launched a new mobile phone application designed to provide information and technology to guide and enhance users’ hunting, fishing and wildlife watching experiences, and to provide added safety and enjoyment for outdoor enthusiasts at all of New Jersey’s wildlife management areas, state parks and forests, and other public open spaces.

“This is part of the Christie Administration’s continuing effort to bring more people into our state parks and wildlife areas, to enhance offerings and make it easier and more convenient for our residents to enjoy the great diversity of fish and wildlife and outdoor recreation opportunities in New Jersey,’’ said DEP Commissioner Bob Martin.

The application is a move towards privatizing and commercializing the park experience.

The initiative reveals a deep misunderstanding of the value of an outdoor parks experience.

People visit state parks to get outdoors, experience nature, relax, and have solace and refuge from our increasingly commercial, artificial, and high tech daily life.

The DEP’s “Pocket Ranger” application includes advertisements, exposing parks users to commercial pitches just at the point they are going to a get away from all that and enjoy the simplicity of the outdoors.

People long for an old school parks experience – where information is provided by a conversation with a real professionally trained and knowledgeable park ranger, not a electronic advertising gadget.

The whole point is to get kids away from 24/7 on line life and experience nature directly. The “Pocket Ranger” locks them into that dead digital world.

Are we going to see a generation of youngsters with their heads down eyes locked on the smartphone screen as they hike and canoe in state parks? It really disappoints me now to come across people on cell phones or texting on trails – that should not be encouraged!

This is another sad example that illustrates that all the Christie folks are aware of and care about is money – demeaning the park visitor as just another consumer and degrading the park experience to just another market opportunity. Here’s Larry rangonese of DEP press office confirming just that:

“People come to the parks for nature and history, but that doesn’t mean we can’t offer them something to go with it.”

[and how would people react to a “Pocket Priest”? Keep the moneychangers out of the temple!]

The application also subjects users to commercial advertising pitches and invasions of personal privacy.

We urge potential users to read the fine print: buyer beware!

From the PocketRanger website:

5. Participants in our “Pocket Ranger® GeoChallenges” must register to participate through the Pocket Ranger® software or affiliate sites. Those who do not participate in the Contest do not need to register. The registration process requires Contest participants to provide their legal name, create a username, and supply their email address. The information supplied during the registration process may be shared with our third party partners. From time to time, Contest participants will receive benefits and incentives emails from us or our third party partners. No other personal information will be shared with our third party sponsors. We believe, in good faith, that our third party partners will protect your data using similar safeguards as those described in this Privacy Policy.

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EPA Fracking Study Is Flawed – But Reasons Why Are Obscured

January 7th, 2013 No comments

In addition to the politics of the Obama Administration’s support for fracking, a narrow scope and EPA reliance on industry & captured state energy development agencies doom EPA study 

Study Delays allow gas industry to continue to create “facts on the ground” that guarantee irreversible impacts from fracking

EPA designated frack study as a "Highly Influential Scientific Assessment" - plays right along with industry strategy which seeks to delay, control the content, and weaken the findings and recommendations of the study to evade regulation and maximize production.

 

Last week, I suspected that there were substantive – as well as political – reasons for EPA’s late Friday afternoon news dump that released the progress report on EPA’s Fracking study (see: EPA Caught Taking a Fracking Dump).

Before reading the EPA study, I made two important points in that post:

1) the scope of the EPA study was far too narrow:

We attended a protest and testified on the public hearing in Binghamton NY, to scope that study (see: On the Threshold of a Fracking Nightmare).

At that hearing, we urged EPA to dramatically expand the scope of what then was contemplated as a narrow study on drinking water, to address cumulative impacts, climate change impacts, health effects, and land use change and ecological effects.

In this study, EPA is only looking at impacts to drinking water.

That means things like huge fugitive emissions of greenhouse gases and health effects of hazardous air pollutants are ignored. So are impacts to forests, wildlife and water quality destroyed by gas development access roads, drilling pads, etc. So are severe impacts to wetlands ecosystems and fisheries caused by withdrawals of billions of gallons of water to frack wells.

2) EPA itself acknowledged that the progress report did NOT  assess impacts on drinking water:

Here’s how EPA’s press release spun the study:

“WASHINGTON – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) today provided an update on its ongoing national study currently underway to better understand any potential impacts of hydraulic fracturing on drinking water resources. Results of the study, which Congress requested EPA to complete, are expected to be released in a draft for public and peer review in 2014. The update provided today outlines work currently underway, including the status of research projects that will inform the final study.  It is important to note that while this progress report outlines the framework for the final study, it does not draw conclusions about the potential impacts of hydraulic fracturing on drinking water resources, which will be made in the final study.”

In other words, EPA not only buried the Report in a Friday afternoon news dump before a major holiday, the Report itself merely kicked the can down the road and dodged the big issues.

The latter point has gotten picked up by the media, because it is so obviously bizarre that EPA is reporting no progress on the only real reason for conducting the report!

But, the media got that story very wrong because they did not distinguish between the progress report and the final report. This makes it seem like the drinking water issue is not being addressed at all, instead of being addressed the wrong way (i.e. study methodology)

The media also is missing the real issues about “the wrong way”, in their rush to condemn EPA for admitting that the progress report “does not draw conclusions about the potential impacts of hydraulic fracturing on drinking water resources.”

So, before I talk about the more important issue regarding the scope of the study, let’s talk about point #2.

While I knew that EPA had failed a basic test and made no real progress, I was shocked by the reason why EPA failed.

This is tricky, because the issues are complex and the technical issues of statistical projection, field data versus computer modeling, and the scope of work are all jumbled together.

