Labor and Sustainability Candidates Questionaire
LABOR AND SUSTAINABILITY CANDIDATES QUESTIONNAIRE
GLOBAL WARMING, CLIMATE CHANGE AND ENERGY
WARS FOR
OIL: The United
States is waging costly and bloody wars for gas and oil
in Afghanistan and Iraq, which are
causing thousands to be maimed and killed on both sides, including the sons and
daughters of American working families who are the victims of the poverty
draft. Plus, the continued use of
hydrocarbons is causing the planet’s warming with dire consequences. In addition to the suffering and loss of lives
caused by these armed conflicts, $5.6 billion is being squandered every month.
These funds could be used to subsidize renewable energy. For instance, it takes an investment of $166
million to get a 5,000-acre wind farm with 67 turbines up & running. For a manufacturing facility to produce 400
megawatts worth of solar voltaic roofing panels requires an outlay of $1
billion.
Do you support an immediate U.S. withdrawal from Iraq
and Afghanistan
to bring the troops home now as well as an end to all conflicts over
petroleum? Are you for using war
expenditures for conversion to a sustainable economy?
ZERO GREENHOUSE
GAS EMISSIONS: The carbon dioxide
concentrations that contribute to global warming have risen to 381 ppmv, with
2005 registering one of the largest increases on record—a rise of 2.6
ppmv. Recent
years have, on average, recorded double the rate of increase from just 30 years
ago. This indicates that business is
proceeding as usual with virtually nothing being done on the federal level to
stop the phenomenal increase of greenhouse gases due to the burning of fossil
fuels. Given the long life-spans of CO2
(Over 100 years) and other GHGs, even if we were to stabilize atmospheric
concentrations tomorrow, they would continue to work against us.
Do you support legislation mandating Zero
Greenhouse Gas Emissions From All Sources A.S.A.P.? What do you think of the Pavley Law in California, which
mandates a 20% reduction in GHG emissions overall by 2020?
RATIFICATION
OF THE KYOTO PROTOCOL: Recognizing the
inadequacies of the Kyoto Protocol given that it calls for only a 7% reduction
in carbon dioxide concentrations below 1990 levels by 2012 when the IPCC calls
for an 80% reduction and the treaty encourages controversial carbon-trading
schemes, some progress might be registered in this country in mitigating
climate change if the United States joined the world and became a signatory.
Do you support the ratification of the
Kyoto Protocol as a first step in climate change abatement on the federal
level?
CONVERSION TO WIND & SOLAR
POWER: With scientists telling us we have only a
decade before Earth’s climate system reaches a dangerous tipping point, it is
clear we need to wean ourselves off fossil fuels and get wind farms and solar
parks up and running on a massive scale in the Prairie States, Great Plains and
Southwest where those resources are most plentiful.
What immediate measures would you take to
achieve this goal and how would you ensure a just transition for oil, gas,
nuclear, electrical utility, auto and transport workers and their families as
the conversion to clean, non-nuclear renewable energy is made?
STATEWIDE
ENERGY BALLOT INITIATIVE: Humanity is facing a crisis of enormous
magnitude, which will affect generations to come, yet we have little say in the
state’s energy policies such as from what sources our power is derived. The people of Colorado voted recently for more wind power
in a state referendum.
Do you support a ballot initiative that
would give Minnesotans the right to vote on which energy sources are used?
PUBLIC
OWNERSHIP OF ELECTRICAL UTILITIES:
Many
people feel that the big power companies like Xcel are not being run
responsibly with the public interest or the health of the environment in mind
when you consider their continued commitment to using dirty coal and dangerous
nuclear power.
Do you support the public ownership of the
electrical utilities so they can be run for the benefit of people and the
state’s ecosystems?
100%
CLEAN MASS TRANSIT: Only 2% of our national transportation
system is mass transit. There are still
too many motor vehicles on the streets and highways emitting greenhouse gases,
ground-level ozone & VOCs that contribute to smog and acid-rain. Vast amounts of non-renewable resources go
into the production of private automobiles, too many of which cause horrible
traffic congestion. Even city buses,
that run mostly on dirty diesel fuel, emit large quantities of particulate
matter, contributing to childhood asthma, cancer and cardio-pulmonary problems
that lead to thousands of premature deaths annually. Currently, the nation’s poorest families
spend more than 40% of their take-home pay on transportation. Transport must be made more convenient,
affordable and equitable as well as ecological.
