All posts tagged alphabet ranches
05-15-2013 FAQ’s About Drakes Bay Oyster Co.
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on May 17, 2013
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2013/05/17/05-15-2013-faqs-about-drakes-bay-oyster-co/
05-14-2013 Russian River Times “What lies in Drake’s Estero”
Journalism is supposed to be the first draft of history, not the first rewrite of press releases and sound bites. In recent weeks, some journalists reporting on the Estero controversy say ‘they would not touch the science,” not realizing the irony that they are essentially saying they are reporting without knowledge. The word ‘science’ itself comes from the Latin scientia, ”to know.”
Russian River Times posted 05-14-2013
What lies in Drake’s Estero
Journalism is supposed to be the first draft of history, not the first rewrite of press releases and sound bites. In recent weeks, some journalists reporting on the Estero controversy say ‘they would not touch the science,” not realizing the irony that they are essentially saying they are reporting without knowledge. The word ‘science’ itself comes from the Latin scientia, ”to know.”To report on scientific issues, it is not necessary for reporters to ‘do’ science. For example, to return to the issue of sound as a major impact in the Estero: when the NPS and its EIS consultant substitute the sound of a high- powered jet ski for a small four stroke outboard–as National Park Service did in preparing the Environmental Impact Statement–and claim the Estero is damaged by the sound, it raises issues that can only be answered by the basic journalism questions, Who? What? When? Where? Why?
The standard for journalistic coverage of the Drake’s Bay Oyster Company controversy seems to be based on guilt by six degrees of separation. The bulk of the recent reporting on the ‘ right wing conspiracy to destroy the wilderness act’ claim against DBOC is based solely on the fact that one attorney representing DBOC’s Kevin Lunny is a Republican who worked in Washington for a few months for a charity funded by right-wing interests.
By these standards, we assume that if the oyster-farm opponents report to the press that a lawyer supporting DBOC had defended an arsonist, this would be proof that Kevin Lunny, the DBOC owner, is burning down the Estero. Much of the general press has shown an equal lack of standards in the other allegations against DBOC, with no real investigation, relying instead on unsubstantiated claims in the press releases of oyster-farm opponents, the latest of which is merely the last in a long line of attempts by National Park Service and its supporters to smear the Lunny family and present them as some sort of environmental criminals.
The press has no excuse for this type of journalism, which merely restates claims from anti-oyster-farm press releases without even the most basic fact checking. There is a marvelous expression in the British press, ‘Churnalism,’ which aptly describes much of the press and TV coverage, e.g. the regurgitation of recent press releases from Amy Trainer of West Marin Environmental Action Committee and the PBS Newshour report, “Strange Bedfellows Join Fight to Keep Oyster Farm in Operation.” There is simply no excuse for this type of inept and biased reporting.
Minimal research uncovers the facts. Both the National Academy of Science study (which found NPS had misrepresented the science), and the Marine Mammal Committee report (whose experts found no incompatibility with oyster operations and the seal population), have summaries and complete lists of all documents on their website. These including letters from the oyster-farm opponents and supporters. Likewise, the response to the draft EIS contains statements from National Marine Fisheries, Cal Fish and Game that conflict directly with the allegations of the oyster-farm opponents.
Small local papers like the Russian River Times report stories that impact their communities, often over several years, while the larger press tends to only pick up on the sensational, often from unsubstantiated press releases and statements from advocacy groups. The truth is that NPS and its allies have conducted a long national campaign to portray the Lunnys as environmental criminals, damaging wilderness for personal gain. Locally, the Lunnys are known as a third-generation ranching family, well respected as responsible stewards and valued members of the community. Examples include their assistance with grazing research to support rangeland carbon sequestration, supporting shellfish restoration in San Francisco Bay, local composting projects, and working with endangered species restoration.
Ironically, the NPS also celebrated the Lunny’s contributions in a 2007 publication about stewardship in National Parks entitled, ‘Stewardship Begins with People.’ Page 45 shows a photo of Kevin Lunny and Seashore rancher David Evans and the statement that ”…both have been recognized for their environmental stewardship and innovation.” In a currently available on-line version of this NPS document, Lunny has been literally airbrushed out. He was made to disappear! What is disturbing is that the Lunny’s environmental stewardship is ignored in most of the press coverage where NPS and its allies have attempted to destroy the Lunny’s reputation for stewardship. Not five months after the publication date back in 2007, Point Reyes Seashore Superintendent Don Neubacher told Marin County Supervisors that Lunny was an environmental criminal.
The “smear Lunny” campaign began in the spring 2006 Sierra Club Yodeler magazine by Gordon Bennett, then Chair, Marin Chapter. Even an internet review will show that much of the campaign against the Lunnys originated with one individual, plus the direct involvement of a then-retired major Sacramento political player, active in West Marin after leaving his job with a major environmental lobbying group under a cloud.
Anything beyond the most cursory examination would find multiple cases of hidden and misrepresented data, not to mention deliberately altered photographs used without permission, known false statements about endangered species and the creation of a new hypothesis of harm each time previous claims were discredited.
Oyster-farm opponents and NPS would have you believe that sound (violations of soundscape standards) is a major problem in the Estero, implying that the experts on the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) panel and the seal experts on the Marine Mammal Commission (MMC) panel made a serious mistake in failing to identify sound as a major issue. In their 2009 letter to the MMC, which lead to its investigation, Neil Desai of NPCA and Gordon Bennett, then of the Sierra Club, failed to even reference sound or raise the issue.
Gordon Bennett became involved in West Marin environmental activities after he sold his Westbrae Natural Foods business to the Hain Group in 1997. He unfortunately invested much of the proceeds with the infamous Bernie Madoff before becoming active in West Marin environmental issues. Bennett, in his role as Chair of the Marin County Sierra Club group, posted in an article in the Spring 2006 Sierra Club Yodeler, with false claims about criminal destruction of eelgrass, misleading claims invasive aquatic species, and distorted claims about marine debris (conveniently omitting DBOC’s clean-up efforts at Drakes Estero both on shore and in the Estero.)
Bennett is also the first author of the false claims that Lunny was obliged to vacate the lease by 2012. (See Russian River Times “What Was the Deal?”) Bennett appears to have become obsessed with eliminating the oyster company, filing multiple complaints with multiple government agencies, relying on convoluted ‘interpretation’ of documents.
The classic was a September 2009 letter from Bennett, as Sierra Club Marin Group Parks Chair, to multiple government agencies, claiming that DBOC was violating its NPS permit by illegally selling condiments in violation of his Special Use Permit, thus becoming a restaurant! Locally, this became known as the “illegal catsup complaint.
The letter was addressed to California Department of Fish and Game, Marin Department of Health Services, State Board of Equalization and Point Reyes National Seashore. Bennett bases his complaint on the one-letter difference in spelling between complimentary (i.e. given for free) and complementary (i.e. adding to something), ignoring the fact that DBOC, by the specific terms of its NPS permit, was legally allowed to sell the produce of the family’s adjoining ranch. (The complaints about the shellfish are dealt with here.) This is just one example of Bennett poring over reams of documents in an attempt to find some supposed glitch in language or definition to cause trouble for the Lunnys.
Bennett’s LinkedIn page shows that he ceased to serve as a Sierra Club chairperson in March 2011. The Sierra Club has declined to made any statements regarding his removal, but Congressman Pete McCloskey, author of the endangered-species act and supporter of the oyster farm, informed the Russian River Times that he had been told by the executive director of the Sierra Club that Bennett had been ‘fired.’
Bennett resurfaced with Neil Desai of NPCA, co-signing an August 16 2011 complaint to the Coastal Commission, in which Bennett signs as President of Save Our Seashore. The letter makes unsubstantiated statements like”…their oyster operations within the Estero are considered unmanageable by many in the public”, and “chronic lateral channel inclusions which can include amongst other things, humans, boats and loud music, which can prevent seals from using what would otherwise be suitable habitat.” These are not ‘facts,’ but allegations, none of which were accurate.
Investigation of Bennett’s involvement leads to reports in the Nation of an amazingly revelatory discussion with Tess Elliot and Kevin Lunny, wherein Bennett candidly admits to lying. The conversation is included in letters to the editor about Elliot’s September 9, 2008 Nation article, entitled “Scientific Integrity Lost in America’s Parks” Here are the key excerpts: “Bennett made several confessions during our post-show chat. (Listen to the KQED program with Senator Feinstein, Gordon Bennett, Tess Elliot and others here) “The park knew it had no evidence when it made those charges,” he said, excusing his own malfeasance of lying to a 50,000-strong audience. He had also claimed that the Point Reyes Wilderness Act mandated the oyster farm’s removal in 2012. “You know the Wilderness Act says nothing about 2012,” I said. Again, Bennett acknowledged misleading listeners. ”If you know these claims are false, why don’t you remove them from your website?” I asked. “The other side spreads misinformation, too,” he replied. I shamed Bennett for attaching the Sierra Club’s name to his false claims. He replied that he did so as a buffer against lawsuit.
Bennett’s LinkedIn page also claims that he has been President of Save Our Seashore, which he claims has existed since 1994, yet he has not released any information to the public. Perhaps not coincidentally, Save Our Seashore is the name of an organization formed in 1994 by the late Peter Behr, one of the true founders of Point Reyes National Seashore, who did much in creation of the pastoral zone that protected the ranches and oyster farm and brought them into the park. Here is a 1969 TV interview with Behr regarding the Seashore, and on his views about environmental campaigning.
National Parks Conservation Association’s Neil Desai, is also a key player and founder of the SaveDrakesBay coalition website, since taken down and parked on GoDaddy.com, replaced with yet another site. His participation in the smear campaign was previously documented in the Russian River Times, involving nationally released false statements, doctoring photographs and making allegations that he knew to be misleading. Desai nationally distributed false information to deliberately distort public comments on the NPS EIS, authoring a notice that claimed four species at Drakes Estero, including the harbor seal, were endangered. According to the Fish and Wildlife Service, a sister agency to NPS, none were endangered (or even threatened).
He has worked closely with Amy Trainer, current EAC director who replaced Fred Smith after the start of the anti-Lunny campaign who herself has originated many of the misleading statements, such as this recent patently false claim that the Lunnys are making millions from the oyster company.
That campaign in many ways resembles the worst of the California initiative politics. This is not surprising, given the involvement of Jerry Meral, whose LinkedIn page not only shows his role with EAC, but that he ‘managed’ the former EAC executive director, Fred Smith. It also displays his well-known relationship with other environmental groups, specifically his role as executive director of the Planning and Conservation League (PCL). Meral resigned his position in 2002 after the defeat of Proposition 51. He then became active in local politics and with the EAC, contemporaneous with the start of their campaign against Drakes Estero.
A blunt editorial in the December 5, 2002 Sacramento Bee documents Meral’s methods: finding a cause, assembling a coalition, claiming to be protecting the public’s rights, and logrolling the various factions involved while seeking funding to drive publicity and enact the deal.
The editorial closes: ”Meral always argued that the ends justified his means. But (in the case of Prop. 51) the voters weren’t buying. When the questionable means come to overshadow the ends, maybe it’s time to retire the method, too.”
When journalists fail to ask basic questions before reporting on a story based on press releases from advocacy groups, they do little to inform the public, and contribute greatly to polarization. Journalism is not sticking a microphone in someone’s face and reading press releases. It is facts, documents and history and informed questions. The job of journalism is to make sure it is not being spun, and to inform, not incite. Tell the public the facts and what you have found out about ‘Who? What? When? Where? Why?’
Editors Note:
We are including in the on line version of the article the full text of the Elliot letter in the Nation, and would point out that the article and its letters, including those from then Sierra Club Executive Director Carl Pope and Dr. Laura Watt of Sonoma State, who wrote her PHD thesis on the working landscapes of Point Reyes, are well worth reading. The editors removed Gordon Bennett’s response to Elliot because of factual errors.
You may read all of the Russian River Times reporting on the estero here.
Nation Web Letter
I once shared a homemade Pugliese tart with Gordon Bennett in a Starbucks in San Francisco. We had been guests on a show on public radio, along with Kevin Lunny of Drakes Bay Oyster Company. Bennett had made several claims that I knew were false. As we exited the sound room, I suggested we keep chatting, and over slices of pastry I had packed in my purse, I asked Bennett how he could lie on air.
