Legislature(1997 - 1998)
04/06/1998 03:40 PM Senate RES
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* first hearing in first committee of referral
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HJR 52 - OPPOSE AMERICAN HERITAGE RIVERS
CHAIRMAN HALFORD called the Senate Resources Committee meeting to
order at 3:40 p.m. and announced HJR 52 to be up for consideration.
REPRESENTATIVE JEANNETTE JAMES, Sponsor of HJR 52, said the
American Heritage River initiative is a wolf in sheep's clothing.
It is something we don't need more of in Alaska, because we already
have enough federal designation over some of our lands and waters.
She said that President Clinton issued Executive Order 13061
directing agencies to establish and implement the initiative. It
was touted as a method to give us money to clean up our rivers, but
it also includes the entire watershed. John Schuller killed a
grizzly bear in his own backyard and was found to be at fault
because he was in the zone of imminent danger according to the
Endangered Species Act. We don't want to allow the federal
government to come in and put a blanket over our rivers and call
them American Heritage Rivers.
SENATOR TORGERSON proposed to change the last "Whereas" to "Be It
Resolved."
REPRESENTATIVE JAMES said she supported that.
There were no objections to the adoption of the amendment and it
was so ordered.
MS. MEL KROGSENG said she was speaking on her own behalf as a Kenai
River property owner and that although the majority of property
owners objected to being included in the American Heritage Rivers,
the Kenai River Special Management Area Advisory Board chose to
make a motion to nominate the river as an American Heritage River.
The statute clearly states that their authorization is purely to
hold meetings on the Comprehensive Management Plan for the river
and to make recommendations to the Commissioner. There was a lot
of discussion on the matter and they came very close to being
nominated, but the Kenai Peninsula Assembly defeated that action.
She wanted them to know that the Kenai River Special Management
Area Advisory Board seems to be taking actions that she believes
are inappropriate with their mission.
CHAIRMAN HALFORD asked if they should be added to the list this
resolution is sent to.
MS. KROGSENG answered that it wouldn't be inappropriate for them to
send a copy to all the other 49 states.
MR. STAN LEAPHART, Citizens Advisory Commission on Federal Areas,
said in August last year they submitted comments on the initiative
to Katie McGinty, who is chairperson of the Council on
Environmental Quality, urging that the proposed initiative not be
adopted. But it was adopted over those objections. There are
currently 126 rivers that have been nominated for designation and
it's expected that the President will make his decision on the
first 10 within the next two weeks. Their analysis indicated that
at best its goals and objectives remain poorly defined and is a
duplication of existing programs designed to provide assistance to
local governments. At worst, it represents an entirely new federal
program with no statutory authority for its creation which is a
threat to state and local government authority, as well as the
rights of private property owners. Although there have been some
improvements to the initiative, there are still a lot of problems
with it.
One of the stated goals is to improve the delivery of services by
the 12 departments and agencies that constituted the American
Heritage Rivers' Interagency Committee. He asked why it takes the
creation of a new federal program to compel these 12 agencies to do
their job. The answer, of course, is that it does not. The
Department is not currently performing as it should under existing
statutory mandates and regulatory guidelines and they fail to see
how this initiative would change that. On the contrary, by
requiring agencies to focus on this new program, they will have
fewer resources available for more important and legitimate
programs. Better agency performance is not what this initiative is
all about. It truly represents an effort to create, by executive
fiat, a program that Congress refused to create in 1996 when it
rejected a number of bills which would have created a National
Heritage Area Partnership Program. His commission is also highly
skeptical of the claim that designation of a river would only occur
if there is "broad community support," particularly in light of the
extremely lose definition of the term community. He used the
example of the creation of the 1.7 million acre Grand Staircase
Escalante National Monument over the objection of local communities
by Utah's congressional delegation.
Designation of a river would require adherence to a wide array of
program guidelines and requirements in order to maintain the
designation and qualify for federal funds. This would come at some
cost to local control or loss of opportunity for the private
property owner. The carrot and stick approach by the federal
government means some special interest group gets the carrot and
private property owners and businesses get the stick, usually in
the form of more regulations and restrictive programs.
Number 229
SENATOR TAYLOR asked which six rivers were on the short list to be
designated.
MR. LEAPHART answered that there are actually 126 rivers which are
primarily in the eastern states, but the Columbia, the Rio Grande,
and portions of the Upper Mississippi are some.
CHAIRMAN HALFORD asked Representative James if she considered
opposing the entire program, as well as being exempted.
REPRESENTATIVE JAMES said she thought about it, but decided they
might be stepping on some other people's toes.
CHAIRMAN HALFORD said he didn't think they could do it under the
current title and he didn't think it was appropriate to go through
the process of a title change.
SENATOR LINCOLN said under the process for nominating a river it
says the communities in coordination with state, local, or tribal
governments can nominate the river stretch and individuals living
outside the area cannot nominate a river. This resolution says the
Alaska State Legislature opposes a nomination or designation of any
river in Alaska and asked if that does not preclude anyone in a
community who wants to nominate their river.
REPRESENTATIVE JAMES said the intent of the President's initiative
was to have the people who live along the river make the nomination
which is part of the problem. Along with allowing your river to be
identified as an American Heritage River, you get money to clean it
up and that's an inviting thing. She thought the nomination should
also be agreed to by the State, because the rivers are under the
power of the state, not the local people. They do not want local
people to have that authority.
SENATOR LINCOLN asked if someone chooses to nominate a river in
their community, would they need the state's blessing, the local
blessing, and the tribal blessing. If that is so, by this
resolution, that will never happen. She asked if that was correct.
REPRESENTATIVE JAMES said that was the purpose.
SENATOR TORGERSON said he knows from experience that it does not
come to the legislature for approval or to a local government.
Their problem initially is that the advisory group to the
Commissioner nominated it in the first place and that could be two
people. To the Commissioner of Natural Resources it could be one.
SENATOR LINCOLN said she wanted to understand if it says all the
different bodies could nominate, but the State would not give their
blessing.
SENATOR TAYLOR said it goes beyond that, because the federal
government has no jurisdiction over the navigable waters of the
United States. There is not one single court case that indicates
that isn't right. He thought the President was trying to use the
initiative as leverage against the people who own property along
rivers and the states who have all the rights to those waters. The
Dinkum Sands case clearly indicates who has control over those
navigable waters.
REPRESENTATIVE JAMES supported Senator Taylor's comments and then
added that the communities can nominate the rivers; and it says the
federal role will be solely to support community based efforts to
preserve and protect the resource.
SENATOR TAYLOR moved to pass SCSHJR 52 (RES) from Committee with
individual recommendations. There were no objections and it was so
ordered.
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