To stop global warming, clean up our air
and relieve traffic congestion, do you support 100% clean mass transit
powered by renewable wind and solar energy
that is more accessible to the poor?
JOBS
AND SUSTAINABILITY
APOLLO
ALLIANCE TEN-POINT PLAN: Job growth in Minnesota is stagnating. Between 2000 and 2004, 51,900 jobs were lost
in manufacturing alone with a 5% annual average unemployment rate. The Apollo Alliance promotes a Ten-Point Plan
for Good Jobs & Energy Independence.
It includes: 1) Improved automotive
technology & hybrid cars for greater fuel efficiency & reduced GHG
emissions. 2) Investment in more
energy-efficient factories through retrofits that will save jobs. 3) Construction of more high-performance,
green buildings to save on operating costs.
4) Production of energy-efficient appliances to satisfy consumer
demand. 5) Modernization of the
electrical infrastructure by installing scrubbers, capturing carbon and cogenerating
& transmitting renewable energy. 6)
Expansion of renewable energy development by diversifying in solar, biomass
& wind. 7) Improved transportation
options by investing in multimodal networks including bicycle, bus and rail
transit, both inner city & regional.
8) Revitalization of urban
centers & infrastructures with improved green planning. 9) Development of Hydrogen Fuel Cell
Technology. 10) Preservation of regulatory protections for
worker health & safety and the environment.
Do you agree that the Apollo Alliance
program for jobs and energy is worth adopting?
CLEAN
EDGE ACT: This legislation,
which is being introduced into Congress by Senators Reid,
Clinton, Cantwell & Stabenow, promises to create 530,000 jobs at
sustainable wages to maintain working families in a $49 billion program for
clean energy that is designed to pay for itself.
Do you support the Clean EDGE Act? What measures would you take to achieve
greater employment in a more sustainable economy?
THE
IMPACTS OF GLOBALIZATION ON THE DOMESTIC ECONOMY: Those who raise the “Jobs vs. the
Environment” debate fail to see that jobs are being lost not to environmental
regulations but to globalization.
Workers at Tonka Toys & Cornelius Steel lost their good-paying jobs
because production was outsourced to Mexico
& China. Once pushed out of industry, skilled workers
in the U.S.
must seek employment in the service area at low wages and few benefits. In nearly every country, there is a labor
surplus that functions as a contingent work force, living under tremendous fear
& insecurity. Many emigrate from
poor to rich countries in an attempt to improve their lot. The blame for the general situation does not
lie with Third World nations or the influx of
immigrant workers. Rather, it is trade rules which leave less developed
nations without the ability to protect themselves from worker exploitation, the
destruction of subsistence agriculture & environmental degradation. For that reason, it is important that fair
employment practices, guarantees to ensure local food production and
environmental protections be embedded into all trade agreements.
How would you go about achieving that?
SAVING
THE FORD PLANT: To save the 1,885 hourly & salaried
jobs at the Ford Plant, United Auto Workers Local 879 is conducting a study for
conversion of the TCAP, which already runs on clean, renewable hydropower. By having negotiated sustainability into
their collective bargaining agreements over the years, the auto workers have
already made the plant function in a more environmentally friendly manner. For example, the water used is cleaner when
it is returned to the river, there are no foul emissions from the factory’s
smoke stacks and the waste stream has been reduced by recycling parts
packaging. The more ecological the plant
has become, the safer and healthier it is to labor in for the workers and live
near for the residents. The union local
has consciously linked the clean power the plant runs on to cleaner practices
in the production process. That is why
many people feel that the plant should remain open and be converted to some sort
of green manufacturing operation that would produce either clean mass transit
or wind turbines.
What steps do you plan to take to assist in
converting the Ford Plant to green manufacturing?
TRADE ADJUSTMENT ACT:
This
legislation was designed to assist workers whose jobs have been sent offshore.
Would you favor something similar to assist
workers in making the conversion to a sustainable economy?
