Matt Gurnsey
New member
In the recent issue of Norwesting, editor Chuck Gould posted the following editorial:
Just a few days before Christmas in 2009, five Seattle area boat yards received registered letters from a group of environmentalists known as Puget Soundkeeper Alliance. The letters constituted legal notice of "intent to file a lawsuit," and required the boatyard operators to respond within a very short period of time. While the rest of us were enjoying a holiday with our families, local boatyard owners were down at the office assembling paperwork and frantically trying to contact their vacationing attorneys.
Why would the Puget Soundkeeper Alliance sue boat yards? According to their own website, the group exists to bring lawsuits! Quote: ''We are a team of dedicated staff and citizen volunteers whose mission is to stop pollution from entering Puget Sound. The Alliance uses the power granted to citizens to sue under provisions of the Clean Water Act of 1972 to stop polluters in their tracks."
The guise under which the lawsuits are threatened involves alleged violations of stormwater discharge standards. Due in large part to aggressive lobbying by Puget Soundkeeper Alliance, environmental standards for stormwater discharge have become exceptionally difficult for any boatyard to meet. It is true that careless use of copper bottom paint in a boatyard can result in copper contamination of asphalt or cement surfaces, and that a rainstorm can then flush the copper contaminants from paved surfaces into adjoining waters.
Nearly all boat yards are making good progress toward reducing copper contamination. Steps typically include tarping under a boat, forbidding "do it yourself" painters, and the installation of extensive filtration systems.
It is also true that the copper content of nearly any storm drain in an urban area exceeds the "permitted" copper content from a boatyard. Automobile brakes, clutches, and other "wear and tear" components deposit copper particles on streets and parking lots. When rainwater drains from a roadway and down through a boatyard to the adjoining body of water, the boatyard takes the blame for every speck of copper in the stormwater - regardless of where the contamination actually originated. (We're aware of one boatyard in Seattle that has never done any bottom painting of any kind, doesn't even have a haulout facility, and is still bedeviled by higher-than-standard levels of copper in stormwater runoff).
Only by installing filters large and elaborate enough to extract any minute amount of copper generated in the boatyard itself as well as virtually all stormwater that flushes through the facility from any nearby street can a boatyard hope to meet the standards.
We have discussed this situation with highly informed sources, including individuals with many years of experience in the local marine industry and perpetually involved with committees resolving issues with Washington State Department of Ecology. While to this point we only have one side of the story, a number of serious concerns must be addressed:
First are these lawsuits really designed to address pollution, or are they primarily a fundraising device? According to one of our sources, Puget Soundkeeper Alliance virtually always offers to forego filing a lawsuit if the targeted boatyard will make a large cash settlement. We have heard that figures of perhaps $70,000, plus attorneys' fees for both sides, are typically demanded to squash the threatened legal action. A sum of this size could put many struggling independent businesses over the edge, and in any case will surely be figured into the prices charged to boaters for repairs and services at those yards.
Second, if the environmentalists are willing to drop the lawsuit in exchange for a large payoff, what prevents them from threatening to sue the same boat yards over and over again, year after year? Is it less important to the Puget Soundkeeper Alliance that any real progress is made toward cleaner stormwater discharge than that the threatened boat yards "pony up" the required ransom?
Third, and most troubling of all, is the possibility that the payoffs could be nefariously directed. The same law that grants Puget Soundkeeper Alliance the right to sue also prevents the group from collecting any of the settlements.
According to one well-placed source, the Alliance normally nominates another non-profit organization to receive the funds. How many, if any, of the "citizen volunteers" for Puget Soundkeeper Alliance earn a living as a paid staff member at another non-profit agency? If any of the Puget Soundkeeper Alliance volunteers also serve with other non-profit agencies, how many of those agencies (once again, if any) will benefit from the settlement funds extracted from local boat yards?
Nearly all boaters and boating related businesses appreciate the importance of maintaining a healthy aquatic environment. Few of us wantonly pollute. Our recreational pastime is genuinely threatened whenever environmentalism is carried to extreme. Nothing less than our basic social fabric would be threatened if ever extremism, disguised as altruism, might be allowed to shake down small independent businesses from behind the fig leaf of a government regulation.
Should Puget Soundkeeper Alliance choose to respond to our questions and concerns, we will make space available in an upcoming issue.