Lawsuit filed over federal energy corridors
KS Wild is proud to be a plaintiff on this case.
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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) -- More than a dozen conservation groups filed
suit Tuesday alleging that the federal government skirted several laws
when designating thousands of miles of energy corridors in New Mexico
and other Western states.
The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in San Francisco, names
Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, Energy Secretary Steven Chu and the
heads of three other federal land management agencies.
The groups behind the complaint said they are challenging the energy
corridors because they align existing power plants fueled by coal and
other fossil fuels rather than consider future generating stations that
could take advantage of solar, wind and other renewable energy sources.
"It doesn't make any sense for the agencies to invest all of this time
and energy into a network of corridors that must be obsolete very soon
if we're going avoid the worst effects of climate change," said Amy
Atwood, a senior attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity, one
of the 15 plaintiffs.
A spokeswoman with the Bureau of Land Management in Washington, D.C.,
said she could not comment on the pending litigation. The BLM was a
lead agency in the preparation of an environmental impact statement for
the energy corridors.
The 6,000 miles of corridors through federal lands in 11 Western states
mark future routes for oil and natural gas pipelines and electric
transmission lines. The 3,500-foot-wide corridors generally follow
major highways.
The lawsuit claims the federal government failed to consider the
impacts on wildlife and scenic lands, including New Mexico's Sevilleta
National Wildlife Refuge and Utah's Arches National Park and Grand
Staircase-Escalante National Monument.
Local officials from San Miguel County, Colo., south to the village of
Placitas, N.M., also voiced concerns that the federal government
ignored comments given during public meetings in 2006 and 2008 and did
not consider the impacts to property adjacent to the federal lands that
make up the corridors.
"I would say it was kind of a hatchet job to tell you the truth,"
Atwood said. "They just ran over everybody's concerns, did what they
wanted to do, didn't take any input or feedback and this is the result."
The lawsuit asks the court to find the federal government in violation
of the 2005 Energy Act, the Endangered Species Act, the National
Environmental Policy Act and the Federal Land Policy and Management Act.
It also asks that the court declare unlawful the government's decisions
regarding the corridor designation and subsequent changes to federal
land use plans.
The BLM and U.S. Department of Energy were directed by the 2005 Energy
Act to lay out the corridors in Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho,
Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Wyoming.
The original proposed routes came under heavy criticism from property
rights advocates as well as conservation groups. The BLM made changes
in the final version to avoid sensitive areas, including 27 wilderness
areas that had been touched by an earlier draft.
Still, the plaintiffs argue that the designated corridors fail to meet
one of the fundamental purposes of the Energy Act, which was to
establish corridors that would improve reliability and relieve
congestion of the national grid.
Katie Renshaw, an attorney with Earthjustice, said the plaintiffs are
hopeful the Obama administration will be interested in working on a
settlement given its efforts so far to prioritize renewable energy.
"You can have miles and miles of solar fields or wind farms, but
without transmission linking them to cities it's kind of pointless,"
she said. "This is a necessary step for the rhetoric that's out there."
The plaintiffs include Center for Biological Diversity; San Miguel
County, Colo.; Bark; Defenders of Wildlife; Great Old Broads for
Wilderness; Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center; National Parks
Conservation Association; National Trust for Historic Preservation;
Natural Resources Defense Council; Oregon Natural Desert Association;
Sierra Club; Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance; The Wilderness Society;
Western Resource Advocates and Western Watersheds Project.
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