DEFINING
A JUST TRANSITION: The principle of a just transition is based
on the belief that a healthy economy and a clean environment can and should
coexist. The process of achieving this
vision should be a fair one that does not cost workers or community residents
their health, environment, jobs or economic assets. Any losses, therefore, should be fairly compensated. The practice of a just transition means that
the people who are most affected by pollution--the frontline workers and
fenceline communities—should be in the leadership of crafting policy and have a
say in what solutions are chosen, including health & safety measures on the
job. To facilitate a just transition
from the current economy and environment to a sustainable and fair economy and
environment certain things must be guaranteed such as worker compensation,
retraining and relocation, if necessary, community redevelopment to make the
infrastructure more environmentally friendly, an equitable transportation
system, clean-up of our air, soil, water, workplaces and neighborhoods and the
proper maintenance of our health.
Do you agree with this definition of a just
transition and if so, how would you achieve these goals?
ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS FOR
CANDIDATES
GLOBAL
WARMING, CLIMATE CHANGE AND ENERGY
INTEGRATED COAL GASIFICATION, COMBINED CYCLE (IGCC): Coal
mining continues to kill miners, and ruthless mountaintop mining of coal is
destroying rivers, streams and entire ecosystems. Coal slurry and slag heaps are causing
further sulfide pollution of our soil and water while the burning of coal
steadily increases global warming as it pollutes our air. Coal gasification may increase efficiency up
to 50% and have lower emissions than pulverized coal-burning plants. However, mercury produced by both types of
power plants is still highly toxic, and carbon sequestration is still a serious
problem considering the possibility that it could belch out of its underground
storage caverns in one gigantic plume, which could suffocate all life in the
vicinity and cause CO2 concentrations to spike.
Carbon dioxide is often injected into older oil fields to drive out the
remaining petroleum. In an experiment
conducted by the U.S. Department of Energy at the Frio Brine Formation in Texas, scientists
discovered that the deep burial of carbon dioxide led to the acidification of
the brine, releasing metals such as iron and manganese and dissolving large
amounts of carbonate minerals. This loss
of carbonates caused pores and fractures in the rock that could lead to the
release of CO2 as well as fouled brine into our aquifers that supply drinking
water. Plus, the acid mix (pH of
vinegar) that occurred could eat through the cement seals that plug abandoned
oil and gas wells, 2.5 million of which are located throughout the U.S.
Given
the environmental and health impacts of using coal to generate electricity and
the risks involved with carbon sequestration, what is your position on the ICGG
plant that is projected for Hoyt
Lakes?
DM&E COAL RAIL LINE: The transport of coal exposes
communities to dust in the ambient air as it blows off the open cars, which is
harmful to people’s pulmonary health.
The DM&E Railroad wants
to run 34 or more mile-long coal trains per day from the Powder River Basin through
our region, putting 56 communities at risk.
Its trains will also be hauling many hazardous chemicals. The carrier’s safety record is abominable
having an accident rate 7.5 times higher than the national average. For instance, in July 2004, a train derailed,
spilling 45,000 gallons of ethanol and causing the evacuation of Balaton, MN. DM&E plans to use continuous welded rail,
which expands and contracts as temperatures fluctuate making for deformed rails
that lift from their bed—the perfect formula for disastrous derailments. With a dodgy credit history, DM&E has
applied for a no-collateral, $2.5 billion, taxpayer-funded loan from the
Federal Railroad Administration to
finance this boondoggle. Indigenous
people in the region as well as the City of Rochester
and the Mayo Clinic have spoken out against this scheme that means more dirty
coal burned in Midwestern and Eastern power plants.
Where
do you stand on the DM&E coal rail line?
ETHANOL PRODUCTION: Minnesota has required gas stations to sell
only ethanol-blended gasoline since 1997.
However, there are many problems with its production and use, which make
it unsustainable. The corn from which
ethanol is derived erodes the soil 12 times faster than it can be
reformed. The chemical fertilizers,
pesticides and herbicides required to grow the grain pollute our ground water,
causing serious health problems. The
run-off of nitrogen and phosphorus leads to nutrient overloading that has
created a Dead Zone in the Gulf of Mexico. Irrigating corn on the Great
Plains mines groundwater 25% faster than the natural recharge
rate, thus overpumping our aquifers.