Speaking on behalf of the Sierra Club, Bennett alleged that Lunny’s oyster farm was a menace to seals and eelgrass. Each of us knew these claims were debunked in a report by the National Academy of Sciences, which found that the park had misrepresented its own data. There was no evidence supporting the claims that the park and Bennett had levied against Lunny for over two years. The academy report brought to light what many suspected: a campaign to portray the farm as a threat, and justify its closure.
Bennett made several confessions during our post-show chat. “The park knew it had no evidence when it made those charges,” he said, excusing his own malfeasance of lying to a 50,000-strong audience. He had also claimed that the Point Reyes Wilderness Act mandated the oyster farm’s removal in 2012. “You know the Wilderness Act says nothing about 2012,” I said. Again, Bennett acknowledged misleading listeners.
“If you know these claims are false, why don’t you remove them from your website?” I asked. “The other side spreads misinformation, too,” he replied. I shamed Bennett for attaching the Sierra Club’s name to his false claims. He replied that he did so as a buffer against lawsuit. “Why don’t you just tell the truth?” Lunny asked. “Then you won’t get sued.”
Bennett was quiet. I had an epiphany. This man, whose reckless behavior has shaped the Drakes Estero debate, does not hesitate to use the power of his title to mislead the public. For him, the end justifies the means. As he put it to me that day, wilderness is like a church. Bennett pursues his wilderness-church with religious zeal. When I wrote the article for The Nation I expected a response from Bennett–but the angry and libelous tone of his letter alarmed me. It is impossible to rebut the numerous false statements in this space, so I will pick only a few.
On May 5, the National Academy of Sciences announced that a Point Reyes National Seashore report “selectively presented, over-interpreted and misrepresented” studies of the oyster farm’s ecological effects. That day, Jon Jarvis told the press that he thanked the academy for agreeing with his conclusions. What on earth did he mean? The report explicitly dismissed his conclusions. Later I discovered that Jarvis had given the academy a corrected version of the park report, but had neglected to make this version public. The older versions of the report–each containing claims of harm–kept circulating, while the corrected version remained hidden. So Jarvis was pleased that the academy agreed with his secret retractions. But Jarvis did not stop there. “We agree with some conclusions in the academy report, and disagree with others,” he said. Everyone was confused. The academy had dismissed each of the park’s claims, and Jarvis’s only challenge was a tangential point that was not even in the academy’s charter, concerning whether or not native oysters existed in Drakes Estero and therefore influenced its historic baseline ecology. Jarvis said they did not. Yet the waterside shed where Lunny sells his oysters is a stone’s throw from a gigantic midden, a heap of shells left as proof that native peoples enjoyed the estero’s salty bounty.
In his letter, Bennett makes an outlandish reversal, claiming it is the academy–not the park service–that “selectively presented, over-interpreted and misrepresented” evidence. His proof? A two-page explanation written by a man with a math degree from the University of Pennsylvania that is so flawed it is laughable.
Meanwhile, he attacks Goodman, the biologist who uncovered the park service’s misuse of data. Bennett claims Goodman is not a biologist. In fact, Goodman graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Stanford University with a BS in biology, earned his PhD in zoology, with a specialty in neurobiology, from UC Berkeley, and was a tenured professor at both of those schools for twenty-five years. He is a former chair of the life sciences board for the National Academy of Sciences. Each of Goodman’s allegations was borne out by the academy’s report.
Readers must decide whether Bennett’s claims hold water. Readers must decide who is making ad hominem attacks. I have suggested that Jarvis, now approved by the Senate for directorship of the National Park Service, has shown disregard for science. His loyalty to the troops trumps his loyalty to the truth.
Tess Elliott
Bolinas, CA
Oct 4 2009 – 2:14pm
IF ANY OF THE ABOVE LINKS DO NOT WORK PLEASE GO DIRECTLY TO THE RUSSIAN RIVER TIMES POST AT:
https://russianrivertimes.wordpress.com/2013/05/14/what-lies-in-drakes-estero/
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on May 15, 2013
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2013/05/15/05-14-2013-russian-river-times-what-lies-in-drakes-estero/
05-14-2013 Ninth circuit hears argument on whether interior secretary is above the law – PLF Liberty Blog
Today, in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, Drakes Bay Oyster Company presents its case for enjoining the Secretary of the Interior and the National Park Service from destroying its business before its legal claims can even be heard in court. You can follow my live tweet from today’s oral argument on twitter @TonyFrancoisEsq, #SaveDBOC, starting at 9:00 AM Pacific.
At the heart of this case is the rule of law. Do we have a government of laws which every one of us, the government as well as the governed, must observe? Or do we have a government of elites, who get to make it up as they go and cannot be held accountable?
In 2009 Congress enacted a straightforward authority for the Secretary to issue Drake’s Bay Oyster Company a new permit for its shellfish farm in Point Reyes National Seashore. It includes the phrase “notwithstanding any other provision of law” to prevent the Secretary from denying the permit based on a prior congressional designation of “potential wilderness” surrounding the oyster farm. Simple, yes?
When former Secretary Salazar denied the oyster farm a new permit last November, he claimed that actually this statute “expressly exempts my decision from any substantive and legal requirements.”
Former Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar writes that Congress has exempted him from every other law it ever enacted.
Read that again. That is a member of the President’s cabinet, asserting that Congress has licensed him to do, well, whatever he wants. Everyone who cherishes liberty should be alarmed by the federal government’s interpretation of this law.
Pacific Legal Foundation defends liberty through the rule of law. Without the rule of law, our property and freedom mean nothing. As it hears Drake’s Bay Oyster Company’s appeal today, and when it decides it, the Ninth Circuit needs to remember the importance of the rule of law, and needs to reject the tyrannical assertion that Congress is, or can be, in the business of exempting members of the President’s cabinet from every law that every president ever signed.
For the video, Click on the link below:
Ninth circuit hears argument on whether interior secretary is above the law – PLF Liberty Blog.
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on May 15, 2013
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2013/05/15/05-14-2013-ninth-circuit-hears-argument-on-whether-interior-secretary-is-above-the-law-plf-liberty-blog/
05-14-2013 Greenwire – by Emily Yehle: Rushed USGS report misrepresented biologist’s findings
“The U.S. Geological Survey published a report that misrepresented a biologist’s findings, lending support to the National Park Service’s claims that a California oyster farm disturbs nearby seals.
USGS is the latest agency to get sucked into the years-long controversy over whether the National Park Service manipulated science to shore up public support for closing Drakes Bay Oyster Co. In the latest twist, documents show USGS reported that a series of photos linked oyster boats to disturbed seals — when, in fact, a marine biologist had told the agency that the photos showed no such link.”
Greenwire
3. INTERIOR:
Rushed USGS report on oyster farm misrepresented biologist’s findings
Emily Yehle, E&E reporter
Published: Tuesday, May 14, 2013
The U.S. Geological Survey published a report that misrepresented a biologist’s findings, lending support to the National Park Service’s claims that a California oyster farm disturbs nearby seals.
USGS is the latest agency to get sucked into the years-long controversy over whether the National Park Service manipulated science to shore up public support for closing Drakes Bay Oyster Co. In the latest twist, documents show USGS reported that a series of photos linked oyster boats to disturbed seals — when, in fact, a marine biologist had told the agency that the photos showed no such link.
The inaccuracy is buried in a 27-page, somewhat technical report USGS completed at the behest of NPS. But it cuts to the core of the passionate debate over whether the farm’s activities disturb the seals that breed on a protected sandbar in Drakes Bay.
Former Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced last year that he would not renew the farm’s lease in Point Reyes National Seashore, ending more than 70 years of mariculture in Drakes Bay. But the farm continues to fight the decision, filing a lawsuit that claims, among other things, that Salazar did not properly follow the National Environmental Policy Act.
Drakes Bay Oyster Co. is still open, operating under an emergency injunction. A U.S. district court judge denied the farm’s request for a permanent injunction until the lawsuit is resolved — and today, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit in San Francisco will hear oral arguments in the farm’s appeal of that decision.
But what has become a tangled web of legal arguments began with one claim from NPS six years ago: that the farm disturbed seals.
The USGS report was the last piece of uncriticized evidence.
‘Breathing down my neck’
Last year, NPS released an environmental impact statement that concluded the farm’s continued operations would have “long-term moderate adverse impacts” on seals. But the agency has had a hard time proving that impact, prompting a series of missteps that started with a false claim in 2007 that the oyster operation had decreased the harbor seal population by 80 percent.
Since then, evidence has been shaky at best. The Marine Mammal Commission concluded in 2011 that NPS had “scant” data to prove a disturbance of harbor seals; a peer-reviewed article claiming evidence in fact showed only weak correlation. That left only one report indicating a potential disturbance: the USGS review of about 165,000 photos taken of Drakes Bay in 2008.
On the whole, the review is careful to point out that the photos are of poor quality and little use. But USGS also reports that on two days, boat traffic was “directly connected, or at least associated with,” disturbing seals enough that they flushed into the water.
The environmental impact statement, in turn, exaggerates that finding, claiming that the USGS report “attributed” two flushing disturbances to boat traffic.
Both are wrong. Brent Stewart, a senior research scientist at Hubbs-Seaworld Research Institute, concluded that the photos did not show boats disturbing seals on either of the two days. Stewart is listed on the USGS report as an author — and his observations are the basis for the USGS conclusions on seal disturbances.
The reason for the inaccuracy in the USGS report is unclear. But a series of emails reveals that the agency rushed to complete its analysis, due to pressure from NPS.
William Lellis, the deputy associate director of ecosystems at USGS, assigned the project to research ecologist Carrie Blakeslee on Feb. 7, 2012. In an email, he wrote that the analysis needed to be done by the end of March “to brief Secretary Salazar who needs to make a decision on Wilderness Status for the park.”
But by May, it still wasn’t complete, and USGS began to apply pressure to Stewart to submit his commissioned report.
“NPS will be breathing down my neck this week, when do you think you’ll be able to transmit something?” Laurie Allen, a USGS senior science adviser, wrote to Stewart.
Stewart did review a draft of the final report and did not initially point out the inaccuracy in the text. But the version he reviewed did not include the final figures and appendix, which also contained errors.
USGS publicly released its report Nov. 26. Three days later, Salazar announced he would not renew the farm’s lease.
But in early December, Lellis reached out to Stewart, asking him to again review the photos on the two days when boats allegedly disturbed seals. Stewart responded with a supplemental analysis that found no such disturbance.
On one of the days, the seals moved around, but “I don’t consider this to be a flush but rather likely a startle of most seals owing to a sudden movement or startle of one or two seals with or without external stimulus,” Stewart wrote.
USGS never corrected its report. In an email to Greenwire, USGS spokeswoman Anne-Berry Wade declined to comment.
“Because of the ongoing litigation, it would be inappropriate for the USGS to offer any specific comments,” she said, adding that the report was peer-reviewed and has been publicly available on the USGS website since it was published.
Another claim of misconduct
The watchdog agency Cause of Action released the emails this week, arguing that they show Salazar based his decision to close the farm on faulty science. The right-leaning group is representing Drakes Bay Oyster Co. in its lawsuit and obtained the emails through a Freedom of Information Act request.
But that request — which asked for all documents related to the USGS report — did not produce Stewart’s supplemental analysis. Corey Goodman, a neurobiologist who has spent years double-checking research from NPS, obtained that analysis directly from Stewart. Yesterday, he filed a misconduct complaint — the latest of several — to new Interior Secretary Sally Jewell, claiming that USGS and NPS have deceived the public.
Interior declined to comment, citing the ongoing court case.
Goodman wants Jewell to convene a blue-ribbon panel of independent scientists to investigate the allegations, an unlikely scenario.
The farm operators, meanwhile, hope it will help their argument that Salazar relied on science to close the farm. When Salazar announced his decision last year, he emphasized that it was not based on science but rather on NPS policy and the need to remove the farm and restore the area to full wilderness.
But the emails show Interior’s top officials were briefed on the USGS report in the days before Salazar’s decision.
“NPS and their supporters keep saying that the science isn’t important in the federal court case, but that just isn’t true,” Drakes Bay Oyster Co. owner Kevin Lunny said. “The Department of Justice lawyers have used these false science claims to argue that the public good favors the removal of our oyster farm, and with it, the loss of 40 percent of the state’s oysters and 30 jobs.”
