Sunday, December 5, 2010

ANOTHER developer type appointment to the Mohave County P and Z Commission

ANOTHER developer type appointment to the Mohave County P and Z Commission. Despite strong opposition by the people of this community and even THREE of the existing P & Z commisioners concerning the distinct CONFLICT OF INTEREST which is evident within the commission (FLOODED WITH DEVELOPERS) Watson appoints ANOTHER conflict of interest personality! The P and Z lacks any diversity, fairness and equity when it comes
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News and Information in Mohave County including Kingman, Golden Valley, Chloride, Dolan Springs, Arizona, AZ

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A WATER CRISIS IN MOHAVE COUNTY “A State of Depletion” First of a Four Part Series on Water

Tuesday, August 18, 2009
A WATER CRISIS IN MOHAVE COUNTY “A State of Depletion” First of a Four Part Series on Water


By: Denise Bensusan

The citizens of Mohave County Arizona are facing a major crisis concerning their water supply. No matter how you spin it, the science tells us that this community is in trouble!

Most of us don’t think much about where our clean (potable) drinking water comes from let alone how long it will be available to us. We have come to assume that water is an unlimited natural resource that will be there for us no matter how much is wasted. NOTHING COULD BE FURTHER FROM THE TRUTH!

The United States has the cheapest, cleanest water in the world current day, but our flippant attitude toward this vital resource is crashing in upon us faster than we can implement a real solution. “Americans are facing serious water shortages, especially in areas that rely on groundwater.” The majority of Mohave County i.e. the City of Kingman, Golden Valley, Dolan Springs, Yucca, Meadview, Valentine, Hackberry, Truxton, Peach Springs etc. depends on groundwater (aquifers and tributaries underground) for their water supply.

The Arizona Department of Water Resources (A.D.W.R.) is extremely concerned for our water supply, but we are outside of an Active Management Area (A.M.A.) and water laws are practically nonexistent. They see and understand the crisis plaguing our community but in truth they have very little control over water issues here.

Herb Guenther, the director of the A.D.W.R., said the State is in denial over water quantity. He went on to say that we must use our water in a sustainable way or that the uncertainty over water availability will slow economic growth.

A.D.W.R. was created legislatively in response to a serious condition called “overdraft” of Arizona’s water supply. In the Mohave County General Plan, “overdraft” is referred to as “depletion." Simply put, overdraft or depletion is the act of pumping groundwater out of the aquifers faster than it is being replaced or recharged naturally. Just imagine drinking a glass of your favorite beverage through a straw and never refilling your glass. As you suck through the straw, your beverage will disappear and your glass will become empty. Overdraft or depletion also increases the costs of drilling and pumping, and of course the inevitable loss of our water supply will be both physically and financially devastating to the entire community.

Let’s look at the recharge rate (or lack thereof) of the Hualapai Aquifer. This aquifer supplies water to the City of Kingman and private well owners north of Kingman. This is the Estimated Annual Natural Recharge (water replacing the water being drawn out of the aquifer) per A.D.W.R...

(a) 2,000 - 2,500 acre feet per year (per Remick 1981)

OR

(b) 3,000 acre feet per year (per Freethey & Anderson 1986)

Let’s give the benefit of the doubt and utilize the higher recharge rate of 3,000 acre feet per year for this example. With Cultural Demand (water usage) in the period of 2001 - 2005 (it's is far higher now) of 8,900 acre feet per year. A.D.W.R.’s hydrology shows that the Hualapai Aquifer is being pumped into a state of decline at approximately 5,900 acre feet per year. Now, let’s add in the 4,000+ acre feet that the proposed Mohave Sun Power “WET COOLED” power plant plans to withdraw. Laura Grignano, A.D.W.R.’s Industrial Planner, has verified that there is NO monitoring of the amount of water that Mohave Sun Power removes from the aquifer. Now we have 9,900 acre feet per year of depletion within the Hualapai aquifer. That’s … 3 BILLION, 237 million, 300 thousand gallons of water per year being taken out of the aquifer and NOT being recharged back in.

