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Triana (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore | Tue Aug-08-06 08:21 PM Original message |
Thanks to You, 06 Legislature Ends with Victories |
This year's NC General Assembly session has come to a close and
we are happy to share with you several victories for the environment and public health you helped make happen! We've asked you to do a lot since the state legislature started this year's session in May. You've acted on a number of important issues over the last three months: protecting the drinking water for NC's well users, implementing a landfill moratorium, reducing toxins in our children's schools, encouraging energy efficiency measures for the state, and protecting the state's existing strong groundwater rules for pollution cleanup. THANK YOU! Thousands of people, like you, from all over North Carolina have been responding to alerts from the NC Conservation Network during this legislative session. As a subscriber to our alerts, you are part of a growing community of North Carolinians that hold our decision-makers accountable for protecting our environment and public health. Many thanks for your actions, commitment, and voices that have truly made a difference this year. Check out what you all have accomplished in just three months: * Sent over 13,000 emails to your elected officials and decision-makers. * 150 activists gathered at the General Assembly for Clean Water Lobby Day, while hundreds of others who couldn't make it sent emails and made phone calls. * Dozens of volunteers working in two cities called over 1,000 activists across the state to ask them to call their legislators for energy efficiency legislation. * Over 1,500 of you attended our two statewide tours, most recently with Kilowatt Ours filmmaker Jeff Barrie. * You generated almost 5,000 messages this year to legislators regarding the landfill moratorium, which passed despite the nearly 30 waste industry lobbyists and the tens of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from the waste industry. As an advocacy organization, our power comes from you-the people of North Carolina. During this year's legislative session your calls, emails, and visits effectively provided support to our advocates here in Raleigh. Numerous times we would hear from legislators that your calls and emails were being heard and making a difference. Great work! ~~~~The Budget-Overall Good News~~~~ The environment faired fairly well in the final budget (SL 2006-66). Funding was provided for shellfish protection programs, private drinking water wells, public water supply systems, a state park expansion at Hickory Nut Gorge, restoration of funding for the pesticide disposal program, and full funding for the Clean Water Management Trust Fund. One key item that did not get funded was for new sedimentation and erosion control inspection positions. These positions are sorely needed to protect water quality around areas of new development and we hope will be a legislative priority for funding in 2007. ~~~~Victories for the Environment You Helped Make Happen~~~~ The first victory in the short session was the protection of groundwater quality for those relying on private drinking water wells. Your phone calls to committee members helped secure funding in the budget for notification and well water testing for residents living near known contamination "hotspots." Additionally, after a Raleigh News and Observer exposé in March on groundwater contamination, the Governor put his weight behind H2873, Safe Drinking Water/Private Wells, a bill to enforce new well construction standards statewide, which passed in the final days of session. The second major victory came in the final hours of session, when the House agreed to pass the Senate-backed moratorium on new landfills. S353, Landfill Moratorium and Studies, puts a 1 year halt on permitting new mega-landfills. This will give the state time to study issues associated with mega-landfills being proposed in 6 eastern counties. The bill also calls for an environmental justice study to look at why landfills are being sited in low income minority communities. Grassroots action was strong on this effort. Your phone calls and emails helped dislodge the bill from House Rules committee to a floor vote. It passed second reading (99-11) and third reading (102-8) in the House, and passed the Senate unanimously. The other major victory of the session was the passage of H1502, Schoolchildren's Health Act. This bill, which reduces children's exposure to toxics in school, was held up last year by the arsenic treated wood industry (playground equipment can contain wood treated with arsenic.) This year, thanks to grassroots pressure, the bill was moved to a more favorable committee, where it passed. It moved on to a floor vote, where it beat off a weakening amendment (for the arsenic treated wood industry), and on to a final unanimous vote in both the House and Senate. While the legislature passed up the timely opportunity to implement a strong package of energy efficiency incentives, they did take two positive steps in that direction. The first was passage of S402, Water/Utilities Savings in Government Facilities, which enables government buildings to finance energy efficiency measures with future energy cost savings. The second was passage of S2051, State Energy Use Planning/Energy Assistance. This bill, which started as a strong package of energy efficiency incentives called the Energy Independence Act, ended as a milder set of steps involving studying and planning for energy efficiency. While not the strong victory a broad coalition of groups was after, the bill plants the seed for stronger legislative action next year. Several other initiatives did not move but were turned into studies, leaving the door open for action next year. A major community priority to pass authorization for the Land for Tomorrow bond referendum was not successful this year; instead the legislature authorized a study of the best ways to finance land conservation (S1122). Similarly, a proposal to include land managed for wildlife