This month, the Rock Island District of the Corps of
Engineers announced that it reprogrammed $50,000 to bring Navigation and
Ecosystem Sustainability Program (NESP) back from the dead.
The majority of environmental and conservation groups in the
Mississippi Basin oppose this project because NESP handcuffs ecosystem
restoration funding to expensive, unnecessary, and environmentally damaging
navigation infrastructure spending. By
handcuffing ecosystem restoration to navigation infrastructure, it puts the
restoration funding at greater risk. And
it prevents managers from addressing a main cause of environmental degradation in
the Upper Mississippi River: the navigation
infrastructure itself. Congress actually
stopped funding for the program in 2011 because the navigation projects could
never be economically justified by the Corps.
Thankfully, the four year lifespan of NESP wasn't enough to
fully implement the project by 2011. If
it had been fully implemented, important ecosystem restoration spending would
have dried up in 2011 also. Fortunately,
the successful Upper Mississippi River Restoration Program, which NESP was
planning to replace, remains intact and funded today.
Since Congress last funded NESP in fiscal year 2010 it is
slated for deauthorization consideration starting in fiscal year 2015
(according to a 2007 law passed by Congress).
So, the Rock Island District is throwing a pittance at the program this
year in hopes of restarting the deauthorization clock.
So, what will the $50,000 accomplish? The Corps’ program manager says the funds
will be used “to develop a plan to update the construction cost estimates.” Not actual update any part of the project,
just plan to update it.
This is an annoying strategy the Corps practices nationally
to keep bad programs on life support.
Throw a penny in the account, don’t do any real work, and keep these
zombie programs running around terrorizing those of us trying to protect and
restore rivers around the country.
The silver lining is that the Corps may not be allowed to
keep their zombie projects much longer.
The President signed a new law this year that revamps the 2007
deauthorization process. The law intends
to clear the Corps’ more than $60 billion backlog of projects that are
minimally funded, lack local support, and/or are no longer feasible.
With the new law, the public will be given opportunities to
comment on the list of projects for deauthorization, and the Nicollet Island
Coalition will be looking forward to taking out these zombie projects.