Burning corn takes food out of the mouth’s of the world’s hungry at a
time when global grain production is experiencing shortfalls due to climate
change. Ethanol plants emit toxic air
pollutants, including six volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and particulate
matter. Plus, CO2 is generated by the drying process. Corn ethanol is not efficient because it
requires 29% more fossil fuel energy to make than it actually produces. For every gallon of ethanol produced there are
12 gallons of waste water that must be treated, requiring more energy. Billions of taxpayers’ money subsidize the
ethanol industry most of which goes to large producers such as Archer Daniels
Midland with little benefiting small farmers.
Because grain alcohol is a hydrocarbon, it still emits carbon dioxide when
burned, thereby contributing to global warming.
Should
we continue with the subsidized burning of food when it is obviously not a
renewable source of energy or sustainable on any level?
PUBLIC OWNERSHIP OF ELECTRICAL
UTILITIES: To generate electricity, Xcel Energy
and other huge power companies are committed to the burning of more filthy
coal, which is a major contributor to global warming, toxic mercury pollution
and acid rain. In addition, Xcel is
guilty of dumping clean wind power because it does not want to invest in the
needed grids to deliver it to customers who have requested it. The Big Stone II expansion, proposed by Otter
Tail Power, is an example of the utility giants continued objective to provide
power with dirty energy because it is cheap and profitable rather than to give
us renewable energy. Many Minnesotans
and Dakotans are opposed to that project and want more wind power. There is clearly a conflict between the
wishes of the populace and the utilities.
To
ensure that the electrical utilities are run in the interests of the people and
the region’s ecosystems, do you support their public ownership?
PRESERVATION
OF ANWR: The
shutdown of the Prudhoe Bay oil field due to BP’s
failure to maintain the pipeline is providing further justification for oil and
gas drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
(ANWR). This delicate tundra ecosystem and the indigenous
people who depend upon it for their subsistence are already experiencing the
detrimental impacts of a warming climate.
It is certain that subjecting ANWR
to the ravages of the petroleum industry will ensure its total
destruction.
Do
you support the continued preservation of ANWR
as one of the world’s largest intact wilderness areas?
OFFSHORE GAS & OIL DRILLING: The
U.S. House of Representatives has
just lifted the 25-year moratorium on offshore oil drilling putting our coastal
wetlands, estuaries, beaches and marine ecosystems at risk. In addition, it has opened up new expanses in
the Gulf of Mexico, which is already suffering
the deleterious effects of widespread oil and gas drilling.
Do
you favor the reversal of this harmful policy by maintaining the moratorium on
offshore drilling?
NUCLEAR POWER
PLANTS: Nuclear power is inherently
dangerous in terms of the routine radioactive emissions that are released, the
risk of catastrophic accidents and the long-term problem of storing radioactive
wastes that will affect many generations for millennia to come. Exposure to radioactivity at any level is
carcinogenic and threatens the stability of the human gene pool. There are no safe levels, yet the Bush
Administration supports the nuclear power industry in building more of these
dangerous power stations. Some propose
that expanding the use of nukes is a viable means to reduce carbon dioxide
emissions, yet CO2 is produced in every step of the nuclear fuel cycle—mining,
refining and transporting the uranium, building the power stations, containing
and storing the radioactive wastes and decommissioning the plants. They are no more carbon-neutral than they are
safe.
To
ensure the health and safety of life on the planet, do you support the shutdown
of all nuclear power plants, including those at Prairie
Island and Monticello?
THE
PROTECTION OF MINNESOTA’S NATURAL
HERITAGE
SULFIDE MINING ON THE IRON
RANGE: The
state legislature along with the MPCA and DNR
has been fast-tracking the permitting process for heavy and precious metal
mining in the Arrowhead Region. They have been relaxing and foregoing
environmental standards in order to ease the way for companies like Polymet
Mining of Canada
to set up shop with three more similar ventures in the pipeline. Mining in sulfide-rich areas such as the Iron Range produces
sulfuric acid that can leak into nearby wells, streams and lakes. Acid-mine drainage can also cause the
leaching of heavy metals and mercury, transforming it into its more toxic organic form of methyl mercury. This will further pollute the lakes and
streams of Northern Minnesota and Canada and endanger the health of
our children. PolyMet plans to contain
the toxins and acids in lined pools in the ground. If those go bad or the pool overflows, the
results could be catastrophic. The
company want to locate its operation on top of 1200 acres of wetlands and has
chose the town of Floodwood
as a replacement site much to the upset of its residents and the farmers whose
hayfields will be flooded. The smoke
emitted from the ore refinement process will pollute the air of the BWCA. There is growing opposition among working
people to sulfide mining on the Iron
Range. Labor
World, the organ of the Duluth AFL-CIO Central Labor Body, ran an editorial
in its August 30th issue opposing the construction of the PolyMet
mine because of these environmental concerns which will affect future
generations to come. Although the
industry may provide a few jobs for twenty to thirty years, these companies
will be gone once the minerals are exhausted, leaving even more degraded ecosystems
for our children and grandchildren to cope with.