conservation in the lower tax rate present use value program was given the green light for a study (S1451), as was the "clean cars" program aimed at reducing vehicle emissions (H1723). ~~~~Lobby and Ethics Reform Cloud~~~~ Ethics reform was a significant backdrop to this year's legislative session. The session opened amidst calls for Speaker Jim Black's resignation due to potential ethics violations and closed just before a former legislator, Rep. Michael Decker, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit extortion, implicating Black in an illegal money-for-vote deal. Not surprisingly, a top priority this year was passing an ethics and lobbying reform bill, which they did in the final hours of session. The bill (H1843) makes some inroads, but will need further work next year. ~~~~Bad Bills That Passed~~~~ There were two significant losses this session, in which strong industry interests succeeded in undoing environmental protections already in place. The first affects air quality, and will let Duke Energy emit more pollution than current law would have allowed as they expand their Cliffside, NC power plant. Specifically, the bill allows Duke Energy to count pollution reductions it makes under the Clean Smokestacks Act-reductions that have been paid for by taxpayers-when calculating the emissions it can add to the air from new plants. The effect is that the calculated emissions from planned boilers at their Cliffside plant will not trigger a federal review from the Department of the Interior that would likely require stronger controls. This special exemption was inserted into a routine "cleanup" bill (S1587), and passed despite loud opposition from both grassroots activists and friendly legislators. Statewide environmental groups are fighting the expansion of new polluting power plants, urging the state to utilize energy efficiency measures and renewable energy options first. The second big loss this year was a blatant end run by developers around the rulemaking process, resulting in a lowering of the fee developers pay to reduce water pollution from nutrient runoff. Developments often cause runoff of nitrogen and phosphorous into waterways which degrades water quality and can lead to fish kills. The state offers developers an opportunity to pay into a fund to control these pollutants somewhere nearby rather than control them right there on the development site. The state went through a long rulemaking process to increase the fee from the sorely inadequate $11 per pound of nitrogen pollution to $57 per pound. The developers had every opportunity, including two public hearings, to object to this increase, but did not. Instead they introduced legislation (S1862) this year to reduce the fee back to $11 and send the state back to the drawing board to study (again) what the fee should be, and recommend legislation to set a new fee. We will be monitoring the process during the 2007 session and will let you know how things unfold. ~~~~Bad Bills You Helped Stop~~~~ In the final half of the session, several damaging bills emerged, leaving advocates scrambling, but grassroots pressure from folks like you succeeded in stopping three of the five bad bills! The first, H1778/S1132, Risk-Based Environmental Remediation, would have lowered groundwater cleanup standards and enabled polluters to walk away from future liability by paying a small fee. Several groups actively worked against this bill, along with DENR, the Governor's office, and legislative champions. In a tenacious effort to pass this legislation, the bill sponsor pulled out the stops with legislative maneuvers. At the last minute, thanks to grassroots pressure, industry backed down. However, they will undoubtedly return with this bill in 2007. H2162, Land Disturbing Activities Near Trout Waters would have weakened protections for trout waters. It was stopped from coming to a House Environment committee vote thanks largely to grassroots pressure from your emails. And finally, a provision sponsored by the billboard industry was defeated. The provision, added as an amendment to another bill (H1827), would have doubled the area of tree clearing in front of billboards and made the public foot the bill. Happily this bad provision was removed before the bill was passed. While some of these bad bills are likely to come back next year, the fact that three of the five bad bills were stopped is a notable success! Even though the 2006 session has ended, our work continues. As a community we will continue to hold our elected officials accountable for protecting public health, our environment, and existing environmental laws. If you have a moment, please write a letter to the editor of your local newspaper either thanking the NC General Assembly for their good work or challenging them on the work to come! Click here for tips on writing and submitting a letter to the editor: http://ncconservationnetwork1.org/ct/P1AH1zY1RXWs/. To find out how your legislators voted during the 2006 session, please visit the NC General Assembly website at http://ncconservationnetwork1.org/ct/Q7AH1zY1RXWB/. It has been a busy couple of months and we have been emailing you a lot lately. We will try to give you a break from our emails for a couple of weeks-unless there is a pressing issue that just can't wait. Thank you again for all of your emails, calls, visits to legislators, and your continued support of the NC Conservation Network. We look forward to working together as we continue to advocate for a cleaner and healthier North Carolina. Onwards! Veronica Butcher, Organizer NC Conservation Network **************************** Spread the word about the NC Conservation Network's Public Alerts! Visit http://ncconservationnetwork1.org/because_you_love_nc/join-forward.html?domain=because_you_love_nc to send a quick and easy email telling your friends and family about Public Alerts and asking them to join. Help support our work to protect North Carolina's air, water and quality of life. Donate online today by visiting: http://ncconservationnetwork1.org/ct/QdAH1zY1RXWc/ |
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