Restore Law and Order in the Conservation Area
NJAS Opinion: August, 2001
A recent special report in the Atlantic City Press (Sunday,
June 10, 2001) details increasing wetland violations, lack of
enforcement of illegal fills, lack of mitigation and deal making
instead of penalties. An editorial in The Record (June 13, 2001)
points to a serious drop in notice of wetlands violations and
fines since 1993, along with a concurrent cut in the Land Use
Regulation Program personal of more than 20%. This in spite of
the fact that on paper at least, the New Jersey Freshwater
Wetlands Protection Act is the strongest law in the nation!
Discovery of an illegal conversion of swamp forest into
cranberry bogs results in a controversial land settlement, not a
regulatory sting. "Let's make a deal" was also the
order of the day in the recent Pinelands Commission approval of
a residential development in a protected rattlesnake habitat in
exchange for a parcel of land, instead of enforcement under the
Endangered Species Act. And the Commission can only muster 4
conservation votes to protect, preserve and enhance! Buffer
requirements around wetlands get nonchalanted, with incompatible
uses allowed in the transition area. Instead of fines and
enforcement, we get endless stakeholder processes and
compromises.
A law that is not enforced is no law at all. There is a
pervasive pall of permissiveness now around conservation
regulations that threatens to undermine and undo what was
squarely won in the legislature. It is a product of our age, an
unprincipled capitulation to relativism in the protection of
natural resources that are vital to our welfare. We need a rapid
reversal of this trend before it becomes a cancer.
To that end we propose the following as soon as possible:
* Restore the 20 plus percent cuts in the Land Use Regulation
Program to close the gap between violations and enforcement
actions.
* Provide an independent stable of consultants, not paid by
the developer who are expert in various taxa, to do the
endangered species investigations necessary to enforce Pinelands
regulations, CAFRA regs, and Freshwater Wetlands regs.
* Use the ample discretion NJDEP has in the critical habitat
provisions both of the CAFRA regs and the FWPA (freshwater
wetlands) regs to provide sufficient protection for wetland
species
* Tie the NJDEP Landscape Project to both the CAFRA and FWPA
regulations and to the state Endangered and Nongame Species
Conservation Act (ENSCA) so that sufficient habitat around the
threatened and endangered species is protected. Since the
Supreme Court Sweet Home decision in the 90's, it is clear that
habitat destruction amounts to "take" of a species. It
is an utter absurdity in the same breath to forbid the take of
an endangered species, and then allow the destruction of its
habitat so that next year it doesn't reproduce.
* Use article 10 of the Municipal Land Use Law permitting
regional zoning to provide conservation zones of low density in
areas with clusters of endangered and threatened species
* Establish a Category One (highest) water quality
designation on streams with trout and endangered species in all
special resource areas such as the Highlands, the national
wildlife refuges and the state Natural Areas, so that these
areas cannot be degraded after money has been expended for their
conservation.
* Restore the Office of Environmental Prosecutor so that
violations do not go without penalty
* Restore the Department of the Public Advocate, so that
there is somewhere to go when the public interest is not being
protected.
We challenge the state to reverse the tide, to become a
player and a plaintiff, not a co-defendant. Back up our laws
with teeth! Non-enforcement is throwing good money after bad.
Richard Kane, Vice President
Conservation and Stewardship
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