In
order to provide employment on the Iron
Range,
do you support the Earth-friendly manufacture of wind turbines or other green
technologies and products as an alternative to toxic sulfide mining?
PEAT STRIP MINING IN THE BIG BOG: The
Canadian transnational, Berger, Ltd., has been given carte blanche by the DNR, the Koochiching County Commissioners and other state
officials to mine peat in the Big Bog of the Pine Island
State Forest. At taxpayers’ expense, the state has
graciously built disruptive roads and dug harmful drainage ditches so that
Berger can vacuum up free of charge all of the peat moss it can truck away over
the next 30 to 50 years to be dried and sold for horticultural purposes to
companies like Scotts. Also known as the
Pine Island Bog, it is the largest last pristine sphagnum moss/spruce wetland
in the lower 48 states and is home to timber wolves, black bear, moose, bald
eagles, southern lemming and many bird species.
It is a primary aquifer and head waters for several Minnesota rivers, lakes, and streams and
serves as a vital filter that purifies the water of pollutants. It has locked away huge amounts of mercury,
that if released, would further contaminate the surface & ground waters of
the area. For thousands of years, this
ecosystem has stored vast amounts of carbon that are now being released by
digging the peat, which oxidizes when it dries and releases CO2, thereby
contributing to global warming. The Big
Bog is also an important aspect of the natural entitlements of the Red Lake Nation, which has stood in historical opposition
to peat mining because it would destroy their fishing, wild rice harvesting and
subsistence farming. Many Northern
Minnesotans also oppose peat mining in the Big Bog and do not believe the DNR’s and Berger’s promises that it will be restored since it
takes thousands of years for peat to develop.
The mining operation will leave a six-foot deep hole of many square
miles, which can never be recovered. Once it is gone, it is gone, along with
the species that lived there and the vital ecological services the Big Bog
provides. The operation offers only
about two dozen seasonal jobs at poverty wages of eight dollars an hour. This natural wonder is shared by the people
of Minnesota
with the Red Lake Nation, and it
should not be violated to satisfy the economic interests of a few.
Do
you agree that DNR Commissioner Gene
Merriam should revoke Berger’s permit immediately?
RESTORATION OF THE GREAT LAKES: The
Great Lakes Collaboration Implementation Act was introduced into Congress in
2006. It is a comprehensive plan to: 1) Halt the invasion of non-native aquatic
species that upset the natural balance, reaching crisis proportions because of
their introduction via the ballast water discharge from foreign vessels; 2) End the dumping of raw, untreated sewage
into the waters, especially from the City of Duluth; 3) Restore
the sorely depleted coaster brook trout to Lake Superior and its tributaries,
which are its spawning grounds; 4) Clean
up the badly polluted St. Louis River,
which is a critical superfund site where sediments are loaded with tar, polycyclic
aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), pesticides, cyanide, naphthalene, mercury, zinc,
chromium, PCBs and dioxins/furans; 5)
Capture toxic mercury pollution from taconite mining and halt its emission from
coal-fired power plants; 6) Protect the
shoreline and tributaries from overdevelopment and land clearing that would
destroy wildlife and aquatic habitat and diminish water quality.
Do
you support the passage of this vital legislation to restore and preserve Lake Superior for future generations?