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on May 14, 2013
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2013/05/14/05-14-2013-greenwire-emily-yehle-rushed-usgs-report-misrepresented-biologists-findings/
05-13-13 NPS and USGS Falsified Findings of Harbor Seal Distrubances
timeline and quotes from USGS FOIA response.05_13_13
USGS Dr. Lellis & Dr. Goodman conversation and emails
For immediate release: NPS and USGS Falsified Finding of Harbor Seal Disturbances at Drakes Estero
New Information Shows False Science Misinformed Interior Secretary Salazar for His Decision
Inverness, California, May 13, 2013 — A scientific misconduct complaint was filed today with Interior Secretary Jewell. This complaint was based in part on new information only made available this past week via both the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and from the independent scientist who did the harbor seal behavioral analysis for the National Park Service (NPS) and U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). The complaint, filed by Dr. Corey Goodman, concerns the NPS and USGS claim – shown to be false – that the independent scientist – Dr. Brent Stewart – found the oyster farm disturbed harbor seals at Drakes Estero, which he did not. The complaint alleges the public was deceived.
The new information shows that evidence of disturbances was falsified. This revelation has profound implications for Secretary Salazar’s decision to not renew the oyster farm permit, showing that USGS and NPS apparently misinformed Secretary Salazar using scientific claims they knew were incorrect, and that the Department of Justice continues to use the same false science to misinform the federal court.
The data in question are included in the NPS Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) released in late November 2012. The FEIS alleges that oyster boats have a “moderate adverse impact” on the harbor seals at Drakes Estero, a claim the new information shows is not true. Around the beginning of 2012, NPS asked USGS to independently analyze the 300,000 photographs from secret cameras placed along the shore of Drakes Estero from 2007 to 2010. The USGS scientists picked 165,000 photographs from 2008 for their analysis. They sent all of the series of photographs that showed possible harbor seal disturbances to an independent harbor seal behavior expert, Dr. Brent Stewart of Hubbs-SeaWorld Research Institute.
Last May, Dr. Stewart filed his report that found “no evidence of disturbance” by the oyster farm, but USGS misquoted him and claimed he found two correlated disturbances, and the NPS FEIS further misrepresented both USGS and Dr. Stewart and claimed he found cause and effect, and with it, NPS found a moderate adverse impact. Two serial misrepresentations led a finding of “no evidence of
1
disturbance” by the independent expert to be transformed to a finding of causation of disturbances by NPS in its FEIS.
This past week, USGS released a series of emails in response to a FOIA request submitted in December 2012. Those emails show that USGS and NPS personnel believed that the analysis of the NPS photos had very high priority and was fast tracked to inform Secretary Salazar’s decision on the oyster farm permit. The emails also reveal that USGS personnel apparently briefed two Assistant Secretaries of Interior on July 3 to inform the Secretary’s decision. It appears the Secretary was briefed with false science.
In early December 2012, questions were raised concerning the USGS and NPS claims vs. the independent scientist’s findings. As a result, USGS personnel went back to the independent expert and asked him to re-review the NPS photographs. Dr. Stewart’s supplemental analysis, filed with USGS on December 10, 2012, shows that he confirmed his initial analysis, namely, the finding of no evidence of disturbances by the oyster farm. Up until this past week, Dr. Stewart’s supplemental analysis has not been made public.
Upon request from the office of Congressman Jared Huffman, Dr. Stewart provided this report to the Congressman’s staff nearly two weeks ago, and released those same documents upon request from Dr. Goodman this past week. This supplemental report, and the request and submittal emails, were not included in the USGS response to the FOIA request, raising questions as to whether USGS withheld the material in violation of FOIA, or alternatively, whether USGS personnel used private email addresses to circumvent FOIA. Regardless, this key document was not provided in response to the FOIA request.
“After receiving the supplemental report, the USGS should have retracted its own report, informed NPS that its FEIS contained major mistakes, and informed the Secretary that he was misinformed for his decision,” said Dr. Goodman. “But it appears as if none of this happened. Dr. Stewart’s supplemental report was suppressed, and with it, the evidence showing misconduct was covered up.”
Although Interior stated that the science was not important to the Secretary’s decision, the new documents paint a very different picture, one in which NPS was “chomping at the bit” for the USGS scientific analysis of the photographs because of the Secretary’s “deadlines for deciding on the permit.”
“NPS and their supporters keep saying that the science isn’t important in the federal court case, but that just isn’t true,” said Kevin Lunny, owner of Drakes Bay Oyster Company. “The Department of Justice lawyers have used these false science claims to argue that the public good favors removal of our oyster farm, and with it, the loss of 40 percent of the State’s oysters and 30 jobs.” The next hearing for the lawsuit in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals is scheduled for May 14, 2013.
Dr. Goodman requested that Interior Secretary Jewell convene a blue-ribbon panel of independent scientists to investigate the allegations that USGS and NPS personnel intentionally misrepresented the findings of the independent scientist concerning the oyster farm at Point Reyes National Seashore.
Contacts:
Barbara Garfien Barbara.garfien@gmail.com 415-717-0970
Dr. Corey Goodman
corey.goodman@me.com
415-663-9495
mobile 650-922-1431
2
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on May 13, 2013
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2013/05/13/05-13-13-nps-and-usgs-falsified-findings-of-harbor-seal-distrubances/
04/25/2013 Dr. Jeff Creque on Red Herrings in Drakes Estero
Red Herrings in Drakes Estero
Jeff Creque, Ph.D. Land Stewardship Consultation, responded on April 25 to a letter in Marin Voice written by Dr. Marty Griffin. Below is his response as it appeared in the West Marin Citizen, the Marin IJ, as well as the Press Democrat.
Dr. Marty Griffin’s years of service to the cause of conservation in Marin are appreciated, but his opinion piece (MV, 5/2/13) reminds me of Michael Moore’s comment at the Oscars some years ago; we do indeed live in fictitious times.
Dr. Griffin reviews the many charges brought against the Drakes Bay Oyster Farm (DBOF) by the California Coastal Commission (CCC) in its ongoing collaboration with the National Park Service (NPS) to eliminate aquaculture on over 55% of the State of California’s water bottom shellfish leases, but he fails to explain the CCC’s ham-handed attempts to regulate an activity over which it has no statutory authority.
If DBOF is, technically, out of compliance with CCC regulations, it is due entirely to the success of the bureaucratic pincer move deployed jointly by the CCC and NPS. There have been no “expanded operations” by the oyster farm. Johnson’s Oyster Company (JOC) harvested some 800,000 pounds annually prior to the company’s collapse in 2004. DBOF has gradually rebuilt the farm’s annual harvest to about 400,000 pounds, half that of JOC.
Oysters may be an irrelevant luxury food item for Dr. Griffin, but they remain one of the few sustainable sources of marine protein on the planet. While global fisheries collapse, sea levels rise and oceans acidify, estuary restoration efforts throughout the world attempt to restore oyster beds as rapidly as possible. Only in Drakes Estero are reputed environmentalists working overtime to destroy our capacity to produce what the Monterey Bay Aquarium calls a “super green” sea food.
Dr. Griffin might read the National Academy of Sciences report he misquotes to learn more about Didemnum vexillum, which is ubiquitous in estuaries globally. If he did, he would know oyster culture did not cause its presence in Drakes Estero, and it is not possible to eradicate, even if all cultured oysters were removed. He would learn that the NAS found no evidence of environmental harm from shellfish aquaculture in the Estero and recommended development of a Collaborative Management Plan to enable aquaculture to continue, and to address the concerns raised in this overheated debate with legitimate scientific inquiry, in an adaptive management framework.
Most importantly, I want to assure Dr. Griffin that there is nothing frivolous about our lawsuit, undertaken only after much deliberation and careful legal analysis by our pro bono legal team. The anguish expressed during our pre-filing deliberations by Ms. Faber, whose own lifetime of laudable service to the cause of conservation in Marin rivals even Dr. Griffin’s, including her tireless efforts to bring about the Coastal Act and her service on the original CCC, was, for me, particularly sobering.
As made clear in our legal brief, the CCC has greatly exceeded its authority in this matter, working against its own statutory requirement to support coastal dependent activities, particularly aquaculture, and both replicating and exceeding authorities of the Fish and Game Commission, in direct violation of the Coastal Act.
With 14.5 million residents to feed in the SF Bay Area today, and 21 million projected by mid-century, the importance of this critical, sustainable, nearly perfect marine protein resource is increasingly obvious to all who care about the future of sustainable food production in our region. DBOF is an archetypical example of exactly the type of food production we need more, not less of. It is part of the solution to our growing dilemma; it is most certainly not part of the problem.
I urge those in our community who share our concerns to become involved in this issue while there is still time.
Jeffrey Creque, Ph.D.
Alliance for Local Sustainable Agriculture
908 Western Ave
Petaluma 94952
707/765-1059
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on May 13, 2013
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2013/05/13/04252013-dr-jeff-creque-on-red-herrings-in-drakes-estero/
03/07/2013 Joan Chevalier in Range Magazine On Reterritorialization
I have an opinion piece in the Spring issue of Range, along with this photo of me and my lovely little reiner, Diva.
Here’s the link to the article, “Giving Way to the Land.”
It’s a rewrite of an article that appeared in Bombay India, published by their Institute of Technology. I write about the colonial attitude of America’s large environmental organizations toward rural Americans.
“Anthropologists call this reterritorialization when a dominant culture, wanting to take over a subordinate culture, tells itself a pretty little story about its own heroism in saving the savage wrong-headed natives from themselves. The message the natives hear is: “You can either make a living on our terms or you can disappear.”
The will to make rural Americans disappear is no where so well demonstrated as in a second article in Range magazine’s Spring issue, “Shell Game on Drakes Estero” by Carolyn Dufurrena. (rangemagazine.com) Those of you who are members of the Sierra Club should resign immediately. The Sierra Club (whose name is anathema in rural America) has led a campaign of misinformation, in league with the National Park Service, against a small oyster farm in California, all in the name of “wilderness.” The NPS scientific case against the Lunny family has been discredited by the National Academy of Science not once — but twice. The Park Service used false and misleading data: a report from 1955 on oysters in Japan was taken and applied to this farm — as though those numbers came from this location! –accusing the Drake Oyster Company of destroying the eel grass with oyster feces. This is not happening: the eel grass is lush; the fish are flourishing. They accused them of harming harbor seals — to the tune of a 80 percent reduction in their numbers. The numbers indeed had dropped — not near the oyster farm, but far far away in — wait for it — WILDERNESS. Yes, in the wilderness area due to hikers and kayakers — all my lovely liberal friends chortling little seal songs to the wildlife whilst carrying copies of Aldo Leopold in their knapsacks were enough to send the seals packing. Heck they would send me packing. It had nothing to do with the oysters. But the National Park Service has spent, conservatively, about $10 million dollars trying to discredit this family, instead of doing something meaningful for the harbor seals in the wilderness area. Of course, because it is official wilderness, they probably can’t do anything meaningful.
So, this family is going to lose its operations and 30 Hispanic families will lose their employment because of a will to power: in this case the notion that purifying the landscape from all economic activity keeps it a Disney wonderland for the very very few who are wealthy or fit enough to make their way into official wilderness. And the kicker here is that this landscape would not be intact and public today, but for this family and the other rural operations who came together to protect it decades ago. The levels of betrayal here are Dickensian.
The story is well captured in this video here:
I will be writing more about this . . . count on it.
Joan Chevalier is a speechwriter in New York. Her pieces have appeared in the Boston Globe, Washington Times, and Wall Street Journal. check http://www.joanchevalier.com.
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on March 18, 2013
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2013/03/18/03072013-range-magazine-on-reterritorialization/
03-18-13 Stewardship Begins With People – where the NPS extolls Kevin Lunny as an ENVIRONMENTAL STEWARD
From the Conservation Study Institute, US Department of the Interior, and with the imprimatur of the National Park Service itself:
STEWARDSHIP BEGINS WITH PEOPLE
An Atlas of Places, People, and Handmade Products
(click on the link below for the full version)
(I was informed by Leslie Shahi of the Conservation Study Institute on 03/18/13, that the book was never made available as a PDF download because it “was graphic intensive – the size was prohibitive” . I have obtained a scanned PDF of the full version which I have EASILY uploaded above for your benefit, having taken less than 15 seconds to download to my computer and then upload to this blog. If you have any difficulties with the full version, click on the link below for the abbreviated version; it includes all but chapters on other parks.)
