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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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91
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jul_sep
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0826330.000
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1994-02-27
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<text>
<title>
(Aug. 26, 1991) War over the Wetlands
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Aug. 26, 1991 Science Under Siege
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ENVIRONMENT, Page 53
War over the Wetlands
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A policy shift makes a mockery of Bush's campaign promise to be
an ecology-minded President
</p>
<p>By Michael D. Lemonick--Reported by Jerome Cramer/Washington
and J. Madeleine Nash/Bottineau, N. Dak.
</p>
<p> The shallow depressions that dot the farm fields of North
Dakota would hardly fit most peoples' definition of wetlands.
The smallest of these glacier-carved features, known as prairie
potholes, are under water for only a few weeks in the spring.
During periods of low rainfall, they are almost
indistinguishable from any other acreage. But when the frozen
ground warms in early spring, the depressions swarm with
crustaceans and insects that provide migrating waterfowl with
essential protein. The smaller potholes also enable breeding
pairs of birds to find the privacy they covet.
</p>
<p> Yet seasonal wetlands like the prairie potholes and
seemingly dry areas like the edges of lakes and rivers and
swamps that are actually waterlogged below ground level are also
potential moneymakers for farmers, land developers and oil and
gas drillers. Because of pressure from such groups, the Bush
Administration has a new policy that endangers these fragile
lands. Though the President has not technically violated his
1988 campaign pledge of "No net loss of wetlands," the official
definition of a wetland is being narrowed. As much as a third
of the 38.4 million hectares (95 million acres) of wetlands in
the lower 48 states will be considered wetlands no more and thus
will be vulnerable to development. Says Jay Hair, president of
the National Wildlife Federation: "The new policy represents a
death sentence for much of this critical American resource."
</p>
<p> The government action clearly reflects the commonsense--and incorrect--notion that wetlands have to be wet. While
swamps and marshes are more important, the dryer wetlands have
their unique role in the environment. They are natural flood
controls, and they also act as filtration systems for water
passing through them. Some wetland plants absorb toxic
pollutants like heavy metals.
</p>
<p> If the Administration is fuzzy about what constitutes a
wetland, that is understandable. Before 1989, there was no
official definition, and the four agencies that had jurisdiction
over wetland development--the Fish and Wildlife Service, the
Army Corps of Engineers, the Environmental Protection Agency and
the Department of Agriculture--often disagreed. Says the NWF's
Douglas Inkley: "Sometimes the Corps would say one thing to a
farmer, and a week later the EPA would come out and say
something different."
</p>
<p> The confusion was so great that the agencies finally got
together in 1989 and wrote a manual, spelling out for the first
time what a wetland is: any depression where water accumulates
for seven consecutive days during the growing season, where
certain water-loving plants are found and where the soil is
saturated enough with water that anaerobic bacterial activity
can take place. Development in such areas was forbidden without
a special exemption. And anyone wanting an exemption from the
rules had to prove that there was no practical alternative to
wetlands destruction.
</p>
<p> Now the Administration has proposed a new manual that
relaxes the rules. It designates as wetlands areas having 15
consecutive days of inundation during a growing season or 21
days in which the soil is saturated with water up to the
surface. Moreover it redefines the growing season to be shorter
and reduces the variety of plants that qualify an area as a
wetland. The provision requiring proof of no viable alternative
to filling in a wetland will apply only to "highly valuable"
areas--the top rung on a new classification ladder to be
worked out over the next year by a federal panel.
</p>
<p> Perhaps the most controversial change is the decision to
permit more extensive "mitigation banking," which requires
landowners to restore lost wetlands or create new ones in
exchange for destroying an existing site. Critics charge that
there is no scientific body of evidence to prove that man-made
wetlands are a substitute for the real thing.
</p>
<p> Still, the outcome could have been worse. EPA chief
William Reilly, who was in charge of rewriting the manual, tried
to ease the existing guidelines as little as possible. But he
had to win the approval of probusiness presidential advisers.
The resulting compromise may not please environmentalists, but
it may derail a bill moving through Congress that would have
been even more damaging to wetlands.
</p>
<p> The manual will not become official until after a 60-day
period of public comment and a subsequent EPA review, and
environmental groups are gearing up to comment loudly. So are
those who want to profit from the wetlands. Says Mark Maslyn of
the American Farm Bureau Federation: "The new rules bring some
common sense back to wetlands policy." But common sense may not
be the best guide in a debate that hinges on scientific
questions. As with so many other resources, America's marginal
wetlands may not be fully appreciated until they are gone.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>