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Island Guardian

The Costs Of Illegal Immigration


By Scott Knutson

I have read some of the comments and articles in The Island Guardian regarding the "illegal" immigration issue, and I share the views of others that this is a federal issue and that the US immigration laws should be fully enforced. I generally remain quiet about these issues, but the fact that the social issues created by illegal immigration are festering in the San Juan Islands is--how shall I say it--disheartening.

I was born is Seattle in 1960 and grew up in Kent, and I own property on Orcas. Although I currently live in California, my roots in Washington where my parents still live, as well as my two brothers and sister; and my daughter is a freshman at UW

As a 20+ year resident of Southern California, I have witnessed the illegal immigration madness first hand. What is happening here and in other small resort communities in Southern California should not be allowed to occur in the San Juan Islands. Down here, there has been a slow erosion over the past 15 years in the quality of public services (medical, schools, etc.) and infrastructure as this area has embraced the mass migration of uneducated, unskilled labor. The question I always ask myself is why is this occurring?

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The Aquatic Reserve


By Janice Peterson

The following nine points represent, in my opinion, important questions, reservations, and criticisms of the Department of Natural Resources document requesting proposals for an aquatic reserve and the Marine Resources Committee’s ill-advised (and unauthorized) activity to support it.

1. The Department of Natural Resources (DNR) request for aquatic reserve proposals is so ponderously written that much of it is impossible to understand. It appears to have been written by scientists for an audience of scientists even though the vast majority of those who will be affected if a San Juan County reserve materializes are non-scientists.

The Marine Resources Committee (MRC) proposal is easier to get through but still seems willfully obtuse. Is it necessary to cite “anthropogenic distress” rather than describing “human activity?” I have to wonder if there is method in this ferociously complicated writing.

Most people who are going about the business of earning a living and maintaining a household simply do not have the time to wade through these documents with the goals of understanding what is being said and determining whether an aquatic reserve will be an asset or a detriment to their lives.

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It Is Time To Pay Attention!


evans-photo-1-small (30k image)By John Evans

There is a process underway to update the San Juan County Critical Areas Ordinance. The current Critical Areas Ordinance has been in place for about 8 years. The Washington State Growth Management Act requires the “update”.

Some shoreline homes with “critical habitat” sandy beaches may become “non-conforming uses,” and therefore restricted in future modification.

Similar “buffers” are being suggested for upland “critical areas, wildlife habitat and riparian zones” as well. Because “critical areas” are usually off limits to development, many existing parcels could become un-developable; other existing homes would become “non-conforming” and still other properties would see their uses severely limited.

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One At A Time


One at a Time … One on One

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(Found on only one stretch of one island road)

By Marcy Hahn

So often social issues are addressed to the masses through ads and letters to the editor. I’ve come to the conclusion that perhaps the issue of improper disposal of cigarette butts needs to be broached one smoker at a time, one on one.

On a recent weekend, while waiting for the ferry in Anacortes, I observed a bearded gentleman in a gray sedan (you know who you are) smoking and flicking cigarette ashes out the window. I continued to watch because I guessed he would be dropping the butt on the ground below - I was correct. I sat a few minutes and the more I thought about it, the more incensed I became about his behavior.

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Ground Water Contamination In SJC


ig_Steve_Ludwig-2 (52k image)By Steve Ludwig

The Community Development and Planning Dept (CDPD) recently presented their proposal for "protecting groundwater" as required by State law. In SJC groundwater contamination is, by all accounts, widespread and is caused mostly by residential drainfields.

Drainfields do a good job of preventing bacteria and solids from reaching groundwater, but can’t stop chemicals from eventually reaching aquifers.

This is a problem everywhere people get water from wells and dispose of their waste in drainfields. Of greatest concern are the thousands of toxins produced by the unfettered chemical industry. These carcinogens, mutagens and endocrine disrupters are in our food, air and most products, and as a result, in our drainfields.