(click on the link below for the currently available WEB ACCESSIBLE VERSION. This version is ONLY 12 PAGES LONG. You can only find it via Google Search, being that it is not available through the NPS Website as all the others are. FURTHERMORE, the CHAPTER ON POINT REYES NATIONAL SEASHORE is MINUS any reference to Kevin Lunny and Drakes Bay Oyster Co. THE PHOTO OF Dave Evans and Kevin Lunny is included yet KEVIN LUNNY is AIRBRUSHED OUT !!!
JUST IN! ONE OF MY READERS PROVIDED THIS LINK TO THE CURRENTLY AVAILABLE EDITION. He wrote to me the following: “Oddly, (perhaps by intent) it comes up under the “fs.fed.us” domain, i.e., the Forest Service, not the Park Service.”
http://www.fs.fed.us/sustainableoperations/documents/susops-summit07-SustCommTrack_Part-II.pdf
It is within the FULL VERSION of the ORIGINAL PUBLICATION ONLY where you will find on page 45 not only a photograph of Kevin Lunny but also, the following comments:
“fourth generation rancher”, who, in this publication, is “recognized for [his] ENVIRONMENTAL STEWARDSHIP AND INNOVATION….[who] belong[s] to a growing number of West Marin farmers and ranchers COMMITTED TO SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURAL STRATEGIES….Lunny has converted his herd to grass-fed and organic production….Lunny’s Drakes Bay Family Farms now operates an oyster farm on Drakes Estero.”
The Introduction states this is “a guide to the work of friends and neighbors of U.S. national parks…who are practicing a stewardship ethic and demonstrating a commitment to sustainability…and the people in this Atlas–and others like them–deserve both recognition and encouragement.”
Other notes and quotes from the publication [EMPHASIS ADDED]:
“Stewardship” presents a blueprint for “advancing innovations in collaborative conservation for the stewardship of our national system of parks and other special places” by highlighting successful examples of places, people and businesses long imbedded in national parks and nearby agricultural communities. EACH IS A POSTER EXAMPLE OF SOUND, TIME-HONORED MIXED USE OF PARK LANDS.”
Pages 4, 20, 30 and 32 are particularly poignant and speak to the Park Service’s policy of exploring creative ways to “re-establish a connection — between parks and living cultures; BETWEEN PUBLIC LANDS AND THE STEWARDSHIP OF FARMS and forests; BETWEEN PEOPLE AND THE FOOD THEY EAT; and between park visitors, communities and a more sustainable future.”
The Park Service’s “Stewardship” PROMOTES SMALL, HISTORIC, LOCAL, FAMILY-OWNED, ORGANIC, SUSTAINABLE, EDUCATIONAL, COMMUNITY ENRICHING, JOB CREATING, DIVERSE FOOD PRODUCERS and eloquently reaffirms a sense of place, local cultures, regional identify, distinctiveness and character, AND THE NEED TO ADDRESS THE UNRAVELING OF SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC RELATIONSHIPS TO THE LAND.
And as it so advocates, the THE PARK SERVICE SPEAKS DIRECTLY TO THE VALIDITY AND VALUE OF CONTINUED MIXED USE OF DRAKES ESTERO BY OUR NATIONAL TREASURE, Drakes Bay Oyster Co.
Curious though is this, in the center of the first page of the Introduction is a paragraph in bold face type, brown font, that states:
“It is no longer enough to strive for a friendly “coexistence.” All parties need to be more intentional and proactive in defining their mutual interests and crafting new, more cooperative strategies that contribute to some measure of sustainability and long-term conservation.”
Was that a sincere statement or a somewhat ominous portent of what was to follow?
On the Acknowledgements page, second column, first line, you will find the name Don Neubacher, the then superintendent of Point Reyes National Seashore.
The date of the publication is 2007 yet, early in 2007, Neubacher met with Steve Kinsey, President of the Marin County Board of Supervisors. He proudly revealed his “war room” and claimed that Kevin Lunny was an “environmental criminal” and could expect fines and “JAIL TIME” and discussed his newly launched campaign to remove the oyster farm from the seashore.
I called The Conservation Study Institute at at 802-457-3368 the number given on the inside front cover, and was put through directly to Leslie Shahi at extension 16. Hers is the second name mentioned on page 58 – the Acknowledgments page – for her “much appreciated help with collecting and organizing the variety of images that appear in the Atlas”.
When asked, she stated that the publication was never made available as a PDF because it was “graphic intensive, the size was too big”.
I requested 10 copies be sent to me and was informed they were not only free, but there would be no shipping and handling charges either. (Our tax dollars at work!). I was assured they would arrive within three to four days that translates to Friday. I will update this posting at that time and when and if I receive them as well as whether their contents are the same as the originals in my possession – 60 pages including the back inside and outside covers.
We are providing you with an abbreviated version as well as the full version.
For the abbreviated version, we have included the entire book EXCEPT the chapters on other parks to make sure full credit is given to those who deserve credit and citation and to provide pertinent information from the publication for your benefit:
· Front cover
· Inside front cover (where permission to share the information is expressly given*)
· Title page
· Map
· Table of contents
· EBay’s landing photo page
· Introduction (2 pages)
· Sue Conley Cowgirl Creamery and other photos page
· Point Reyes National Seashore (the full chapter – 3 pages)
· Website References (2 pages)
· Acknowledgements (see second column first line of that page for mention of Don Neubacher)
· Photographic Credits (inside back cover)
· Back cover
Express permission is granted on the inside front cover, paragraph three and four:
*”We encourage you to share the information in this publication, and request only that you give appropriate citations. Copyrighted images are not placed in the public domain by their appearance in this document. They cannot be copied or otherwise reproduced EXCEPT IN THEIR PRINTED CONTEXT WITHIN THIS DOCUMENT without the written consent of the copyright holders.
Recommended citation: Diamant, Rolf, et al. Stewardship Begins with People: An Atlas of Places, People, and Handmade Products. Woodstock, VT: Conservation Study Institute, 2007.”
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on March 18, 2013
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2013/03/18/03-18-13-stewardship-begins-with-people-where-the-nps-extolls-kevin-lunny-an-environmental-steward/
03-17-13 Marin IJ: Harmonic Convergence for Point Reyes Oysters
03-17-13 Marin IJ,
The Park Service’s own publication, “Stewardship Begins With People,” [NPSG_999_D1963_selected pages] effectively and passionately embraces — and justifies — renewing Drakes Bay Oyster Co.’s lease.
“Stewardship” presents a blueprint for “advancing innovations in collaborative conservation for the stewardship of our national system of parks and other special places” by highlighting successful examples of places, people and businesses long imbedded in national parks and nearby agricultural communities. Each is a poster example of sound, time-honored mixed use of park lands.
In a prior edition now out of print and no longer Web-accessible, “Stewardship” featured the Lunny Family Farm and its wise diversification into oysters.
Pages 4, 20, 30 and 32 are particularly poignant and speak to the Park Service’s policy of exploring creative ways to “re-establish a connection — between parks and living cultures; between public lands and the stewardship of farms and forests; between people and the food they eat; and between park visitors, communities and a more sustainable future.”
|
|
|||
ANOTHER harmonic convergence is underway in Marin. This time its vibe is real and palpable and manifests directly out of the mouths from the voices of societal leaders. This time no humming or blissful chanting on Mount Tamalpais is required, only mindful connection of dots. President Obama’s economic recovery plan focuses on revitalizing small businesses of middle class working folks; his agencies actively extoll establishing and restoring oyster beds to help sustain ecosystems. A federal appellate court cites “serious legal questions” about Interior Department’s refusal to renew Drakes Bay Oyster Co.’s permit, saying “the balance of hardships tips sharply” in favor of the farm, then grants an emergency reprieve. The Independent Journal runs a front-page article about the $445 million contribution of National Parks to Marin’s economy by visitors lodging, hiking, seeing elephant seals — and eating oysters. Another features the launch of the “Grown Local Marin County” branding campaign that promoting foodsheds, as Supervisor and MALT board member Steve Kinsey puts it, of West Marin’s organic sustainable farms, ranches and aquacultures. The Park Service’s own publication, “Stewardship Begins With People,” effectively and passionately embraces — and justifies — renewing Drakes Bay Oyster Co.’s lease. Check it out online. “Stewardship” presents a blueprint for “advancing innovations in collaborative conservation for the stewardship of our national system of parks and other special places” by highlighting successful examples of places, people and businesses long imbedded in national parks and nearby agricultural communities. Each is a poster example of sound, time-honored mixed use of park lands. In a prior edition now out of print and no longer Web-accessible, “Stewardship” featured the Lunny Family Farm and its wise diversification into oysters. Pages 4, 20, 30 and 32 are particularly poignant and speak to the Park Service’s policy of exploring creative ways to “re-establish a connection — between parks and living cultures; between public lands and the stewardship of farms and forests; between people and the food they eat; and between park visitors, communities and a more sustainable future.” The Park Service’s “Stewardship” promotes small, historic, local, family-owned, organic, sustainable, educational, community enriching, job creating, diverse food producers and eloquently reaffirms a sense of place, local cultures, regional identify, distinctiveness and character, and the need to address the unraveling of social and economic relationships to the land. And as it so advocates, the Park Service speaks directly to the validity and value of continued mixed use of Drakes Estero by our national treasure, Drakes Bay Oyster Co. The Park Service itself — convergently and harmonically — got it exactly right. The oyster farm’s lease should be renewed. Bob La Belle of San Anselmo is a conservationist and a lifelong resident of Marin |
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on March 18, 2013
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2013/03/18/03-17-13-marin-ij-harmonic-convergence-for-point-reyes-oysters/
02-06-13 Drakes Bay Oyster Company Appeals Judge’s Decision
Drakes Bay Oyster Company Appeals Judge’s Decision to Deny Injunction
Posted by Communications Staff in Highlights, Press, Press Releases & Statements on February 6, 2013 4:18 pm / no comments
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FEBRUARY 6, 2013
DRAKES BAY OYSTER COMPANY APPEALS JUDGE’S DECISION TO DENY INJUNCTION
The Lunny Family Continues the Fight to Keep the Farm in Business
SAN FRANCISCO – Cause of Action (CoA), a government accountability organization, Briscoe Ivester & Bazel LLP, and SSL Law today appealed Judge Gonzalez Rogers’s decision to deny an injunction for Drakes Bay Oyster Company, which would have allowed the company to remain open for the duration of the trial, Drakes Bay Oyster Company v. Salazar, et al. Without an injunction, the family farm will be required to cease all operations, destroy millions of un-harvested oysters, and force several families living on the farm to move elsewhere by February 28.
“We are committed to fighting against government abuse and overreach to keep the Lunny family in business,” said Amber Abbasi, Chief Counsel for Regulatory Affairs at Cause of Action, “and are taking all the necessary legal steps to appeal this ruling.”
Kevin Lunny, owner of Drakes Bay Oyster Company offered this brief statement on behalf of the farm:
“We continue to be grateful for the outpouring of support from our community. We have had time to weigh our options carefully, and have decided to appeal the judge’s decision.”
Cause of Action and Briscoe Ivester & Bazel LLP, and SSL Law represent Drakes Bay Oyster Company.
The judge’s decision can be found here.
Our Appeal and Exhibits can be found here.
About Cause of Action:
Cause of Action is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that uses investigative, legal, and communications tools to educate the public on how government accountability and transparency protects taxpayer interests and economic opportunity. For more information, visit www.causeofaction.org.
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on February 6, 2013
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2013/02/06/02-06-13-drakes-bay-oyster-company-appeals-judges-decision/
12-24-12 Remember the Pulitzer Prize Winning Author’s article “What’s In the Inspector General’s Report?” 8-12-08
As I was doing a little research, I came across this article. With choruses of Auld Lang Syne about to be sung in days, I thought it appropriate to post this article written by Dave Mitchell.
Although Point Reyes National Seashore abuse of Drakes Bay Oyster Company is thoroughly documented in the report issued three weeks ago by the Inspector General’s Office of the Interior Department, the local press has shied away from going into details.
With an amazing lack of indignation, most news reports have reduced documented revelations of park-administration abuse to he-said-she-said pablum in order to claim “fair-and-balanced” coverage.