The FACT is that we are emptying our water supply and not replenishing it. The Hualapai aquifer is in a state of DEPLETION! We WILL run out of water if we do not IMMEDIATELY start practicing intelligent growth and create a water plan to suit our emergency status!

If Mohave County ignores the health, well being and property values of the average citizen in favor of destructive industry then there will be recalls, referendums and lawsuits. The cost to the county will be extensive.

You have heard a lot of propaganda out there and this community is faced with elected officials and project developers who simply don’t care about the FACTS and they don’t care about you. If our elected officials cannot be creative enough to attract truly green industry that has a positive impact on this community, then replace them with people that can actually handle the job!

RESOURCES

1. A.D.W.R. main site: Click here for Website

2. A.D.W.R. overview of the Arizona Groundwater management Code : Click here for Website

3. PHOENIX (Associated Press)

4. The World’s Water 2008-2009: Click here for Website

5. Mohave County General Plan: Click here for Website

6. A.D.W.R. WATER ATLAS: Click here for Website

7. Laura Grignano, Industrial Planner for A.D.W.R.

The Shameful Attacks on Julian Assange

http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2010/12/the-shameful-attacks-on-julian-assange/67440/

The Shameful Attacks on Julian Assange

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Julian Assange and Pfc Bradley Manning have done a huge public service by making hundreds of thousands of classified U.S. government documents available on Wikileaks -- and, predictably, no one is grateful. Manning, a former army intelligence analyst in Iraq, faces up to 52 years in prison. He is currently being held in solitary confinement at a military base in Quantico, Virginia, where he is not allowed to see his parents or other outside visitors.

Assange, the organizing brain of Wikileaks, enjoys a higher degree of freedom living as a hunted man in England under the close surveillance of domestic and foreign intelligence agencies -- but probably not for long. Not since President Richard Nixon directed his minions to go after Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg and New York Times reporter Neil Sheehan - "a vicious antiwar type," an enraged Nixon called him on the Watergate tapes -- has a working journalist and his source been subjected to the kind of official intimidation and threats that have been directed at Assange and Manning by high-ranking members of the Obama Administration.

Published reports suggest that a joint Justice Department-Pentagon team of investigators is exploring the possibility of charging Assange under the Espionage Act, which could lead to decades in jail. "This is not saber-rattling," said Attorney General Eric Holder, commenting on the possibility that Assange will be prosecuted by the government. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called the Wikileaks disclosures "an attack on the international community" that endangered innocent people. White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs suggested in somewhat Orwellian fashion that "such disclosures put at risk our diplomats, intelligence professionals, and people around the world who come to the United States for assistance in promoting democracy and open government."

It is dispiriting and upsetting for anyone who cares about the American tradition of a free press to see Eric Holder, Hillary Clinton and Robert Gibbs turn into H.R. Haldeman, John Erlichman and John Dean. We can only pray that we won't soon be hit with secret White House tapes of Obama drinking scotch and slurring his words while calling Assange bad names.
The truly scandalous and shocking response to the Wikileaks documents has been that of other journalists, who make the Obama Administration sound like the ACLU.

Unwilling to let the Democrats adopt Nixon's anti-democratic, press-hating legacy as their own, Republican Congressman Peter King asserted that the publication of classified diplomatic cables is "worse even than a physical attack on Americans" and that Wikileaks should be officially designed as a terrorist organization. Mike Huckabee followed such blather to its logical conclusion by suggesting that Bradley Manning should be executed.

But the truly scandalous and shocking response to the Wikileaks documents has been that of other journalists, who make the Obama Administration sound like the ACLU. In a recent article in The New Yorker, the Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Steve Coll sniffed that "the archives that WikiLeaks has published are much less significant than the Pentagon Papers were in their day" while depicting Assange as a "self-aggrandizing control-freak" whose website "lacks an ethical culture that is consonant with the ideals of free media." Channeling Richard Nixon, Coll labeled Wikileaks' activities - formerly known as journalism - by his newly preferred terms of "vandalism" and "First Amendment-inspired subversion."

