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Contributor
Ray
Haynes
Mr.
Haynes is an Assembly member representing Riverside and
Temecula.
He serves on the Appropriations and Budget Committees. [go to
Assembly Member Haynes
website at California Assembly][go to Haynes index]
Hug
A Miner Today
Everyday
life under attack from environmentalists…
[Ray
Haynes] 11/16/04
Your
car. Your desk. Your computer. Your pots and pans. The road
outside.
Your lunch. What do these things have in common? All
of them involved disturbing the land and the “exploitation” of
natural resources in their creation. Anything around you that
contains metal, plastic or rubber comes directly from mining
and oil drilling operations somewhere in the world. Anything
that is wood, paper or food was either logged or harvested.
Almost everything we have comes from mining, drilling, logging
and farming, and yet these industries are increasingly under
attack from NIMBY’s, regulators and environmentalists.
The public opinion
of these industries is now such that if you were to poll people
on the least respected careers, you’d
wind up with loggers, miners, and oil men right down at the bottom
of the list with lawyers, telemarketers, and of course, politicians.
Farmers and ranchers continue to have a pretty high level of
public support as occupations, but their industries are bearing
the brunt of some of the newest rounds of regulations and NIMBY
attacks.
While nobody wants a repeat of the massive pollution caused
by some of the older mining techniques, and nobody likes to look
at a clear cut forest, or an oil rig, these industries have developed
much less intrusive, much more environmentally sensitive methods
of extraction, but are still haunted by attacks based on images
from long discarded practices. The regulatory system and local
opposition groups have made it nearly impossible for any new
mining or logging operations to exist in California, even when
our society desperately needs new supplies of wood, gravel, and
petroleum-based products. Even when all environmental regulations
can be adhered to, local opposition can scare a county or city
into rejecting a necessary project.
Even the farmers,
who have maintained a high level of support amongst the population,
have started to feel the pressure of
activists and regulators. It always astounds me when people move
to a rural area (like much of my district) and then complain
about the sights and smells and flies of agricultural operations.
Dairies have been all but chased out of Southern California by
angry neighbors and air and water regulations. Other livestock
operations are being harassed by similar complaints. What was
once a thriving industry in Artesia, Chino and other parts of
our area is now virtually non-existent. Even simpler farming
operations are under attack for use of compost in the growing
process and because of “fugitive dust” concerns caused
by the plowing and harvesting of fields. And farmers now fear
allowing their lands to fallow out of concern that it will become
habitat for some allegedly endangered critter and they’ll
be forbidden from replanting there in the future.
These are all messy
industries, but they are all necessary. We have made great
strides over the years in making them less
polluting and less impactful on the natural environment and even
visually to neighbors nearby. But the increasing costs of the
decreasing availability of these resources in our country are
costing all of us. High concrete, steel and lumber costs are
driving up the prices of new schools, homes and roads by billions
of dollars collectively, and will continue to increase as long
as we don’t start producing more of these products domestically.
So it is time to stop
attacking loggers and miners and oil drillers and farmers.
Stop accusing them of raping the earth. Stop making
their livelihoods more difficult than they need to be. Start
appreciating the benefits we enjoy as a result of their labor
and their industries. So next time you see a miner walking down
the street, don’t turn your nose up at him. In fact, I
think we’d all be better off if you gave him a hug instead!!! CRO
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