This is ironic because the Inspector General’s investigators found that National Seashore Supt. Don Neubacher’s hostility to the oyster company — along with his and park senior science advisor Sarah Allen’s misrepresentations to county supervisors and the public — was in part a reaction to what had appeared in The Coastal Post and Point Reyes Light.
Notwithstanding the Point Reyes National Seashore’s attempt to dismiss its misrepresentations as merely a mistake or two, the pattern of untruthfulness is far more egregious. Here’s the initial sequence of events as federal investigators reported them:
• On May 18, 2006, The Light published an article headlined Drakes Bay Oyster Company Has Little Impact on Estero. The information in it came from a Drakes Estero Assessment of Oyster Farming Final Completion Report that, according to investigators, “Dr. Deborah Elliott-Fisk of the University of California at Davis wrote with Allen’s input. The report reflected the findings of research done by graduate students Angie Harbin-Ireland and Jesse Wechsler, whose master’s theses summarized their work in the estero.”
The National Seashore administration’s subsequent lamentations over The Light’s getting a copy of the Drakes Estero Assessment and reporting on it are pure opéra bouffe. The Inspector General wrote, “A reporter from The Point Reyes Light requested and received the Drakes Estero Assessment from a Point Reyes National Seashore marine ecologist, something Neubacher described in an interview as a mistake.
“During his interview, the… marine ecologist said, ‘I just generally share information pretty freely, so it didn’t occur to me that it was not a good thing to send it to the reporter.’
• “The day after The [Light] article was published, Allen sent [an] email message to Dr. Elliott-Fisk… ‘Check out the article. As is usual, I am misquoted and the article is heavily slanted pro-oyster. I stated to them that when your study occurred that the oyster farming was at its lowest level in 30 years, talked about other invasive species introduced by oyster farming, and about the major source for sediment being from oyster feces based on a USGS study, but he chose not to include that information.” (In fact, as the park itself would later admit, these allegations misrepresented what scientific studies had and had not found.)
The Inspector General’s report also reveals that Neubacher shares Allen’s low opinion of The Light. A federal investigator said Neubacher had “opined” to him “that although The Point Reyes Light was not very objective, it …carried a certain amount of weight in the community — but not a lot.”
Seabirds congregate on a no-longer-used oyster barge anchored near the oyster-company store
• “With the [park] ecologist’s input,” the Inspector General noted, “Allen began working on a report to counter the conclusions drawn in the article. [This is] indicated by an email message from the ecologist to Allen on July 18, 2006, and a statement by Neubacher during a [KWMR] radio program… the next day.
“During the radio broadcast on July 19, 2006, … Neubacher said Allen had recently put together a paper listing ‘long-term, serious impacts’ caused by oyster farming. He subsequently confirmed to the Office of Inspector General that he was referring to what became the Sheltered Wilderness Report.”
So although Neubacher on KWMR cited Allen’s “recently put together” paper (i.e. the Sheltered Wilderness report) as authority for saying oyster farming was having “long-term, serious impacts,” the document didn’t exist. Investigators determined that Allen, in fact, “began working on the report” just hours before the park superintendent went on the air.
After the report’s untrue statements were revealed, Allen and Neubacher tried to dismiss her scientific-sounding Sheltered Wilderness “report” as nothing more than a poorly written news release. “In a briefing paper prepared in July 2007 [a year later],” investigators noted, “Neubacher described the Sheltered Wilderness report as a ‘park news’ handout.”
(The park also posted this “handout” on its website and was later forced to retract it, acknowledging that what it had said was not accurate. But more about that next week.)
This sort of carelessness with the truth has become a hallmark of Supt. Neubacher’s management style, but no newspaper reporter — only Point Reyes Light columnist John Hulls — seems to care. In commentary published last Thursday, Hulls wrote, “The distinction between a park management/planning report and a park news item is not trivial….
“This pattern of management misrepresentation runs throughout the Inspector General’s report, as well as recent community relationships with the park, ranging from the notorious ‘pepper spray’ incident, in which two rangers used excessive force on two local teenagers, to the controversy surrounding the rapid eradication of the white deer, rather than the phased reduction of the herd which the community was led to expect.” (Phasing the reduction would have allowed time to reassess the program.)

The very picture of deceit: In 2004, two out-of-control National Seashore rangers extensively pepper sprayed a teenage brother and sister from Inverness Park without cause. (This occurred outside the park in Point Reyes Station, and the teens were never charged with any wrongdoing. Ultimately, the Park Service compensated them for the abuse with $50,000.) Shortly after the incident, Supt. Neubacher (at microphone) held a public meeting in the Dance Palace, and 300 concerned residents showed up. To placate the crowd, Neubacher led them to believe he had asked the Marin County District Attorney to investigate the rangers’ behavior, and everyone went home feeling a bit better — only to have the DA set the record straight the next day. The park superintendent had not asked to have the rangers investigated but to have the teens prosecuted, the DA said. Much of the public was outraged at having been deceived. Not surprisingly, the DA refused to prosecute the victims.
Nor has any newspaper paid a lick of attention to inconsistencies within the Inspector General’s report itself. For example, at the beginning of its report, the Inspector General’s Office states, “We found no indication Neubacher was planning to shut Drakes Bay Oyster Company down prior to 2012 when… the company’s Reservation of Occupancy and Use expires.” Virtually every news report used that quotation without qualification.
But wait! “No indication?” Any diligent reporter who read further into the federal report would have found what Marin County Supervisor Steve Kinsey told an investigator concerning a private meeting with Neubacher at the park in April 2007. (Oyster company owner Kevin Lunny was not present.) Kinsey told the investigator he had suggested a scientific study to determine whether the oyster farm was having a significant effect on Drakes Estero, but Neubacher quickly dismissed the need for one, saying oyster company boats had made cuts in eelgrass.
“Kinsey said the atmosphere was like that of a ‘war room,’” the investigator added. The supervisor also told the investigator, “Neubacher was ‘very upset’ and ‘seemed obsessed with proving that Drakes Bay Oyster company was harming seals and eelgrass in the estuary….’
“The tenor of the meeting left no doubt in Kinsey’s mind that Neubacher intended to shut Drakes Bay Oyster Company down prior to 2012.”
Although both the press and the park have focused their attention on Kevin Lunny, the entire Lunny family feels under attack. In a letter to the Inspector General’s Office, an investigator noted, Lunny complained that “Neubacher was… slandering the family name.”
Lunny’s daughter Brigid, the 2005 Western Weekend queen (seen here carrying freshly harvested oysters into the company store), on Tuesday told me she hopes people “get to the bottom” of what’s being done to her family.
Kinsey told the investigator that Supt. Neubacher had claimed the oyster company was “committing environmental felonies” [and]… summed up Neubacher’s portrayal of Lunny as ‘character assassination.’
“Kinsey recalled that during the April 2007 meeting, Neubacher said he had been trying to find a way to keep Lunny operating in the park through the end of his lease with the National Park Service but that a recent ‘pro-oyster’ editorial… in The Coastal Post had changed his mind. Kinsey recalled that Neubacher said something along the lines of, ‘I tried to work with Lunny, but I’m done.’ Agent’s note: An editorial titled Ollie ‘Erster versus Smokey the Bear was published in the April 2007 edition of The Coastal Post.”
The investigator then asked Neubacher about what Kinsey had said, and the park superintendent “conceded he told Kinsey about some criminal violations he believed had occurred related to the G Ranch [the Lunny family’s organic-beef operation, which is discussed in last week's posting], not Drakes Bay Oyster Company…”
“I don’t have the authority to even not work with him ‘till 2012,” Neubacher added in an apparent attempt to weasel out of what he had reportedly said to Supervisor Kinsey. But this claim too was untrue. The investigator double-checked with Interior Department attorneys and reported, “The attorney-advisor and a Department of Interior field solicitor opined that the National Park Service had the legal authority to shut Drakes Bay Oyster Company down prior to the expiration of its Reservation of Use and Occupancy in 2012.”
So what’s all this about there being “no indication” Neubacher wanted to shut the oyster company down before 2012, as the Inspector General’s Office claimed at the beginning of its report? By the middle of this long report, that unequivocal claim has evolved into, “With the exception of Kinsey, no other individuals interviewed said Neubacher or any National Park Service Official had ever indicated they wanted to shut down [the] oyster company prior to… 2012.”
And even that isn’t accurate — unless Lunny is a non-individual. Nor is that the worst of it. Although Lunny, like Neubacher, was interviewed by the Inspector General’s investigators, Lunny, unlike Neubacher, was seldom given the opportunity to respond to statements made by the other side. So says Lunny, and the Inspector General’s report makes that clear.
To be continued…
2 Responses to “ What’s in the Inspector General’s report on the park that the newspapers haven’t been telling you ”
-
Mark Sutherlin says:
Feb. 5, 2010 — Has anyone noticed that this same Don Neubacher was just named Park Superintendent at Yosemite National Park, a park in termoil over prior poor environmental sciences, causing years of litigation, and now a new planning process has begun there?
Scoping input is open until February 4th, to submit your comments to Yosemite National Park, so if you are fast, you may want to send them a comment about the future of Yosemite, under the leadership of Mr. Neubacher. Just a thought:
Not much time left to comment. Tell them what you think.
Trackbacks & Pingbacks:
-
[...] Park Service actions are extensively documented by Pulitzer Prize winning editor Dave Mitchell in the Point Reyes Light and on his blog, Sparsely [...]
-
Archived Entry
- Post Date :
- Tuesday, Aug 12th, 2008 at 7:52 pm
- Category :
- agriculture and General News and History and Marin County and West Marin nature
- Tags :
- Do More :
- You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
-
Recent Posts
-
David V. Mitchell
-

Welcome to the blog of David Mitchell, editor & publisher emeritus of The Point Reyes Light. In 1979, The Light won the Pulitzer Prize for Meritorious Public Service for an exposé largely written by him of the increasingly violent Synanon cult. Mitchell retired in November 2005 after 35 years of newspapering, 27 of those at The Light.
During his newspaper career, he also worked for the old San Francisco Examiner, Sonora’s Daily Union Democrat in the Sierra Nevada, and Council Bluff’s daily newspaper, The Nonpareil. In addition, he edited the weekly Sebastopol (California) Times. Mitchell holds a master’s degree in Communications and a bachelor’s degree in English from Stanford University. He is 68 and lives in Point Reyes Station on the rural coast north of San Francisco.
-
-
Favorite Web Sites
-
- West Marin Citizen
New West Marin weekly newspaper - Photographer Marty Knapp
A gallery of Marty Knapp’s beautiful black and white photography from West Marin. - Rick Lyttle
An artist and Inverness printmaker - Jacob Resneck’s Dispatches from Elsewhere
Former Point Reyes Light reporter - Sips from the Firehose
Because surfing the Internet is like drinking from a firehose, David LaFontaine braves the torrent to tell you what trends and technologies to gulp down, swirl in your mouth, or spit out. - DigitalFamily.com
Created by former Point Reyes Light reporter Janine Warner, DigitalFamily.com features free tutorials, books, and training videos on how to create Web sites and blogs with Adobe Dreamweaver, Microsoft Expression Web, and WordPress.
- West Marin Citizen
-
-
Pages
-
Meta
Copyright© 2006 – 2012. David V. Mitchell. All rights reserved.Blog design by DigitalFamily.com
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on December 24, 2012
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2012/12/24/12-24-12-remember-the-pulitzer-prize-winning-authors-article-whats-in-the-inspector-generals-report-8-12-08/
11-12-2012 LivestockForLandscapes blog posting: Fellow Farmer Needs Your Help
Below is a link to http://www.LivestockForLandscapes.com posting on their take on the situation.
Please click on the link below to read what they have to say.
Fellow Farmer Needs Your Help |.
There is also an excellent 3 minute video on their site. Please click on or copy and paste the link below:
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on November 13, 2012
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2012/11/13/11-12-2012-livestockforlandscapes-blog-posting-fellow-farmer-needs-your-help/
11-12-2012 Secretary Salazar threatens to “PUNCH OUT” reporter!
“America needs leaders in Washington, and the President needs cabinet members who respect citizens, respect the laws, value discussion and working toward mutual solutions. Ken Salazar displayed none of this on Tuesday.”
“These threats would have been inappropriate coming from anyone, but the fact that it came out of the mouth of the Secretary of the Interior is alarming,” stated Kathrens. “I can’t believe that a top official in Obama’s cabinet could be so defensive.”