Coll's invective is hardly unique, In fact, it was only a pale echo of the language used earlier this year by a columnist at his former employer, The Washington Post. In a column titled "WikiLeaks Must Be Stopped," Mark Thiessen wrote  that "WikiLeaks is not a news organization; it is a criminal enterprise," and urged that the site should be shut down "and its leadership brought to justice." The dean of American foreign correspondents, John Burns of The New York Times, with two Pulitzer Prizes to his credit, contributed a profile of Assange which used terms like "nearly delusional grandeur" to describe Wikileaks' founder. The Times' normally mild-mannered David Brooks asserted in his column this week that "Assange seems to be an old-fashioned anarchist" and worried that Wikileaks will "damage the global conversation."

For his part, Assange has not been shy about expressing his contempt for the failure of traditional reporting to inform the public, and his belief in the utility of his own methods. "How is it that a team of five people has managed to release to the public more suppressed information, at that level, than the rest of the world press combined?" he told The Sydney Morning Herald. "It's disgraceful."

Assange may or may not be grandiose, paranoid and delusional - terms that might be fairly applied at one time or another  to most prominent investigative reporters of my acquaintance. But the fact that so many prominent old school journalists are attacking him with such unbridled force is a symptom of the failure of traditional reporting methods to penetrate a culture of official secrecy that has grown by leaps and bounds since 9/11, and threatens the functioning of a free press as a cornerstone of democracy.

The true importance of Wikileaks -- and the key to understanding the motivations and behavior of its founder -- lies not in the contents of the latest document dump but in the technology that made it possible, which has already shown itself to be a potent weapon to undermine official lies and defend human rights. Since 1997, Assange has devoted a great deal of his time to inventing encryption systems that make it possible for human rights workers and others to protect and upload sensitive data. The importance of Assange's efforts to human rights workers in the field were recognized last year by Amnesty International, which gave him its Media Award for the Wikileaks investigation The Cry of Blood - Extra Judicial Killings and Disappearances, which documented the killing and disappearance of 500 young men in Kenya by the police, with the apparent connivance of the country's political leadership.

Yet the difficulties of documenting official murder in Kenya pale next to the task of penetrating the secret world that threatens to swallow up informed public discourse in this country about America's wars. The 250,000 cables that Wikileaks published this month represent only a drop in the bucket that holds the estimated 16 million documents that are classified top secret by the federal government every year. According to a three-part investigative series by Dana Priest and William Arkin published earlier this year in The Washington Post, an estimated 854,000 people now hold top secret clearance - more than 1.5 times the population of Washington, D.C. "The top-secret world the government created in response to the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, has become so large, so unwieldy and so secretive," the Post concluded, "that no one knows how much money it costs, how many people it employs, how many programs exist within it or exactly how many agencies do the same work."

The result of this classification mania is the division of the public into two distinct groups: those who are privy to the actual conduct of American policy, but are forbidden to write or talk about it, and the uninformed public, which becomes easy prey for the official lies exposed in the Wikileaks documents: The failure of American counterinsurgency programs in Afghanistan, the involvement of China and North Korea in the Iranian nuclear program, the likely failure of attempts to separate Syria from Iran, the involvement of Iran in destabilizing Iraq, the anti-Western orientation of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and other tenets of American foreign policy under both Bush and Obama.

It is a fact of the current media landscape that the chilling effect of threatened legal action routinely stops reporters and editors from pursuing stories that might serve the public interest - and anyone who says otherwise is either ignorant or lying. Every honest reporter and editor in America knows that the fact that most news organizations are broke, combined with the increasing threat of aggressive legal action by deep-pocketed entities, private and public, has made it much harder for good reporters to do their jobs, and ripped a hole in the delicate fabric that holds our democracy together.

The idea that Wikileaks is a threat to the traditional practice of reporting misses the point of what Assange and his co-workers have put together - a powerful tool that can help reporters circumvent the legal barriers that are making it hard for them to do their job. Even as he criticizes the evident failures of the mainstream press, Assange insists that Wikileaks should facilitate traditional reporting and analysis. "We're the step before the first person (investigates)," he explained, when accepting Amnesty International's award for exposing police killings in Kenya. "Then someone who is familiar with that material needs to step forward to investigate it and put it in political context. Once that is done, then it becomes of public interest."