MINNTAC TACONITE
TAILINGS BASIN DRAINAGE:
The discharge of about 7.2 million gallons of water from the Minntac
tailings basin into the Sandy and Dark Rivers will be
disastrous. It will increase stream flow
(By 637% & 450% respectively), leading to river bed erosion and
sedimentation and boost the amount of suspended solids in downstream
waters. It will also damage wild rice
beds by inhibiting germination, which will affect the subsistence harvest for
the native people. The warmer
temperature of the contaminated water will affect the lifecycle of freshwater
species. Plus, its massive discharge
will increase mercury levels in fish downstream. There will be greatly elevated levels of sulfates,
facilitating the further uptake of methyl mercury into the aquatic food chain. It is bad enough that the EPA has permitted
seepage at the rate of 2,200 gallons per minute throughout the history of the
basin. This practice has already pushed
concentrations of several heavy metal pollutants such as manganese above
accepted standards. Many environmental
groups, workers and even the Lake Vermilion Sportsmen’s Club are in opposition
to the diversion and for good reason.
Should
U.S. Steel be allowed to continue polluting the local lakes and streams and
posing a threat to the health of wildlife and humans living in the Arrowhead Region?
OHV/ATV FOREST RECLASSIFICATION PROCESS: Off-highway
and all-terrain vehicles do serious ecological damage by gouging ruts, eroding
banks, spreading alien plant species, fragmenting forests, destroying wetlands
and jeopardizing habitat for birds and other creatures. The noise factor is also disruptive to
wildlife and people who want to enjoy our woodlands in peace and quiet. The use of motor vehicles also increases
carbon emissions and adds to global warming.
The Minnesota
legislature has backtracked on the 2003 law that required the DNR to reclassify all “managed” forest to be either
limited or closed, meaning recreational vehicles must stay on trails
specifically designated for motorized use.
The new law allows all trails in the state forest north of Hwy. 2 to
remain open to motorized recreation unless posted as closed. “Closed” signs as opposed to “open” are routinely
pulled down by illegal motorists who have no regard for the sanctity of our
natural areas, making enforcement virtually impossible. State registrations for OHV/ATVs have
steadily increased since the 1970s, yet, less than 5% of Minnesotans use the them
on public lands. The vast majority who
use our forests engage in healthy activities such as hiking, cycling, canoeing or
skiing and respect the woodlands and wetlands by doing as little damage as
possible. Many people feel the DNR should ban motorized recreation from our nature
preserves and forests all together rather than appeasing the auto and
snowmobile industries which have been reluctant to modify their products to
make them more eco-friendly in terms of greenhouse gas emissions.
Where
do you stand on the issue of OHV/ATV use in Minnesota’s natural areas?
SUSTAINABLE FORESTRY: Significant
chunks of Minnesota’s
north woods are being divided up, sold off and developed at an alarming
rate. This year Boise Cascade Corp.
(BCC) sold 309,000 acres to a Boston-based TIMO that purchases forest land for
short-term gain as a real-estate investment.
Thousands of acres of privately owned land that for a century were
managed by timber and mining companies and were open to the public have been
sold to investment companies and parcelled up for re-sale. One million acres, an area larger than the Chippewa National Forest, are now at risk of
being off limits to the public for recreation.
The state of Minnesota and private conservation groups together have
purchased 50,000 acres of the former BCC forest in Itasca and Koochiching
counties as conservation easements. The
funds came from the DNR and the
Trust for Public Land, which is well and good. The trees are supposed to be managed
sustainably according to the standards of the Sustainable Forestry Initiative
(SFI). However, the SFI is considered to
be nothing but a greenwash of the timber and paper pulp industries to cover up
their very unsustainable practices such as logging old growth forests
and endangered species’ habitats, cutting timber in wilderness areas, replacing
natural forests with ecologically-sterile tree plantations that are barren of
understory, clear-cutting vast tracts of woodlands, destroying watershed and
using toxic herbicides. Their practices
lead to ecosystem destruction, the violation of indigenous peoples’ treaty
rights and trampling on the healthy and safety of lumber and pulp mill workers
and their collective bargaining rights.
In addition, the paper pulp industry is one of the worst polluting of
any on the globe. Many of the chemicals
in the sediments of the St. Louis River
come from paper pulp production in Northern Minnesota. If the Nature Conservancy and other groups
think they are saving the forests from development and preserving them for sustainable
use, they are sorely mistaken. SFI
should not be the chosen standard bearer since its use will only lead to
the degradation of the forest easements.
Where
do you stand on this issue?
