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Green
April 12, 2012

Guest blogger: eco-lobbyist Adam Snyder’s update

Adam Snyder

Adam Snyder

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Adam Snyder
Alabama conservative legislators seem black-helicopter paranoid about the U.N.'s Agenda 21, says Snyder says.

Guest blogger Adam Snyder, an environmental lobbyist, offers the following wrap-up and analysis of green-related activity in the Alabama legislature for last week, the week of Monday, April 3.

Conspiracy theorists take center stage

Adam Snyder wonders if a couple of Republican lawmakers, including Sen. Gerald Dial, see black helicopters in their sleep. U.S. Navy photo.

Companion bills that would “prohibit the State of Alabama and its political subdivisions from adopting and developing environmental and developmental policies that, without due process, would infringe or restrict the private property rights of the owner of the property” were introduced by Rep. Stephen McMillan, R-Bay Minette in the House and Sen. Gerald Dial, R-Lineville in the Senate.

These bills could be put in the same conspiracy categories as black helicopters and the lone gunman as they explicitly discuss “Agenda 21? — a set of United Nations recommendations adopted in 1992 about development patterns and environmental policy.

The Senate version of the bill was scheduled to be discussed before the Government Affairs Committee at 1 p.m. on April 10.

Raiding the Scrap Tire Fund… for a while

In a compromise amendment, the Scrap Tire Fund will be raided for two years.

Last week, the first week back after the legislative spring break, the House Ways and Means General Fund Committee passed HB608 with one amendment. That amendment would divert funding from the Scrap Tire Fund for fiscal years 2013 and 2014, but will return the funding to the program in fiscal years 2015 and beyond.

The Scrap Tire Commission was created in 2003 after a study showed that more than five million scrap tires were produced annually in Alabama, another four to five million scrap tires were being shipped to Alabama annually, and 14 to 20 million scrap tires were either stockpiled or disposed of illegally.

A $1 fee is assessed per tire sold in the state to support the program to clean up stockpiles, better enforce scrap tire disposal and cut down on illegal dumps, and create recycling opportunities for the scrap tires.

The Alabama Department of Environmental Management (ADEM), on behalf of the Scrap Tire Commission, has removed millions of scrap tires from more than 50 sites throughout the state.

Snyder’s updates are also posted on the Alabama Conservationist blog at conservationalabama.wordpress.com.

You can find a detailed summary of all eco-related bills in Conservation Alabama’s Hot List at www.conservationalabama.org.

An Ala. legislator wants to "scrap" a successful scrap tire recycling and clean-up program in the state. Photo by Mysid.
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