Friday, February 16, 2018

WI GOP Assembly passes its 'More, Bigger Floods' bill

[Update] Perhaps listening to "Fools Rush In" on their headphones, the GOP-led State Assembly followed the developers' money trail and approved Thursday its 'More, Bigger Floods' bill.

Robin Vos & Co., with GOP Senate leader Fitzgerald and always-campaigning-and-donation-colleciting Scott Walker will together open tens of thousands of protected wetland acres to 'development' at the very time increasingly more-frequent so-called 100-year storms loom increasingly more destructive.

Because the state is getting wetter, so thanks to the state, expect more of this - - 
  
- - after tens of thousands of acres of nature's natural sponges statewide are exchanged for parking lots or deceptively-named 'conservation' subdivisions.

As I wrote yesterday, if we had a real Department of Natural Resources, and not the business community subsidiary which Gov. Walker replaced it with, agency officials and non-partisan experts would have testified against the measure before the Assembly - - and cited the known science about a changing, wetter climate - - facts I'd discovered in late 2016 that Walker's DNR had scrubbed from its key web page on climate change science.

Basically, it's easier for the legislature to approve widespread, hodge-podge destruction of WI wetlands if the DNR under Walker already scrubbed the science - - the reality - - off its webpages that explained why we need smart government and working wetlands now more than ever.


I posted what the DNR's web page had contained, what had been deleted and what remained: new, sanitized text appears in yellow and deletions of original wording have black strike mark through them.


You can see in an example below the missing passages which call attention to changes in precipitation, and to the crucial value of wetlands:

scientists agree that the following changes are likely if climate change patterns continue. 
Increased summer and winter temperatures will cause increased evaporation droughtlower lake water levels and warmer water tornadoesresulting in reduced habitat for cold water species and a loss of critical wetland areas ice/snow or severe heat 
Decreased winter ice cover will also contribute The DNR staff stands ready to increased evaporation and lower lake water levels which could have severe economic consequences for adapt our valuable shipping industrymanagement strategies in an effort to protect our lakeslakeshore recreationwaterwaysplants, wildlife and coastal businessespeople who depend on them 
Changes in rain and snowfall patterns (including more frequent and severe storms) could change water flow in streams and rivers and increase stream bank erosion and runoff pollution.
Not that many years ago, a bill like the one the Assembly just approved would never have seen the light of day.

The state's conservation legacy - - think Gaylord Nelson and Earth Day, the popular, bi-partisan Knowles-Nelson Stewardship Fund, the work of giants like Aldo Leopold and John Muir - - and respect for informed-policy making was too strong to be overrun by a band of business bell-hopping clerks.

But whether the issue is wetlands, or groundwater, or exemptions and permit approvals for sand mines and golf courses, or Foxconn - - and, by the way, in that flood-prone county - - where will all the storm water from its hard, flat, baseball stadium-sized giant parking lots, and massive roofs over much of a complex the size of 11 football fields run to? - - those fact-driven, common-sense-informed days are gone. 

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