A Threat to a Lifeline in Arizona
Legislation would free an Army base from maintaining the level of a free-flowing river.
By Julie Cart, Times Staff Writer
The San Pedro River, one of the last free-flowing rivers in
the Southwest and an oasis for hundreds of species of
migratory birds, could be seriously depleted if Congress
agrees to exempt a nearby military installation from water
restrictions.
Pushing for the exemption at Ft. Huachuca is Rep. Rick
Renzi (R-Ariz.), whose father is an executive at a firm
with contracts worth more than $450 million at the
post.
Renzi's measure, in the form of an amendment to the defense
authorization bill, would exempt Ft. Huachuca from
responsibility for maintaining water levels in the San
Pedro River as called for in an agreement made last year
with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
The House recently approved the exemption despite
opposition from Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano, a Democrat.
The state's senior senator, Republican John McCain, said
last week that he too opposes the exemption.
The bill with the amendment attached is in a House-Senate
conference.
The proposed exemption would allow the post 70 miles
southeast of Tucson to use more water and to expand.
Critics say that would benefit private sector
contractors.
Renzi's father is retired Maj. Gen. Eugene Renzi, executive
vice president with ManTech, a Virginia-based defense
contractor that provides communications and information
technology networks to Ft. Huachuca.
The company, which has an office in Sierra Vista, Ariz.,
was also the largest contributor to Renzi's 2002
congressional campaign. The company has more than $1
billion in pending contracts at the base.
Gary Ruskin of the nonprofit Congressional Accountability
Project said Rep. Renzi's provision needlessly opened him
to ethical questions.
"This isn't rocket science. It is a clear conflict of
interest," Ruskin said. "It is utterly mystifying why he
would not have some other Arizona member pick this up."
The freshman congressman championed the amendment at the
behest of Rep. Jim Kolbe, (R-Ariz.), who represents the
district and who himself unsuccessfully introduced the
measure last year.
Renzi scoffed at the conflict-of-interest claims, saying:
"ManTech will do fine. They don't need a congressman
helping them."
Phone calls to ManTech's headquarters were not
returned.
The San Pedro River, which flows north from Mexico for 140
miles, is a rarity in the arid Southwest â€" an
undammed river that supports an array of plants and
animals, particularly birds. Scientists estimate that at
least half the bird species in North America use the San
Pedro area at some point. A portion of the river has been
set aside as a National Conservation Area.
In an accord reached last year with the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, the Army agreed that its presence as the
second-largest employer in the region made it responsible
for 54% of the area's water use. The rationale for the
agreement is that, although the post itself doesn't use all
of the water, many nearby businesses that consume water
would not be operating if not for Ft. Huachuca.
"We certainly have a concern that if our agreement with Ft.
Huachuca is not in place, the San Pedro could dry up," said
Jeff Humphrey, a spokesman for the Fish and Wildlife
Service in Arizona.
Renzi, who calls his amendment the Fort Huachuca
Preservation Act, said that the agreement with the Fish and
Wildlife Service is onerous and that regardless of the
post's role in the region, it should not be held
responsible for water used by others. He called the
biological opinion that was the basis for the agreement
between the Fish and Wildlife Service and the Army "faulty
science," and said "the guy who wrote it pulled it out of
thin air."
The document's author, Fish and Wildlife Service biologist
Doug Duncan, said all of the scientific information
contained in the opinion was provided by Ft. Huachuca.
"They proposed all their conservation measures," Duncan
said. "It's not something we forced on the fort."
The fort, which has not taken a position on Renzi's
amendment, has been praised for its management of sensitive
bird habitat and has won awards for its efforts to curb
water use.
The proposed amendment comes amid efforts by the Department
of Defense to weaken numerous environmental regulations at
military bases around the country on the grounds that the
regulations impede military readiness.
However, Renzi has not said that military preparedness is
an issue at Ft. Huachuca.
Lori Faeth, Gov. Napolitano's policy advisor for natural
resources and the environment, said the state opposes the
amendment because local groups are already working to
lessen water use.
"The problem with Congressman Renzi's approach is that it
puts people in the position that they feel they have to
choose either the fort or the river," Faeth said.
To conservationists in the area, the amendment presents a
more dire threat to the San Pedro River than the state's
six-year drought.
"The effects of Renzi's actions are not debatable," said
Robin Silver of the Tucson-based Center for Biological
Diversity. "If his efforts are successful, we lose the San
Pedro River. It's that simple."
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