Wikileaks is a powerful new way for reporters and human rights advocates to leverage global information technology systems to break the heavy veil of government and corporate secrecy that is slowly suffocating the American press. The likely arrest of Assange in Britain on dubious Swedish sex crimes charges has nothing to do with the importance of the system he has built, and which the US government seems intent on destroying with tactics more appropriate to the Communist Party of China -- pressuring Amazon to throw the site off their servers, and, one imagines by launching the powerful DDOS attacks that threatened to stop visitors from reading the pilfered cables.

In a memorandum entitled "Transparency and Open Government" addressed to the heads of Federal departments and agencies and posted on WhiteHouse.gov, President Obama instructed that "Transparency promotes accountability and provides information for citizens about what their Government is doing." The Administration would be wise to heed his words -- and to remember how badly the vindictive prosecution of Daniel Ellsberg ended for the Nixon Administration. And American reporters, Pulitzer Prizes and all, should be ashamed for joining in the outraged chorus that defends a burgeoning secret world whose existence is a threat to democracy.

Saturday, December 4, 2010

GOP to jobless: Drop dead

Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, November 16, 2010; 10:54 PM
More than a century ago, a former congressman from Nebraska electrified delegates gathered in Chicago for the Democratic National Convention with a stirring denunciation of Wall Street and the monied interests that would put an over-indebted country through a wrenching recession in order to maintain the gold standard.

MOHAVE COUNTY AND TYRANNY?

MOHAVE COUNTY AND TYRANNY?
By: Wayne Smith

Although not intentional, it seems that Mohave County government has almost become by definition tyrannical. The problem seems to be when residents vote a person into office, they assume that person will represent his or hers constitutes. Instead of this being the case, our local politicians seem to have their own agendas in mind. One can only guess why this is, but I think most of us know!
     Let’s take a quick look at how this cycle goes. Each member of the BOS has been voted into office. Each supervisor gets to appoint three commissioners to Planning and Zoning!
     The three Supervisors vote on and approve a County Manager! The County Manager gets to appoint who is on the Technical Advisory Committee (TAC). In our case, it is all of the power brokers of Mohave County. The TAC members are revising the General Plan to be more business friendly all at the expense of the residents and their quality of life. Now, obviously, all three Supervisors will appoint people to each position that will agree with them! That’s just human nature, but the problem comes when there are no checks and balances to this system. Or another way to say it, the voice of the people still needs to be involved in this process! With the elimination of the “Call to the Public” at public meetings, the lack of participation by ordinary residents on the revision of the General Plan, with the elimination of any water resources element, and the words of must and shall being replaced by should and may ,in my opinion is weakening the General Plan.
     With the weakening of all guidelines in the General Plan, it will allow for everything to be up to interpretation by the BOS. THIS SCARES ME! Another way to look at this is, it eliminates any arguments by residents and once again their voices! The argument by the county will be that I still have the ability to speak at the P&Z and the BOS. My answer to this is by the time it gets this far, both P&Z and BOS already have their minds made up! Remember the wet cooled solar plants and the diesel plant? Whether it was intentional or not, this county has orchestrated a step by step process to eliminate any and all public participation in the decision making process! With this said, the county can do business however it pleases!                                                        To sum up what I just stated, the BOS and the P&Z and the County Manager are in lockstep with their ideas, the County Manager appoints only people that agree with him to be members on the TAC, which can change the general plan to suit what there goals are! All of the TAC members will benefit financially from the changes! They have basically eliminated any and all voices or opposition. Which makes Mohave County an absolute ruler over its citizens. Is this not the definition of a tyrannical government? 
Wayne Smith

Drought-stricken Lake Mead falls to a level not seen since 1937



Drought-stricken Lake Mead falls to a level not seen since 1937

Oddly, the drought's latest milestone arrived on a rainy day. Just before noon Sunday, as thunderstorms closed in on the area, the surface of Lake Mead slipped three one-hundredths of an inch to a new low not seen for a lifetime. The reservoir on the Colorado River hasn't been down this far since 1937, when it was being filled for the first time behind the newly completed Hoover Dam.
Contact reporter Henry Brean at hbrean@reviewjournal.com
or 702-383-0350.