UPDATE: Obama administration weighs in against bills passed in the House, including H.R. 4094 By IRENE NOLAN

UPDATE: Obama administration weighs in against bills passed in the House, including H.R. 4094 By IRENE NOLAN By IRENE NOLAN By IRENE NOLAN The Obama administration announced, apparently yesterday, that it opposes the bill that passed today that includes Rep. Walter Jones’ bill, H.R. 4094, to reverse the National Park Service’s ORV final plan for […]

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The hearing will be webcast live on the committee’s website, and an archived video will be available shortly after the hearing is complete. Witnesses’ testimony will be available on the website at the start of the hearing. Witnesses who will give testimony have not been announced. FOR MORE INFORMATION The Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources website: http://www.energy.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/hearings-and-business-meetings?ID=a64e4f88-18d3-4489-96a0-b1a89b2b51e6 The members of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee: http://www.energy.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/members To find and contact your senators: http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d112:s.02372:  

UPDATE:  Senate bill to overturn ORV plan will have committee hearing on June 27 By IRENE NOLAN By IRENE NOLAN By IRENE NOLAN By IRENE NOLAN A Senate bill to overturn the National Park’s Service’s plan and final rule for managing off-road vehicles on the Cape Hatteras National Seashore will have a hearing before the […]

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By IRENE NOLAN

UPDATE:  By IRENE NOLAN By IRENE NOLAN By IRENE NOLAN By IRENE NOLAN Piping plovers nesting at the Cape Hatteras National Seashore is about what it was this time last year, according to the National Park Service’s weekly Resource Management Summary for June 13. There have been 18 piping plover nests to date, which was […]

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Lawyers for both sides in the Cape Hatteras Access Preservation lawsuit to stop the final ORV regulation at the Cape Hatteras National Seashore conferred by telephone last month on how to proceed with the case and reported back to the federal court. The complaint, filed Feb. 9 in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, names as defendants Ken Salazar, Secretary of the Department of the Interior, Jonathan Jarvis, director of the National Park Service, and Mike Murray, superintendent of the Cape Hatteras National Seashore. The case was assigned to U.S. District Court Judge, Emmet G. Sullivan, who later allowed three environmental groups to enter the case as defendant-interveners.  The groups are the Defenders of Wildlife, National Audubon Society, and the National Parks Preservation Society. They are represented by the Southern Environmental Law Center. The complaint asks the court to determine that the Park Service acted improperly and to prevent NPS from implementing its final plan and rule, which became effective Feb. 15. CHAPA is a project of the Outer Banks Preservation Association, a group dedicated to preserving and protecting the historical use of the beach on the Outer Banks and specifically the Cape Hatteras National Seashore. In its complaint, CHAPA takes issue with just about every step in the process of ORV rulemaking. “An ORV management plan and a final rule that imposes severe restriction on ORV use at CHNSRA were foreordained from the time that NPS began its planning process,” the complaint says. Attorneys for the federal government responded with an affirmative defense – that CHAPA failed to make claims upon which relief can be granted. “To the extent that a response is required, Federal Defendants deny that Plaintiff is entitled to the relief requested or any relief whatsoever.” An affirmative defense is defined as “a defense in which the defendant introduces evidence, which, if found to be credible, will negate criminal or civil liability, even if it is proven that the defendant committed the alleged acts.” The next step, as ordered by Sullivan, was for the parties to “meet and confer,” which they did on May 23. On May 31, they filed their report on the conference. The lawyers agreed that the case is an “an action for review on the administrative record,” which in this case is the Park Service’s process of developing an Environmental Impact Statement, choosing an alternative, and making a final rule. The defendants said in the report that they expect the administrative record will be “quite voluminous.” They have started the process but said the best estimate is that it may take until Sept. 15 to have the record ready for filing. The parties could not agree on a proposed or stipulated date for filing the administrative record and, therefore, they said could not agree on dates for follow-up motions, such as cross motions for summary judgment. Summary judgment is a court order ruling that no factual issues remain to be tried and therefore a cause of action or all causes of action in a complaint can be decided upon certain facts without trial. In this case, lawyers on both sides will probably ask the judge for a summary judgment. Also, after the administrative record is filed, there can be motions to supplement it with information not included in the initial filing. The parties decided that by July 9, the federal defendants will file a status report on the administrative record, including a detailed explanation of what is left to be done. On Tuesday, June 5, Sullivan agreed to the recommendations of the lawyers for the parties involved, ordering the status report no later than July 9. He also scheduled a status hearing in the case for Thursday, July 26, at 11:30 a.m. FOR MORE INFORMATION Click here to read the Meet and Confer Report of the parties in the lawsuit.

UPDATE: CHAPA lawsuit over final ORV rule moves along – slowly By IRENE NOLAN By IRENE NOLAN By IRENE NOLAN Lawyers for both sides in the Cape Hatteras Access Preservation lawsuit to stop the final ORV regulation at the Cape Hatteras National Seashore conferred by telephone last month on how to proceed with the case […]

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