Interior Secretary threatens to “punch out” Colorado Springs reporter
Cloud Foundation Director snubbed by Salazar
Colorado Springs, Colo. (November 12, 2012) – On Election Day, at an enthusiastic gathering of Obama supporters in Fountain, Colorado; Dave Phillips, a reporter for the Colorado Springs Gazette Telegraph, had just finished an interview with Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar about his controversial policies for managing America’s wild horse populations. Just after Secretary Salazar answered final questions about the future safety of wild horses and he turned to leave the interview, he unexpectedly approached Phillips and told him, “If you set me up like this again, I’ll punch you out.” Standing nearby was Ginger Kathrens, Executive Director of the Cloud Foundation, a Colorado-based wild horse advocacy organization. “I was stunned by the Secretary’s rude and clearly hostile comment toward Dave,” said Kathrens.
Kathrens, who had had been granted permission by an Interior law enforcement official to take pictures at the rally added, “ Salazar walked past me, refused to shake my hand, and told me, ‘You know, you should never do that.” It was unclear to Kathrens what he meant. “These threats would have been inappropriate coming from anyone, but the fact that it came out of the mouth of the Secretary of the Interior is alarming,” stated Kathrens. “I can’t believe that a top official in Obama’s cabinet could be so defensive.”
Phillips’ interview with Salazar was a follow-up to a story he had written in September about the sale of wild horses to Tom Davis, a Colorado killer buyer who purchased over 1,700 wild horses from government holding facilities. The horses ended up in south Texas and it is believed they were trucked over the border to Mexican slaughterhouses. Secretary Salazar acknowledged that an investigation of Davis’ activities is currently underway.
Salazar’s anti-wild horse stance came to light in 2004 during his successful run for the U.S. Senate. After a town hall meeting in Greeley, Colorado, wild horse advocate Barbara Flores asked him what he thought about our wild horses. Candidate Salazar responded, “They don’t belong on public lands.” Salazar vacated his Senate seat in 2008 to take his current position as Secretary of the Interior.
The BLM removes far more horses from their legally designated home ranges than can be adopted out to the public. The massive roundups have resulted in the stockpiling of animals in government facilities and privately contracted ranches. Nearly twice as many wild horses are housed in these costly holding operations than currently roam free, leaving most wild herds under populated and vulnerable to inbreeding and die-off due to a lack of genetic diversity.
“You know, this isn’t just about wild horses,” explains Kathrens. “America needs leaders in Washington, and the President needs cabinet members who respect citizens, respect the laws, value discussion and working toward mutual solutions. Ken Salazar displayed none of this on Tuesday.”
# # #
Media Contact:
Lauryn Wachs
(617) 894-6939
Links of Interest:
Media & Interviews available upon request
The Cloud Foundation is a non-profit dedicated to the preservation and protection of wild horses and burros on our Western public lands with a focus on protecting Cloud’s herd in the Pryor Mountains of Montana.
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on November 13, 2012
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2012/11/13/11-12-2012-secretary-salazar-threatens-to-punch-out-reporter/
10-25-2012 Follow-up letter to Salazar from Lunny re Salazar’s pending visit
10-25-2012
Follow up letter to Salazar regarding his pending visit to Point Reyes, coupling it with his America’s Great Outdoors (AGO) program and a visit to Drakes Bay Oyster Company:
“What better way to celebrate and showcase the America’s Great Outdoors than to have you – the Secretary of the Interior – join us and co-present the rich history, culture and ecological diversity to a grade school group? We have numerous requests from schools pending and, working with your office, we could arrange your schedule to participate in such a briefing and presentation. It would be an extraordinary joint celebration of your America’s Great Outdoors program, the Point Reyes National Seashore’s 50th Anniversary, and our historic oyster farm.
We look forward to hosting you at the farm during your upcoming visit, when you will see for yourself these beautifully co-existing coastal resources and will personally meet our workers, the touring school children and our family.”
For the Full text of the letter, click the link below:
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on November 7, 2012
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2012/11/07/10-25-2012-follow-up-letter-to-salazar-from-lunny-re-salazars-pending-visit/
09-13-2012 Lunny invites Salazar to visit DBOC on his announced visit to Point Reyes
09-13-2012
Department of the Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced on 09-12-2012 his intent to visit Point Reyes. Kevin and Nancy Lunny extended an invitation to him to visit Drakes Bay Oyster Farm while in Point Reyes.
“In light of the collapse of the seriously flawed Environmental Impact Statement process, your visit becomes even more important before you make a decision [regarding the renewal of the lease].
For the full text of their letter, click the link below:
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on November 7, 2012
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2012/11/07/09-13-2012-lunny-invites-salazar-to-visit-dboc-on-his-announced-visit-to-point-reyes/
11-01-2012 NPS misses critical deadline re dEIS which is legally inadequate per NAS
NPS missed a critical NEPA deadline last week.
DBOC has not been informed why or what NPS now plans to do. NPS has not communicated with Kevin and Nancy Lunny regarding how they will now proceed.
DBOC’s attorney, Ryan Waterman, wrote Secretary Salazar on November 1, 2012:
“The National Park Service (NPS) has failed to meet a critical National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) public review deadline. As a result, the NPS cannot publish a Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) for the Drakes Bay Oyster Company Special Use Permit (DBOC SUP) that provides even the minimum period of public review prior to November 30, 2012.”
Secretary Salazar, in that letter, was also told that:
“By letter on September 17, 2012, we also documented legal inadequacies identified by the National Research Council of the National Academies of Sciences in the Draft EIS (DEIS) for the DBOC SUP, which make the DEIS so inadequate as to preclude meaningful analysis pursuant to NEPA regulations. These inadequacies also prohibit NPS from proceeding to finalize the DEIS into a FEIS, but instead, require revision and republication of the DEIS (an exercise that also cannot be completed prior to November 30, 2012).”
In April 2008, NPS and DBOC executed a special agreement – a Memorandum of Understanding – signed by then-NPS Regional Director, Jon Jarvis, that gave DBOC a “seat at the table” in any ensuing NEPA process. However, NPS unilaterally ignored that commitment throughout this process. Now, in light of the NPS to meet its own deadlines, DBOC is in the dark as to what is happening and the letter just sent provides Secretary Salazar with a proposal for approving our pending permit application.
For the full text of the The DBOC letter to the Secretary, from their attorney, Click the link below:
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on November 4, 2012
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2012/11/04/11-01-2012-nps-misses-critical-deadline-re-deis-which-is-legally-inadequate-per-nas/
11-01-2012 Huffington Post: Secy Salazar ignores struggle of Hispanic shellfish harvesters jobs at DBOC
Secretary Salazar may wish to honor the first wreck of a Spanish ship in California, the San Augustín, but he has been flagrantly ignoring the struggle of today’s Hispanic food producers and shellfish harvesters to hang on to their jobs at Drakes Bay Oyster Company in Point Reyes National Seashore.
And yet, for more than six years, the jobs of Drakes Bay Oyster Company workers have been in jeopardy, largely because of the questionable science and policies fostered by the bureaucrat who Salazar tapped to be director of the national park service, Jon Jarvis.
Ethnobiologist, conservationist, and essayist
Honoring Achievements of Hispanic Food Producers, But No Engagement With Their Struggles
Posted: 11/01/2012 9:01 am
Earlier this month, when Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar designated 27 new National Landmarks, five of them were meant to honor America’s historic legacy of Hispanic engagement in agriculture and natural resources. While the CésarE.ChávezNational Monument at Nuestra Señora Reina de la Paz in Keene, California, rightly honored one of the twentieth century’s greatest advocates for the rights of Hispanic food producers and harvesters in the United States, Hispanics may wonder about Salazar’s inclusion of the Drakes Bay Historic and Archaeological District on the Point ReyesPeninsula. Secretary Salazar may wish to honor the first wreck of a Spanish ship in California, the San Augustín, but he has been flagrantly ignoring the struggle of today’s Hispanic food producers and shellfish harvesters to hang on to their jobs at Drakes Bay Oyster Company in Point Reyes National Seashore.
There are roughly 30 hard-working skilled professionals of Latin American descent who work for Drakes Bay Oyster Company. They will lose their jobs if Secretary Salazar doesn’t take into consideration their current struggle against the irregular policies and practices of the National Park Service, which Salazar oversees.
At a time when unemployment rates among legally-documented but Mexican-born U.S. citizens are running two points above unemployment rates for the American population at large, it’s a shame that Salazar has not even gone to talk with the men and women who propagate and harvest oysters from Drakes Estero. He has been invited to do so at least twice, for the efforts there perfectly fit with the environmental education objectives of his Great Outdoors initiative. And yet, for more than six years, the jobs of Drakes Bay Oyster Company workers have been in jeopardy, largely because of the questionable science and policies fostered by the bureaucrat who Salazar tapped to be director of the national park service, Jon Jarvis.
This struggle has gone for years without clear resolution, and without intervention by Salazar. Regardless of the skill, intelligence and care they bring to their work, these shellfish farmers and harvesters are having their livelihoods disrupted by inherent conflicts in the National Park Service’s own goals for the seashore: to simultaneously protect scenic and wilderness values in the landscape while showcasing traditional food production that has decades if not centuries of Hispanic influence on the very landscape and waters the park service is required to collaboratively manage.
Drakes Bay Oyster Company’s Staff Marine Biologist, Isela Meza, inspects oyster larvae, 300 microns in size, at the oyster farm’s in-house lab, to verify their early growth cycle. She has a degree in Marine Science from one of Mexico’s best oceanography programs in Baja California..
Apparently, the park service does not see the contradiction between honoring Cesar Chavez and evicting today’s Hispanic food producers from a national seashore originally established to celebrate Point Reyes’ working landscape for fishers, farmers and ranchers. Park service policies are now verging on “immigrant removal” of this historic cultural landscape, where the earliest documented cross-cultural encounter between California Indians and Spanish speakers such as Sebastián Viscaino initially took place.
That is regrettable. The national park service and the Obama administration as a whole are missing an extraordinary opportunity to show Americans how working-class Hispanics’ livelihoods are compatible with good environmental stewardship. In fact, the park service should acknowledge just how much our current food security is dependent upon our fair treatment of Spanish-speaking farmworkers, orchard harvesters, oyster growers and fishermen.
Roughly 75 percent of the hand-picked produce, tree fruits and seafood harvested in the U.S. today are brought to us by Latino-born workers, including the 40 percent of California’s shellfish that is produced in Drakes Estero. Our government’s mistreatment and harassment of these Western food producers and harvesters has recently become a national disgrace, if not an international civil rights issue on par with the discrimination against blacks in the South a half-century ago.
Because citizens, documented and undocumented workers with Spanish surnames are being regularly and unjustifiably harassed, an estimated 30 percent of California’s fruits, vegetables and shellfish requiring hand-harvesting will stay on the trees, rot on the ground, or sit uneaten in shallow waters this year. The American Farm Bureau Federation estimates that the reluctance of Spanish-speaking farmworkers and seafood harvesters to enter U.S. fields and bays will cost America’s economy somewhere between $5 and $9 billion in 2012 alone. This is not a good way to demonstrate that national parks can help rather than undermine America’s food security.
The Hispanic aquaculture workers residing in Point Reyes have honorable allegiance to the Lunny family, which manages Drakes Bay Oyster Company, retaining their jobs far longer than the average American worker in food production. Under the Lunnys’ mentorship, many of them have tackled complex skilled jobs such as oyster culture in the laboratory and outplanting under challenging conditions.
These are the kinds of workers that the American food system dreams of attracting: bright, open to new challenges, willing to learn new skills, congenial and dedicated to the community as a whole. If Drakes Bay Oyster Company is closed down by the park service, it will not only affect the 30 skilled workers with years of service to the company, but the entire population of 150 Latinos who live around Point Reyes.
On a daily basis, President Obama is being hammered by Governor Romney for failing to create more jobs or stopping the loss of existing employment in rural communities. One can only wonder why Secretary Salazar hasn’t personally stepped into Point Reyes to talk with las familias Acebes, Gomez, Gonzalez, Guzman, Hernandez, Lopez, Manza, Martinez, Mata, Meza, Olea, Pablo, Robledo, Salgado and Soto, for they will be devastated if he makes the wrong decision. Secretary Salazar may also be on the wrong side of history if he maintains that sustainable food production is inherently antithetical to healthy national parks. He will have made the same mistake that government agencies made 40 years ago by initially ignoring the concerns voiced by Cesar Chavez, concerns we now know have stood the test of time. Let us hope that Salazar chooses to personally come to Drakes Estero to listen and see the situation on the ground. He needs to step up and resolve a conflict that has gone on far too long, for it is one that could potentially hurt his own people while tarnishing Obama’s reputation with Spanish-speaking voters.
