OMG, am I turning into an activist!

Seems like the only thing I post nowadays are calls to action to fix this or that. I’m not fishing much lately so I’m trying to protect the streams and quarry for when I actually do get out on the water. With that, here’s the latest thing to piss you off and get you to spend 2 minutes sending off an email.

Take Action at TU.org

From TU:

Stop the Harmful Provisions of HR 1

In a five-day span last week, the House drafted a bill that would wipe out years of progress that TU – its volunteers, staff and partners – have made on some of our toughest habitat challenges, and cut severely into federal resource agency funding programs just as the field season is about to start. A funding bill should not contain them, but the bill’s ill-conceived legislative provisions contain the following harmful items:

    Removing funding for the Klamath River Dam Removal and Sedimentation Study, a necessary step to evaluate removing four dams and reopening 350 miles of salmon habitat and resolve the long-running conflict in the Klamath Basin.
    Stopping the Army Corps of Engineers and EPA from conducting a rulemaking to restore Clean Water Act protection for some wetlands and streams which were curtailed by two harmful and confusing Supreme Court decisions, Rapanos (2006) and SWANCC (2001).
    Discontinuing rulemaking processes designed to protect streams from mountaintop removal mining.
    Removing the EPA’s authority under the Clean Water Act to veto Army Corps authorized permits for the disposal of dredge and fill material and to designate as off limits certain areas for disposal of dredge and fill material.
    Preventing the use of federal funds to implement certain Chesapeake Bay pollution reduction programs, which help to restore coldwater habitat in the headwater areas of the Chesapeake Bay watershed.
    Blocking the U.S. Forest Service’s Travel Management Plans, which were developed to prevent uncontrolled off-road vehicle use from damaging fish and wildlife habitat.
    De-funding the San Joaquin River Restoration Settlement Act, a law enacted last year with strong bipartisan support, which represents a broad coalition of restoration partners.

So, everyone, get out there and do the right thing. If you don’t have time to fish, you should at least have time to protect what many people take for granted.

Author: TraderDeanGA

Just searching for financial freedom and fun

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