According to the Wall Street Journal story, EPA can’t report progress because they can’t find a drilling company to work with: EPA fracking study may dodge some tough questions

The EPA had planned to do both computer simulations of water contamination and actual field tests at drilling sites. But the agency hasn’t found a drilling company to partner with to test groundwater around a drilling site. That leaves the computer simulations. But the EPA said those won’t be able to address the likelihood of contamination “occurring during actual field operations.”

“In its inability to find a single company willing to test water quality before and after drilling and fracking, the EPA is being thwarted in perhaps the most important part of its study of fracking’s impacts,” Earthworks said in a statement.

The field data versus modeling issue is key and it is being frustrated by EPA’s study approach, which is to rely on industry partnerships.

This raised the far more important issue of industry role in EPA science.

  • Industry role in EPA science

Here is EPA’s charge from Congress:

The conferees urge the agency to carry out a study on the relationship between hydraulic fracturing and drinking water, using a credible approach that relies on the best available science, as well as independent sources of information. The conferees expect the study to be conducted through a transparent, peer-reviewed process that will ensure the validity and accuracy of the data. The Agency shall consult with other federal agencies as well as appropriate state and interstate regulatory agencies in carrying out the study, which should be prepared in accordance with the agency’s quality assurance principles.

First of all, Congress directed EPA to work with other federal and state regulatory agencies. Congress said nothing about a role for  industry – Congress said nothing about any EPA industry partnership.

Yet, EPA is stressing an industry partnership relationship and has structured the study in a way that depends on reliance on industry data and industry cooperation.

The EPA continues to work with industry partners to begin research activities at potential prospective case study locations, which involve sites where the research will begin before well construction. This will allow the EPA to collect baseline water quality data in the area. …

The EPA is committed to conducting a study that uses the best available science, independent sources of information, and a transparent, peer-reviewed process that will ensure the validity and accuracy of the results. The agency is working in consultation with other federal agencies, state and interstate regulatory agencies, industry, non-governmental organizations, and others in the private and public sector (sic). …

The EPA continues to work with industry partners to design and develop prospective case studies. Because prospective case studies remain in their early stages, the progress report focuses on the retrospective case studies only.

Environmental groups can not compete with the energy industry’s science.

By holding a few staekholder meetings with environmental groups and public scoping sessions, EPA has opened the door to wholesale control of the content of the study.

EPA should be doing the work, hiring contractors, and collecting new field data.

Instead, EPA is relying on industry data.

Worse, EPA is relying on the captured State pro-energy development bureaucracies that have failed to properly regulate the energy industry. The mission of those organizations is to promote energy development – protection of the environment is a secondary or tertiary role. Furthermore, those state agencies lack the resources to properly monitor and regulate the gas industry, even if they intended to do so.

Industry has argued that State regulatory oversight is adequate. But State level regulatory failure is clearly part of the problem.

It is not appropriate for EPA to rely on industry and pro-energy development State agencies.

That fails Congress’ demand that EPA use  a “credible approach” based on “independent data” . It also fails EPA’s own basic tests of independent data and scientific integrity.

  •  Scope of the Study

Congress recommended that the scope of the study in their charge that EPA carry out a study on the relationship between hydraulic fracturing and drinking water,”

But in establishing that narrow charge, Congress did not prohibit or restict EPA’s own scientific initiative and scientific judgement (besides not being legally bound by this specific charge of Congress on fracking and drinking water, EPA does not need Congress to act to study a problem).

EPA could follow the science and the data and scope the study based on a comprehensive set of potential impacts.

That narrow approach to the EPA study clearly contradicts the approach to deregulation of fracking. Haliburton sought the broadest possible set of exemptions from federal law – and Congress played right along

EPA chose to accept Congress’ narrow scope and did not use basic scientific integrity to scope the study. Instead, EPA followed the political winds from Congress and narrowly tailor the study to just drinking water.

EPA did just the opposite in the industry partnership approach – they broadened the scope of and flat out ignored Congress’s narrow charge to consult with regulatory agencies and rely on independent data.

EPA knows better and could never get away with that in scoping an Environmental Impact Statement under NEPA.

We expect a whitewash when the study finally gets completed, which should take many years, a period of time when the gas industry will continue to create “facts on the ground” that guarantee irreversible impacts from fracking.

(Just consider: how many thousands of new wells drilled, permits issued, and contracts executed will come before that EPA study is complete? Then add 4 more years for rule making! The game is rigged, folks.)

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Please Join Protest at The Governor’s State of the State Address

January 7th, 2013 No comments

I’m a longtime Trenton based advocate, but this year I’ll be protesting the Governor’s annual State of the State address in another state capitol, Albany NY on Wednesday:

Rally to Stop Fracking in NY at the State of the State Address

 

The New Yorkers Against Fracking coalition is calling on all New Yorkers to come to Albany for a rally to keep fracking out of our beloved state. We will take our message right to the Governor as we gather outside the annual State of the State Address, delivered by Andrew Cuomo.

Apparently, NJ’s environmental groups – who are working so well together behind the scenes and with dozens of closed door DEP stakeholder groups and are so busy crafting “principles”, slogans, and press releases –  don’t seem to have any message to bring to NJ Governor Christie.

Environmentalists apparently could not mobilize a message to bring to The Governor that has by far the worst environmental record in NJ State history – and adding insult to injury, just days ago, Christie openly opposed a Coastal Commission to govern post Sandy Shore planning (while ignoring and slashing climate change and DEP regulatory programs).

Oh well. Maybe they’ll prove me wrong and have a secret swarm event planned where thousands will show up, shock the media, and overwhelm state house security!

Could you even imagine this in NJ? That might make King Christie angry, and he’s known to retaliate (no more mitigation money or renewal of open space funding! Maybe he’ll even veto that life and death plastic bag bill!)

One way or another, this darkness got to give

Albany anti-fracking protest (8/27/12)

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