Gary Paul Nabhan served on the Congressionally-appointed National Park System Advisory Board under two Presidents. A MacArthur Fellow, he is co-editor of the book People, Plants and Protected Areas and author of Coming Home to Eat. A pioneer in the local food movement, he is also an orchard-keeper in Southern Arizona, cultivating over 35 varieties of heirloom fruits and nut trees introduced by Spanish-speaking farmers during the Mission era.
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on November 1, 2012
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2012/11/01/11-01-2012-huffington-post-secy-salazar-ignores-struggle-of-hispanic-shellfish-harvesters-jobs-at-dboc/
11-01-2012 Salazar honors Spanish Ship wreck, ignores Hispanic workers at DBOC
Secretary Salazar may wish to honor the first wreck of a Spanish ship in California, the San Augustín, but he has been flagrantly ignoring the struggle of today’s Hispanic food producers and shellfish harvesters to hang on to their jobs at Drakes Bay Oyster Company in Point Reyes National Seashore.
And yet, for more than six years, the jobs of Drakes Bay Oyster Company workers have been in jeopardy, largely because of the questionable science and policies fostered by the bureaucrat who Salazar tapped to be director of the national park service, Jon Jarvis.
Gary Paul Nabhan served on the Congressionally-appointed National Park System Advisory Board under two Presidents. A MacArthur Fellow, he is co-editor of the book People, Plants and Protected Areas and author of Coming Home to Eat. A pioneer in the local food movement, he is also an orchard-keeper in Southern Arizona, cultivating over 35 varieties of heirloom fruits and nut trees introduced by Spanish-speaking farmers during the Mission era.
Ethnobiologist, conservationist, and essayist
Honoring Achievements of Hispanic Food Producers, But No Engagement With Their Struggles
Posted: 11/01/2012 9:01 am
Earlier this month, when Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar designated 27 new National Landmarks, five of them were meant to honor America’s historic legacy of Hispanic engagement in agriculture and natural resources. While the César E. Chávez National Monument at Nuestra Señora Reina de la Paz in Keene, California, rightly honored one of the twentieth century’s greatest advocates for the rights of Hispanic food producers and harvesters in the United States, Hispanics may wonder about Salazar’s inclusion of the Drakes Bay Historic and Archaeological District on the Point Reyes Peninsula. Secretary Salazar may wish to honor the first wreck of a Spanish ship in California, the San Augustín, but he has been flagrantly ignoring the struggle of today’s Hispanic food producers and shellfish harvesters to hang on to their jobs at Drakes Bay Oyster Company in Point Reyes National Seashore.
There are roughly 30 hard-working skilled professionals of Latin American descent who work for Drakes Bay Oyster Company. They will lose their jobs if Secretary Salazar doesn’t take into consideration their current struggle against the irregular policies and practices of the National Park Service, which Salazar oversees.
At a time when unemployment rates among legally-documented but Mexican-born U.S. citizens are running two points above unemployment rates for the American population at large, it’s a shame that Salazar has not even gone to talk with the men and women who propagate and harvest oysters from Drakes Estero. He has been invited to do so at least twice, for the efforts there perfectly fit with the environmental education objectives of his Great Outdoors initiative. And yet, for more than six years, the jobs of Drakes Bay Oyster Company workers have been in jeopardy, largely because of the questionable science and policies fostered by the bureaucrat who Salazar tapped to be director of the national park service, Jon Jarvis.
This struggle has gone for years without clear resolution, and without intervention by Salazar. Regardless of the skill, intelligence and care they bring to their work, these shellfish farmers and harvesters are having their livelihoods disrupted by inherent conflicts in the National Park Service’s own goals for the seashore: to simultaneously protect scenic and wilderness values in the landscape while showcasing traditional food production that has decades if not centuries of Hispanic influence on the very landscape and waters the park service is required to collaboratively manage.

Drakes Bay Oyster Company’s Staff Marine Biologist, Isela Meza, inspects oyster larvae, 300 microns in size, at the oyster farm’s in-house lab, to verify their early growth cycle. She has a degree in Marine Science from one of Mexico’s best oceanography programs in Baja California..
Apparently, the park service does not see the contradiction between honoring Cesar Chavez and evicting today’s Hispanic food producers from a national seashore originally established to celebrate Point Reyes’ working landscape for fishers, farmers and ranchers. Park service policies are now verging on “immigrant removal” of this historic cultural landscape, where the earliest documented cross-cultural encounter between California Indians and Spanish speakers such as Sebastián Viscaino initially took place.
That is regrettable. The national park service and the Obama administration as a whole are missing an extraordinary opportunity to show Americans how working-class Hispanics’ livelihoods are compatible with good environmental stewardship. In fact, the park service should acknowledge just how much our current food security is dependent upon our fair treatment of Spanish-speaking farmworkers, orchard harvesters, oyster growers and fishermen.
Roughly 75 percent of the hand-picked produce, tree fruits and seafood harvested in the U.S. today are brought to us by Latino-born workers, including the 40 percent of California’s shellfish that is produced in Drakes Estero. Our government’s mistreatment and harassment of these Western food producers and harvesters has recently become a national disgrace, if not an international civil rights issue on par with the discrimination against blacks in the South a half-century ago.
Because citizens, documented and undocumented workers with Spanish surnames are being regularly and unjustifiably harassed, an estimated 30 percent of California’s fruits, vegetables and shellfish requiring hand-harvesting will stay on the trees, rot on the ground, or sit uneaten in shallow waters this year. The American Farm Bureau Federation estimates that the reluctance of Spanish-speaking farmworkers and seafood harvesters to enter U.S. fields and bays will cost America’s economy somewhere between $5 and $9 billion in 2012 alone. This is not a good way to demonstrate that national parks can help rather than undermine America’s food security.
The Hispanic aquaculture workers residing in Point Reyes have honorable allegiance to the Lunny family, which manages Drakes Bay Oyster Company, retaining their jobs far longer than the average American worker in food production. Under the Lunnys’ mentorship, many of them have tackled complex skilled jobs such as oyster culture in the laboratory and outplanting under challenging conditions.
These are the kinds of workers that the American food system dreams of attracting: bright, open to new challenges, willing to learn new skills, congenial and dedicated to the community as a whole. If Drakes Bay Oyster Company is closed down by the park service, it will not only affect the 30 skilled workers with years of service to the company, but the entire population of 150 Latinos who live around Point Reyes.
On a daily basis, President Obama is being hammered by Governor Romney for failing to create more jobs or stopping the loss of existing employment in rural communities. One can only wonder why Secretary Salazar hasn’t personally stepped into Point Reyes to talk with las familias Acebes, Gomez, Gonzalez, Guzman, Hernandez, Lopez, Manza, Martinez, Mata, Meza, Olea, Pablo, Robledo, Salgado and Soto, for they will be devastated if he makes the wrong decision. Secretary Salazar may also be on the wrong side of history if he maintains that sustainable food production is inherently antithetical to healthy national parks. He will have made the same mistake that government agencies made 40 years ago by initially ignoring the concerns voiced by Cesar Chavez, concerns we now know have stood the test of time. Let us hope that Salazar chooses to personally come to Drakes Estero to listen and see the situation on the ground. He needs to step up and resolve a conflict that has gone on far too long, for it is one that could potentially hurt his own people while tarnishing Obama’s reputation with Spanish-speaking voters.
Gary Paul Nabhan served on the Congressionally-appointed National Park System Advisory Board under two Presidents. A MacArthur Fellow, he is co-editor of the book People, Plants and Protected Areas and author of Coming Home to Eat. A pioneer in the local food movement, he is also an orchard-keeper in Southern Arizona, cultivating over 35 varieties of heirloom fruits and nut trees introduced by Spanish-speaking farmers during the Mission era.
#dboyster
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on November 1, 2012
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2012/11/01/11-01-2012-salazar-honors-spanish-ship-wreck-flagrantly-ignores-hispanic-workers-at-dboc/
08-07-2012 Cause of Action Complaint Filed
08-07-2012
Cause of Action Complaint
RE: Complaint about information Quality.
“Information disseminated by NPS in the DEIS and Atkins Peer Review Report fails to conform to minimum information-quality standards established by the OMB Guidelines, DOI Guidelines, and Director’s Order #11B. This inaccurate, nontransparent, and deliberately misleading information is reasonably likely to cause severe harm to the Lunnys—who may be forced to close their family business, Drakes Bay Oyster Company (hereinafter “DBOC”)—and Dr. Goodman, who is a user of the information provided in these publications and adversely affected by the scientifically invalid data and methods used therein.”
For the full text of the complaint, click on the link below:
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on October 24, 2012
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2012/10/24/08-07-2012-cause-of-action-complaint-filed/
10-05-2012 Knight Professor of Journalism backs Drakes Bay Oyster Co in letter to Feinstein
10-05-2012
“As a member of the Bay Area community and as a journalist who writes about the environment and sustainable agriculture, I’m writing in strong support of the Drakes Bay Oyster Company in Point Reyes. I have followed this saga for several years now, with a mounting sense of wonder and disappointment in the behavior of the Park Service. Drakes Bay is an important thread in the local sustainable food community, and it would be a shame – in fact an outrage – if the company were closed down as a result of the Park Service’s ideological rigidity and misuse of science….”
For the full text of the article, click the link below:
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on October 23, 2012
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2012/10/23/10-05-2012-knight-professor-of-journalism-backs-drakes-bay-oyster-co-in-letter-to-feinstein/
10-09-2012 DOI “pulling punches to avoid embarrassing the administration”
This raises major questions about the integrity of the pending IG’s investigation of NPS soundscape science at Drakes Estero.
“Washington, DC — A sizeable and growing segment of the investigators and supervisors within the Interior’s Department’s Office of Inspector General (IG) believes the office is pulling punches to avoid embarrassing the administration, according to new staff survey results posted today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). These concerns echo criticisms by Congress and PEER that under acting Inspector General Mary Kendall the Interior IG has compromised its “independence and honesty” to please political superiors, in the words of one agent.”
For Immediate Release: Oct 09, 2012
Contact: Kirsten Stade (202) 265-7337
Rising Doubts on Independence of Interior Inspector General
Staff Survey Shows Only 60% Believe IG Operates “Free from Improper Influence”
Posted on Oct 09, 2012 | Tags: DOI, Scientific Integrity
Washington, DC — A sizeable and growing segment of the investigators and supervisors within the Interior’s Department’s Office of Inspector General (IG) believes the office is pulling punches to avoid embarrassing the administration, according to new staff survey results posted today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). These concerns echo criticisms by Congress and PEER that under acting Inspector General Mary Kendall the Interior IG has compromised its “independence and honesty” to please political superiors, in the words of one agent.
The 2012 survey was completed by 82% of all IG staff with final results reported in mid-September. A key finding was employee response to the question of whether the IG “conducts its work in a manner that is independent (free from improper influence) from the Department [of Interior].” Nearly one in seven respondents said no and more than a quarter would not say either way. Less than 60% said yes, a lower percentage than in surveys from the previous two years. Staff comments included the following:
“I think there is widespread distrust and low morale in the organization right now. There are at least perceptions the acting IG and COS [Chief of Staff] did not do the right thing, ie [sic], improperly quashed investigations, and have not been forthright with Congress”;
“Wake up and quit trying to ‘get approval’ from DOI [Interior]…we have a job to do”; and
“Be careful with how much reports get softened to avoid ‘slamming’ the Department in the interest of maintaining a good relationship.”
These issues are brought into stark relief by a House Natural Resource Committee investigation into whether the IG skewed its own report into claims that the Obama White House and top Interior officials falsely reported that its 6-month Gulf of Mexico drilling moratorium following the 2010 BP spill had been endorsed by outside experts. Internal IG emails complained its probe was improperly blunted. In her September 19th memo transmitting survey results to staff, Ms. Kendall complained of “scrutiny from the House Resources Committee” among the factors which may have affected results.
