01-14-2025, 10:02 AM
This post was last modified 01-14-2025, 10:34 AM by putnam6. Edited 3 times in total. 
I'm for some environmentalist causes but this is an example of when special interest groups go off the rails, with negative impacts.
First, we hear water can't be diverted because it will harm the smelt population, then not clearing brush for various reasons, and now this.
It shows how this crap adds up and bogs down the ability of our government agencies to act in all of our best interests.
All for an herb that uses "wildfires" to grow healthy and multiply
Im very aware the removal of an animal or plant can have a wide range of consequences, look at the wolf being reintroduced back to Yellowstone, it's changed the topography and ecosystem for the better
Is Braunton’s milkvetch feeding an actual endangered rodent or is it as it seems, hyper-environmentalism running amuck in Cali
https://nypost.com/2025/01/14/us-news/ca...red-shrub/
First, we hear water can't be diverted because it will harm the smelt population, then not clearing brush for various reasons, and now this.
It shows how this crap adds up and bogs down the ability of our government agencies to act in all of our best interests.
All for an herb that uses "wildfires" to grow healthy and multiply
Im very aware the removal of an animal or plant can have a wide range of consequences, look at the wolf being reintroduced back to Yellowstone, it's changed the topography and ecosystem for the better
Is Braunton’s milkvetch feeding an actual endangered rodent or is it as it seems, hyper-environmentalism running amuck in Cali
https://nypost.com/2025/01/14/us-news/ca...red-shrub/
Quote:In 2019, the LA Department of Water and Power (LADWP) began replacing nearly 100-year-old power line poles cutting through Topanga State Park, when the project was halted within days by conservationists outraged that federally endangered Braunton’s milkvetch plants had been trampled during the process.
After an amateur botanist hiking through the park during the work saw the harm done to some of the park’s Braunton’s milkvetch — a flowering shrub with only a few thousand specimens remaining in the wild — and complained, the project was completely halted, Courthouse News Service reported.
Instead of fire-hardening the park, the city — which the state said had undertaken the work without proper permitting — ended up paying $2 million in fines and was ordered by the California Coastal Commission to reverse the whole project and replant the rare herb.
That work saved about 200 Braunton’s milkvetch plants — almost all of which have now likely been torched in the wildfires that consumed Topanga Canyon, along with nearly 24,000 acres (37 square miles) of some of LA’s most sought-after real estate.
At least eight people have died and 5,000 homes have been destroyed by the fire, which was still just 14% contained as of Monday.
It was not clear whether the steel poles were ever installed.
The good news for the milkvetch, however, is that they usually need wildfire to sprout — meaning dormant seeds now have a massive new habitat for a new crop of the rare shrub.
His mind was not for rent to any god or government, always hopeful yet discontent. Knows changes aren't permanent, but change is ....
Professor Neil Ellwood Peart
Professor Neil Ellwood Peart