The widespread use of chlorine for drinking water "disinfection" and cleaning creates a long list of "persistent organic pollutants" or POPs for short. Pharmaceuticals and estrogens also find their way into aquifers from urine. Some people routinely dump unwanted toxins into drainfields to "get rid of them."

The ordinances to protect aquifers are still being written, but so far the proposals are looking pretty half-hearted. There is no dispute that drainfields are the major source of contamination in SJC yet the CDPD strategy does not restrict their proliferation. This can only result in a worsening of the situation. Washington State law prohibits local governments from allowing aquifers to degrade, yet this is just what CDPD is proposing.

Worse yet, CDPD and Health Department staffers clearly stated that SJC has not allocated any funds to test for the abovementioned poisons. Unless residents act, we will never know how safe, or dangerous, our drinking water is. CDPD only proposes minimal testing for nitrate. Nitrate is an indicator of contamination, but not a very good one.

This appears to be a cheap way of seeming to be doing something since nitrate is easy to detect and water systems already are required to test for them. All we really know is that there has been an alarming increase in nitrate in the last few years.

It’s sad that a county with a 53 million dollar budget can’t provide the funds to minimally protect public health or to comply with the State laws intended for that purpose. One of the foundations of common law, going back hundreds of years and still argued in courts today is the Public Trust Doctrine; it states that the primary duty of government is to protect the things we hold in common and are needed for life to continue; water, air, the natural ecology etc. The County Council’s 2008 Legislative Priorities doesn’t even mention our groundwater crisis.

We have been through this before. The failures to comply with the letter, much less, the intent of laws protecting public health are costing SJC taxpayers millions in lost grant funds, legal fees and extra staff in the PA’s office and CDPD.

The effort to write a new CAO ordinance, of which groundwater protection is a part, is going down the same path toward another finding of "noncompliance."




Statement Regarding Storm Water Funding Ordinance Vote


By Rich Peterson

ig_Rich_Peterson-1 (37k image)
No one can know with certainty how to interpret the vote, but I believe these results go well beyond the issue of rejecting a flawed storm water funding ordinance. I think the outcome relates strongly to the concept of home rule and the fundamental voter rationale in adopting the charter. A strong collective sentiment exists among us that local government should serve the people and that the county council has, in some cases, not accomplished this.

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Urban Growth with Respect for All


By Sharon Peaslee

On August 24 I addressed the San Juan County Planning Commission imploring them to ensure the protection of properties directly impacted by the expansion of Friday Harbor. I am thoroughly convinced that the needs of the town and all its citizens can be met without degrading homes and properties along the boundary lines. But this will take a very strong commitment to careful and respectful planning, from all parties involved in this process.

Home Trust has already reached an agreement with the Buck family to build a high-density affordable housing complex on land that borders five properties on Sunday Drive. One of them is a lot that I am about to build my home on. I was stunned to discover just a few weeks ago, that the Home Trust plan involves building three 3-unit dwellings right along our property lines. We will lose our views and our privacy. Somehow they overlooked this in their planning. This land is currently zoned R-5, but if annexed by the town will be rezoned for multi-family housing.

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Our Islands and the Sea


ig_Lincoln_Bormann-1 (30k image)
By Lincoln Bormann

“The biosphere…is essentially continuous in space, a single interwoven web of life covering the surface of our planet.” – Marston Bates, The Forest and the Sea

The Land Bank has always viewed the sea through the prism of human eyes. Everyone wants to see the water without obstruction, as though they had burst through the underbrush into the open and discovered the coastline. The sea has been something to take in, to savor without consuming. Part of our job has been to preserve some part of this feeling.

As we learn more about the connection between the land and water though, we start to think beyond this. Instead of being a vantage point, property becomes defined in terms of its ecological characteristics. Is there an intermittent stream? Does it connect to other conserved properties? Is it forested or prairie, degraded or in good condition? More and more, the emphasis changes toward extending or restoring physical and biological linkages, just as human infrastructure connects us to different places.

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