“As an acting IG, Mary Kendall’s tenure depends upon pleasing the very people she is supposed to investigate. As a result, this watchdog is not just on a very tight leash, it is on a choke chain,” stated PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch. “To be effective and remain independent, an IG must be willing on a daily basis to get canned or resign if the mission is compromised.”
Pleasing her superiors entails not only softening reports or quashing probes it can also include targeting employees who inconvenience senior Interior managers. Last week, for example, it was revealed that the IG conducted a controversial investigation into Arctic scientists as part of an effort to stem and discredit the source of embarrassing leaks. The more than two-year effort identified no scientific misconduct but did interrupt one scientist’s extensive research and disrupt his career.
Although Kendall seeks to be nominated as the permanent IG, even after confirmation every IG serves at the pleasure of the President – a status often cited for the tendency of many IGs to concentrate on low-level misconduct and eschew probing improper or imprudent political interference. This has long been a pattern at Interior IG, one perfected by Kendall’s mentor, Earl Devaney, who was Interior IG until 2009.
“Under the current system, IGs revel in petty scandals and flee profound corruption,” Ruch added. “If the Inspector Generals were truly independent, groups like PEER would not be so infernally busy.”
###
Read the Acting IG’s transmittal memo
View entire staff survey results
Look at the House investigation
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on October 9, 2012
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2012/10/09/2217/
09-18-12 Greenwire reports on demand for new sEIS
09-18-12 A California oyster farm is demanding that the Interior Department redo a draft environmental impact statement, pointing to a recent study as proof that the review is so inadequate it “precludes meaningful analysis.”
Greenwire
10. NATIONAL PARKS:
Oyster farm at heart of wilderness battle demands fresh environmental review
Emily Yehle, E&E reporter
Published: Tuesday, September 18, 2012
A California oyster farm is demanding that the Interior Department redo a draft environmental impact statement, pointing to a recent study as proof that the review is so inadequate it “precludes meaningful analysis.”
Drakes Bay Oyster Co. is facing the end of its 40-year lease in November, and Interior Secretary Ken Salazar will consider the final EIS in his decision on whether to allow the farm to stay. But a report last month from the National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences found that a lack of evidence made the conclusions in the draft EIS significantly uncertain (Greenwire, Aug. 30).
The NAS panel did not take a position on whether the draft EIS followed requirements under the National Environmental Policy Act. But the farm is arguing that the findings in the panel’s report make it clear that the Park Service did not follow federal regulations — and that the agency must revise the draft EIS and open up another public comment period.
That would mean delaying Salazar’s decision on the farm’s lease for weeks or even months.
Ryan Waterman, the farm’s attorney, wrote in a letter to the Park Service last week that the NAS report outlined errors that “go to the very heart” of the draft EIS.
“[I]t is simple to apply the NRC Report’s highly critical structural and substantive critique of the DEIS’s scientific information, analyses, and conclusions to NEPA regulations to reach the inescapable conclusions that the entire DEIS must be revised and recirculated,” Waterman wrote. “This is so because the errors identified by the NRC Report are pervasive and effect the DEIS as a whole.”
Park Service spokesman David Barna indicated in an email that the agency was continuing as planned.
“The National Park Service received the letter from Stoel Rives regarding the report by the National Academies of Sciences,” he said, referring to the law firm where Waterman works. “As stated at the time of the report’s release, the National Park Service appreciates the work of the Academy and is reviewing the report as we work to strengthen the final EIS.”
Lucinda Low Swartz, a NEPA expert who sat on the NAS panel that wrote the report, declined to weigh in on whether the draft EIS passes NEPA muster. But she pointed out that it was still a draft; only a final EIS and subsequent record of decision can violate NEPA law, she said.
She also emphasized that the NAS report specifies that the panel’s recommendations “should not be interpreted as a conclusion that the DEIS does not meet NEPA requirements.”
“I believe the committee doesn’t want its report used as the basis of a discussion on whether what is in the EIS meets the requirements of NEPA,” she said.
But if the Park Service integrates all the NAS panel’s recommendations, it may well end up with a final EIS that is significantly different from the draft.
The panel, for example, called into question the report’s only “major adverse” finding — related to the farm’s noise levels — and suggested the impact might actually be minor. It also pointed out that the draft EIS did not contain a “negligible impact” finding nor did it include levels of “beneficial impact,” making comparisons difficult. Furthermore, the levels of “adverse impact” were not well-defined.
But perhaps the biggest criticism in the NAS report was the Park Service’s decision to use two baselines, making it impossible for the Park Service to compare the “no-action” alternative to the three “action” alternatives.
Agencies are usually able to measure the effects of a federal action off the current baseline situation. But the Park Service compared the continued operation of the farm to a theoretical situation where the farm does not exist — and it compared the closing of the farm to the current environmental situation.
The NAS panel recommended that the Park Service simply not compare the no-action alternative to the action alternatives in the final EIS.
But in his letter, Waterman argued that a final EIS must allow the public to compare alternatives, citing NEPA regulations that call for “sharply defining the issues and providing a clear basis for choice among options by the decision-maker and the public.”
He also pointed to numerous other findings in the NAS report, such as the fact that the draft EIS did not include “mitigation” options for decreasing the farm’s effect and that all three lease renewal alternatives are ambiguously defined.
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on September 19, 2012
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2012/09/19/09-18-12-greenwire-reports-on-demand-for-new-seis/
09-14-12: Lawyers find DEIS errors so pervasive as to preclude meaningful analysis, entire dEIS must be rewritten.
09-14-12: Counsel for the Lunnys, Ryan Waterman, submitted a letter to NPS which concluded, “Based on the (National Academy of Sciences) NRC Report’s findings, NEPA regulations (Federal) prohibit the National Park Service (NPS) from finalizing the Drakes Bay Oyster Company Special Use Permit Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) because the NRC Report shows that the DEIS is so inadequate as preclude meaningful analysis pursuant to 40 C.F.R., Section 1502.9(a). Instead, NPS must now revise the entire DEIS, and recirculate and seek public comment on the revised DEIS.”
The Waterman letter to NPS then states, “Yet it is simple to apply the NRC Report’s highly critical structural and substantive critique of the DEIS’s scientific information, analyses, and conclusions to NEPA regulations to reach the inescapable conclusion that the entire DEIS must be revised and recirculated. This is so because the errors identified by the NRC Report are pervasive and effect the DEIS as a whole.”
Counsel then says, “The errors identified by the NRC Report go to the very heart of the DEIS.”
The Waterman letter concludes stating, “NEPA regulations are clear that a federal agency may not finalize a draft EIS that precludes meaningful analysis under 40 C.F.R. Section 1502.9(a). The NRC Report demonstrates unequivocally that the DEIS fails to pass this basic test in a number of important ways. Accordingly, NPS will commit NEPA error if it finalizes the DEIS before preparing and re-circulating a Revised DEIS because the findings made in the NRC Report demonstrate that the DEIS is so inadequate as to preclude meaningful analysis….Instead NPS must now revise the DEIS, and re-circulate and seek public comment on the Revised DEIS.”
The 12-page letter, part of a 100-page detailed submission, identifies one DEIS failure after another based on the National Academy’s review. This is the second highly critical Report from the National Academy of Sciences. In 2009, the NAS severely criticized the NPS for manipulating and misrepresenting data. The new NAS (NRC) report concludes that little changed.
Click here for the entire document
2012-09-14-Corresp to National Park Service
(12 page letter and “Pre-Publication of ’Scientific Review of the Draft Environmental Impact Statement, Drakes Bay Oyster Company Special Use Permit, Committee on the Evaluation of the Drakes Bay Oyster Company Special Use Permit DEIS and [Atkins] Peer Review, Ocean Studies Board, Division on Earth and Life Studies, National Research Council of the National Academies’ “)
Something odd of note: From the NRC report page 11, last three lines; and page 12, first two lines:
“Time was also set aside for public comment. The agenda and list of participants in the pubic
session is available in Appendix D. Organizations and members of the public were also encouraged to
submit information for the committee’s consideration in writing. These documents are part of the pubic
record for this study, available through the National Academies’ Public Access Records Office,14 and also
were posted on the internet.”
As of the publication of this posting to this blog you may find it curious that, according to Appendix D (which is the very last page of the link provided above) a “Participant List” is provided which states:
Participant List
(Limited to those who participated in person)
Gordon Bennett, SOS
Julie Cart, LA Times
Jeffrey Creque, Alliance for Sustainable Agriculture
Melanie Gunn, National Park Service
Brannon Ketcham, National Park Service
Kevin Lunny, Drakes Bay Oyster Company
Cicely Muldoon, National Park Service
Dominique Richard
Amy Trainer, EAC
I have posted both Video 1 and 2 of the “public meeting” on this blog under the heading “Videos, Slides & News Links”.
Video 1, is the panel questioning of the NPS and some questioning of Kevin Lunny.
Video 2, is the “Public Comment” section.
Here is the list of the ACTUAL PARTICIPANTS of the Public Comment, Video 2
Gordon Bennett – 0:01:42 to 0:05:49
Amy Trainer – 0:05:57 to 0:12:09
Dominique Richard – 0:12:32 to 0:18:31
Jane Gyorgy – 0:19:02 to 0:27:44
Jeff Crecque – 0:28:17 to 0:32:35
Phyllis Faber (letter read) – 0:33:16 to 0:38:15
Kevin Lunny – 0:39:30 to 0:42:12
Neal Desai (by phone) follows
- Their list is not in order of presenters, nor alphabetical, nor even accurate. Either they provided an incomplete list of both video’s participants or an inaccurate list of Video 2 participants.
- Their list Includes someone who did NOT participate in either Video 1 or 2 – Julie Cart of LA Times
- Their list does not include one who DID participate in Video 2 – me, Jane Gyorgy of WOW (www.oysterzone.wordpress.com)
Odd, don’t you think?
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on September 16, 2012
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2012/09/16/09-14-12-lawyers-find-deis-errors-so-pervasive-as-to-preclude-meaningful-analysis-entire-deis-must-be-rewritten/
09-06-12 Gordon Bennett caught for ILLEGAL CONSTRUCTION HOME RED TAGGED (frmr Sierra Club Marin Group rep and foe of DBOC)
“Inverness resident and former Sierra Club representative Gordon Bennett has had his Sea Haven home red-tagged by the county for illegal building, county code enforcement officer Cristy Stanley said.”
Gordon Bennett caught without permits
Inverness resident and former Sierra Club representative Gordon Bennett has had his Sea Haven home red-tagged by the county for illegal building, county code enforcement officer Cristy Stanley said.
Officials visited the property and issued the tag on August 3, noting that Mr. Bennett was attempting an unpermitted interior remodel and the construction of two decks.
A county official estimated that permits for similar jobs would cost somewhere in the neighborhood of several thousand dollars.
Ms. Stanley said Mr. Bennett or others at his property’s address were working on relocating a laundry room, remodeling a sun room, relocating a bathroom, and turning another bathroom into a pantry.
Officials met with Mr. Bennett, and sent an official letter notifying him of the violations on August 30. He must obtain permits by September 28, although Ms. Stanley said he is eligible for a 30-day extension.
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on September 10, 2012
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2012/09/10/2178/

05-14-2013 Impressions from the hearing
They cut off the line attendees right before me but had set up televisions in courtroom #4 and in the cafe. Upon my arrival at the cafe the proceedings having begun, and Amber Abassi already speaking, I did not get to hear the opening nor the introductions. Impressions varied. Below are some:
The judge on left (from audience view) sounded as if he got it, the one on the right sounded as if he didn’t, the one in the middle, inconclusive.
Another said:
“Going into the hearing, I knew that this would be a legal discussion, with judges probing lawyers about legal propositions. Judges circulated questions to lawyers late last week. To read much into the legal probing is a fool’s errand. They were tough on both sides. They appear to be well-read, up on the issues and fully prepared. All have reputations for being straight-shooters. “
One other person said something that made me laugh:
“A hearing is something best left to attorneys to describe – also a hearing is like going to a seance in a way, we are all trying to psychically read meaning and leaning into the questions posed by the judges.”
This one was special:
“I find it fascinating (or rather, a sad commentary on the journalism profession these days) that none of the reports I’ve read so far have actually made the distinction that this hearing was about whether to keep the injunction in place or not, NOT deciding the case itself.
Share this:
Like this:
Posted by Jane Gyorgy on May 15, 2013
http://oysterzone.wordpress.com/2013/05/15/05-14-2013-impressions-from-the-hearing/