National Wetlands Coalition
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The National Wetlands Coalition, founded in 1989,[1] has opposed U.S. wetlands policy, saying "the federal government, while seeking to protect wetlands, casts a wide net and imposes burdensome and ineffective regulations on private property that does not function as or provide the ecosystem benefits of high-value wetlands".[1] Time Magazine called it "a big-biz coalition against wetlands".[2]
In 1995, the organization consisted of about 60 municipal associations, utilities and major industrial compannies, such as Exxon, Texaco and Kerr-McGee.[3]
The organization has been relatively inactive since around the late 1990s. [2]. The website was being "reworked" from February 2001 [3] through November 2005 [4]; it went offline in December 2005.[5]
[edit] References
- Hebert, James, The San Diego Union-Tribune, July 1, 2003, p. E-1, "False Fronts: Consider the source -- if you can identify it"
[edit] Notes
- ^ National Wetlands Coalition home page, January, 2000 via archive.org, accessed March 22, 2007
- ^ John Snow, "Lost In Cyberspace", Time Magazine, April 26, 1999
- ^ Mark Dowie, "Greens outgunned", Earth Island Journal, Spring 1995
[edit] External links
- Official National Wetlands Coalition website (no longer functioning)