Bush exempts Navy to continue exercises off SoCal coast
By PAULINE JELINEK, Associated Press Writer
Wednesday, January 16, 2008
(01-16) 07:43 PST WASHINGTON, (AP) --
President Bush exempted the Navy from an environmental law so it
can continue using sonar in its anti-submarine warfare training off the
California coast — a practice critics say is harmful to whales and other
marine mammals.
The White House announced Wednesday that Bush had signed the
exemption Tuesday while traveling in the Middle East.
The Navy training exercises, including the use of sonar, "are
in the paramount interest of the United States" and its national security,
Bush said in a memorandum.
"This exemption will enable the Navy to train effectively and
to certify carrier and expeditionary strike groups for deployment in support of
worldwide operational and combat activities, which are essential to national
security," the memo said.
The decision drew immediate criticism from environmentalists who
had fought to stop the Navy's sonar training.
"The president's action is an attack on the rule of
law," said Joel Reynolds, director of the Marine Mammal Protection Project
at the Natural Resources Defense Council. "By exempting the Navy from
basic safeguards under both federal and state law, the president is flouting
the will of Congress, the decision of the California Coastal Commission and a
ruling by the federal court."
NRDC spokesman Daniel Hinerfeld said the group would be filing
papers with the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals later Wednesday or Thursday
to challenge Bush's exemption.
A federal judge in Los Angeles had issued a preliminary injunction
earlier this month requiring the Navy to create a 12-nautical-mile, no-sonar
zone along the California coast and to post trained lookouts to watch for
marine mammals before and during exercises. Sonar would have to be shut down
when mammals are spotted within 2,200 yards, under the order.
The court found that using mid-frequency active sonar violated the
Coastal Zone Management Act and Bush exempted the Navy from a section of that
act.
Complying with the environmental law would "undermine the
Navy's ability to conduct realistic training exercises that are necessary to
ensure the combat effectiveness of carrier and expeditionary strike groups,"
Bush said.
The Natural Resources Defense Council had sued to force the Navy
to lessen the harm of its sonar exercises. In November, a federal appeals court
said the sonar problem needed to be fixed.
Critics contend sonar has harmful effects on whales, possibly by
damaging their hearing, and other marine mammals worldwide. The council's
lawsuit alleges the Navy's sonar causes whales and other mammals to beach
themselves.
In an argument that has been going on for years, the Navy has
continually argued that the exercises are vital for training and that it works
to minimize the risk to marine life.
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