CLEAR CUTTING IN THE SUPERIOR
NATIONAL FOREST: Four
environmental groups filed suit in August of this year against the U.S. Forest
Service hoping to halt the long term Superior
National Forest plan
because it fails to protect biodiversity in and around the Boundary Waters
Canoe Area Wilderness (BWCAW). Thousands
of acres of timber will be clear-cut within a quarter-mile of the boundary
waters since the DNR also plans to
log vast areas of state land mixed amid the federal holdings that were
designated as roadless under the Clinton Administration and are now open to
plunder by the Bush regime. This will
result in motorized trespassing that will open up passageways for damaging
invasive species like buckthorn, spotted knapweed and gypsy moths. The Forest Service is cheating on
environmental standards by reducing the number of indicator species used to
measure the impact of logging from 34 to only three animals and one tree. In March, a federal Judge had already ruled
that the Forest Service had adequately studied the impacts in the Tomahawk area
just south of the BWCAW, giving legal sanction to this plunder.
Where
do you stand on DNR and Forest
Service policies which threaten one of the last pristine wilderness areas in
the region? Do you think they should be
reversed?
THE 1991 WETLAND CONSERVATION ACT (WCA):
By the
state’s own admission, Minnesota
wetlands are being lost at an alarming rate despite the passage of the WCA,
which calls for no net loss. This is due
to far too many exemptions in the protection laws. The WCA was a political compromise that actually
allows destruction, damage and degradation of aquatic ecosystems. Plus, enforcement of federal and state protections
is wholly inadequate. This situation,
combined with outdated drainage laws, has led to a loss of 1,367 acres of
wetlands between 2001-03 alone. We need
the many vital ecological services our wetlands provide and our children and
theirs deserve the right to enjoy them.
Would
you like to see the legal loopholes closed to protect our wetlands from further
loss?
ENDOCRINE DISRUPTING
COMPOUNDS IN THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER AND OTHER
WATERWAYS:
Our streams, rivers, lakes and water supply are being contaminated by an
insidious group of chemicals called Endocrine Disrupting Compounds (EDCs). They are a diverse category that includes
pesticides, herbicides, plastics, pharmaceuticals, household cleaners,
industrial chemicals such as PCBs and heavy metals. Metabolites from birth-control pills that are
dumped down drains, anabolic steroids used in livestock operations, the
post-emergent herbicide Atrazine and natural plant steroids from paper pulp
mills are other examples of EDCs. They
interfere with the normal hormonal activity and reproductive health of both
vertebrates and invertebrates with the greatest impact being on aquatic life
that is continually immersed. EDCs
disrupt a body’s glandular system by sending inappropriate signals at the wrong
time in a creature’s crucial developmental stages. Some of the effects on wildlife are
behavioral and physiological changes such as early or delayed sexual
development, egg shell thinning in birds, reduced penis size in males,
deformities of bird beaks, increased hermaphrodism, skewed sex ratios in
populations, feminization and reduced sex drive among males, impaired gonad
development and lower sperm counts. In
human beings the effects of EDCs can include autism, hyperactivity and
Attention Deficit Disorder in our children and infertility, Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome in adults. There is even
scientific speculation that it EDCs can cause senile dementia, Parkinsons and
Alzheimers in the elderly. They can also
make people vulnerable to certain cancers as with the children and
grandchildren of women who took the synthetic hormone diethylstilbestrol (DES)
during pregnancy in the 1950s. DDT is also
a hormone disrupter that was affecting our bird populations and was eventually
banned in the U.S.
because of that. EDCs are commonly found
in the effluent discharged from sewage treatment plants, including the one in St. Paul, which serves
1.8 million people. That plant’s
treatment regime can remove about 80% of known steroids, but apparently this is
not enough. U. of M.
researchers have found that male carp and walleye downstream are being
feminized, which is affecting the ability of these species to reproduce at
healthy population levels. Many people feel the Precautionary
Principle is best in these cases and safeguards should be instituted.
What
measures would you take to protect wildlife and humans from the detrimental
effects of EDCs?
SUSTAINABLE
AGRICULTURE
CLEAN-UP OF THE
MINNESOTA RIVER: Due
to many decades of runoff from agricultural chemicals into the Minnesota River,
its waters have now been classified as toxic by the MPCA. Because of the extreme degradation of its
water quality, this once pristine river is a major contributor to the hypoxic
Dead Zone in the Gulf of Mexico from chemical
fertilizers. Many feel the intensive,
petro-chemical based agriculture practiced in the state must change to a system
that is much more sustainable and Earth-friendly.
What
do you propose be done to clean up the Minnesota River and other waterways affected by
agricultural runoff?
PESTICIDE & HERBICIDE USE: Many of the commonly used agricultural
pesticides herbicides are associated with decreasing male fertility, fetal
abnormalities, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome in children and Parkinson’s
disease. This is because of their
hormone disrupting function, which is the reason they work against animal &
plant pests. Prolonged and chronic
exposure to these chemicals is why they are ranked among the top three
environmental cancer risks. Many feel
more aggressive government action should be taken to remove these harmful
chemicals from the market and hold companies responsible for the damage to the
health of wildlife and human beings.
Where
do you stand in the debate?
THE CONSERVATION SECURITY
PROGRAMS
(CSP): Industrial agriculture is a major
source of pollution in the U.S.—leaching
and eroding the soil, poisoning the water, generating 25% of greenhouse gasses
and consuming 17% of all fossil fuels used.
The CSP was designed to encourage farmers to adopt conservation
practices on their lands. Its subsidies
reward farmers for protecting watersheds, reducing tillage by employing no-till
drill planting methods and cutting nitrogen fertilizer use in addition to
setting aside acreage for tall grass prairie restoration and woodland and
wetland preservation. Unfortunately,
because of congressional budget cuts, fewer than 20,000 out of 2 million farms
nationwide are signed up for the program.
Lawmakers have placed a funding cap on the CSP while robbing it to pay
for disaster relief, deficit reduction and financing other areas of the USDA’s
budget.
Do
you support a significant shift in funding to aid farmers in conservation and
renewable energy practices on their farms?
THE ORGANIC CERTIFICATION
COST SHARE PROGRAM: This program, part of the 2002 Farm
Bill, was allocated only $5 million to make one-time direct incentive payments
of $500 each to assist farmers with the costs of initial organic
certification. It is the only subsidy
ever given to them. Whereas, industrial
agriculture, by contrast, received over $23 billion in subsidies in 2005 alone. Those who support an expansion of organic
agriculture feel a significant shift in U.S. farm subsidies is needed to
help family farmers and ranchers make the transition.
Where
do you stand on this issue?
THE
NUTRITIONAL QUALITY OF OUR FOOD
ORGANIC FOODS:
With rising
healthcare costs, some of the best medicine is of the preventive sort by practicing
a healthy, stress-free lifestyle and a good dietary regime. Eating nutritious foods free of contaminants
such as chemical preservatives, artificial flavorings and colorings is one of
the best ways to prevent disease. Organic
products make up a 2.5% share of all grocery store sales and the demand for
them is steadily increasing among health-conscious consumers.
Do
you think organic agriculture should receive a fair share of government
resources spent on agriculture?
ORGANIC STANDARDS: As
the consumer demand for organic foods grows, there is increasing pressure to
lower organic standards. Recently, this has taken the form of increased
allowances for synthetic substances in processed food products labeled
“organic” and the certification of “organic” dairies where the cows have little
or no access to pasture. In the
body-care industry, shampoos and other items whose ingredients are mostly
synthetic often misuse the word “organic” while regulators do little to
discourage the practice. This fudging on
standards can erode the confidence people have in organic products.
Do
you support strict standards for processed foods dairy and body-care products
that are labeled as organic?
NATIONAL FOOD UNIFORMITY LAW: This year, the U.S. House of Representatives passed this controversial law that
would nullify 200 state and local food safety and labeling statutes. Those eliminated would include regulations
identifying ingredients likely to cause cancer, birth defects, allergic
reactions or mercury poisoning.
Should
we have the right to regulate consumer safety at the state and local level in
order to warn consumers against dangerous substances in our food?
WOMEN, INFANT AND
CHILDREN (WIC) PROGRAMS
FOR THE WORKING
POOR: Until
government resources are shifted from unsustainable industrial agriculture to
the production of organic foods, they will remain unaffordable to many. Children and the elderly especially need
healthy foods the most, yet they are the groups most likely to live in poverty.
Do
you support increases for WIC and the Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program to help
low-income Americans buy organic foods?
LABOR_AND_SUSTAINABILITY_CANDIDATES_QUESTIONNAIRE.doc
Labor and sustainability Candidates Questionaire
|