
IMPROPRIETIES DENIED: Richard Pombo says he has no fear of being tainted by the Abramoff scandal. “Do people who agree with me on legislation donate to my campaign? Absolutely. But my opinions haven’t changed,” he says (Adele Starr / AP)
Source of this article - Los Angeles Times, February 14, 2006.
Lawmaker questioned about Abramoff Ties.
By Bettina BoxallTRACY — Growing up on the family ranch here, Rep. Richard W. Pombo (R-Tracy)
says, he learned that "you have to work till you're done. There's nobody else to
pick up the slack."
![]() IMPROPRIETIES DENIED: Richard Pombo says he has no fear of being tainted by the Abramoff scandal. “Do people who agree with me on legislation donate to my campaign? Absolutely. But my opinions haven’t changed,” he says (Adele Starr / AP) |
It's a lesson he carried from the fields of the
northern San Joaquin Valley to the committee rooms of Congress, where for more
than a decade he has doggedly labored to undo one of America's signature
environmental laws, the Endangered Species Act.
After finally getting a
bill through the House last fall that would eliminate habitat protections on
more than 150 million acres, Pombo has never been closer to reaching his goal.
But as the Senate prepares to take up his measure this year, Pombo finds himself
on the defensive, with his ideology increasingly viewed as extreme and his
connections to industry and to disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff under scrutiny.
A seven-term Republican and chairman of the influential House Resources
Committee, Pombo is a tax-cutting, anti-abortion, anti-gun-control conservative.
But it is the 33-year-old species law that has been his political obsession. He
has argued that it puts "endangered flies, beetles, rats and shellfish" before
people. He has exaggerated the law's impact on his own land.
Besides
curbing protections, his bill would require the federal government to pay owners
for any restrictions on the use of their property.
"It took me 13 years
to get to that point," Pombo said recently, sitting in the backroom of a Tracy
restaurant, where burlap seed bags decorated the clapboard walls and old farmers
swapped jokes over afternoon coffee.
Now though, instead of focusing on
carrying his win to the Senate, he finds himself facing questions about his
efforts on behalf of Abramoff clients. And a series of legislative maneuvers
late last year called attention to what critics say is his record of pushing
proposals that benefit his primary campaign contributors: agribusiness, the oil
and gas industry, builders, utilities and mining.
In November, Pombo
tacked onto a budget bill provisions to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
to oil drilling and expand oil and gas drilling off the nation's coastlines,
including California's. Another rider would have reversed a long-standing
moratorium on selling federal mineral lands to mining companies and opened up
public lands to private development. And budget language drafted by Pombo's
staff — but never introduced — would have sold 15 national parks to raise
federal revenue.
Moderate Republicans blocked the drilling provisions
while conservative Western GOP senators rallied by sportsmen's groups killed the
land sell-off. A key GOP senator has also raised doubts about elements of the
species act revision.
In environmental circles, Pombo's efforts cemented
his reputation as the most dangerous man in Congress. And they provided fodder
for a lengthening list of political opponents who challenge his carefully
cultivated image as the straight-shooting protector of the rural little
guy.
"It was an outrageous set of proposals, and he's not done,"
complained Roger Schlickeisen, president of the Defenders of Wildlife Action
Fund, which has launched a "Pombo in their pocket" campaign to underscore
Pombo's corporate ties. "There's nobody else that competes with him" in
compiling an anti-conservation record in Congress, Schlickeisen said.
But
free market and property rights advocates cheered Pombo's moves. "He's a breath
of fresh air," said Terry Anderson, executive director of the Property and
Environment Research Center in Bozeman, Mont., and a senior fellow at the Hoover
Institution. "His efforts to try to privatize some of the federal lands was a
major shift" from previous policy.
The 45-year-old rancher, who wears
cowboy boots and hats around the button-down capital and hangs photos of cattle
wrangling in his congressional office, says his first recollection of the
Endangered Species Act stems from a fight over a new town proposed near Tracy
years ago. Wildlife concerns helped kill the development. "I think that was
probably the first time I realized what they can use the Endangered Species Act
for," said Pombo. "To me it just didn't seem right."
He says he has been
misrepresented.
"A lot of people want to paint me a certain way and try
to make it out so I fit this caricature that has been created as an
anti-environmentalist and all of the negative things. Quite frankly it's not
true," said Pombo.
He argues that the best way to conserve natural
resources is to give society an economic incentive to protect them by allowing
their use rather than barring it.
He insists he is improving the species
act by making allies of the owners of private property, where most endangered
species are found. He pointed out that House Democrats supported a competing
Endangered Species Act rewrite that also eliminated habitat
protections.
With his property rights mantra and cowboy garb, Pombo,
nicknamed "Marlboro Man" by President Bush, evokes a wild rural West that
doesn't reflect his increasingly suburbanized district, which includes the
burgeoning bedroom communities east of the San Francisco Bay and the western
flank of Central Valley farm country.
Fifteen years ago Tracy was a
typical blue-collar valley farm community, friendly but short on pastoral charm,
with a Heinz ketchup factory and a sugar beet plant. Both are closed now. Since
1990, the population has more than doubled to nearly 80,000. The slightly sweet
smell of manure still wafts through town, but Tracy is morphing into a generic
ex-urb, ringed by chain-store shopping centers and jumbo-sized tract houses
selling for a median $500,000, half what they would cost nearer the bay.
The Pombo family, a large, close-knit Portuguese Catholic clan that
settled in the area a century ago, is aiding the transformation. During Pombo's
two years as a local councilman before heading to Congress in 1992, he worked on
a general plan that set the stage for Tracy's explosive growth. Today much of
the farmland for sale on the town fringes is staked with the red and white signs
of Pombo Real Estate, founded in the 1960s by his late uncle Ernie and carried
on by relatives.
Pombo's property rights zeal resonates with the old farm
guard, which feels beset by environmental regulation. Government is "trying to
tell you, 'You can't do this and that with your land,' " said Tracy High School
agriculture instructor Dale Backman, who taught Pombo and now advises his son
Richie in the school's Future Farmers of America program. "Yeah, we need
environmental protection. But we've gone too far."
As Pombo's profile
rises, so does his political opposition. In the election this year, Democrats
are targeting his seat. He will also face a challenge from his own party. Former
California Congressman Pete McCloskey, a maverick Republican and co-author of
the Endangered Species Act, says he's so offended by Pombo's record that he is
moving into the district to run in the primary.
Still, election watchers
say Pombo will not be easily dislodged from his largely Republican district.
"You're not going to beat Richard Pombo on the Endangered Species Act," said GOP
political analyst Allan Hoffenblum. "But corruption is an issue that's on
everybody's mind. If he's vulnerable on any issue, that would be
it."
Pombo's critics have focused on his campaign's reliance on donors
from industries that stand to benefit from his legislation. Just months before
the mining proposal made it out of Pombo's committee, a former committee aide
who once worked for Abramoff's firm and is now a lobbyist for mining interests
hosted a $1,000-a-head fundraiser for Pombo.
The Times reported earlier
this year that Pombo joined forces with former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay
of Texas in efforts to squelch a federal banking investigation of Texas
financier Charles Hurwitz. Pombo, who had previously received a campaign
contribution from Hurwitz, has contended that the investigation was unfounded
and abusive.
A Massachusetts tribe and client of Abramoff's that donated
$20,000 to Pombo received the congressman's help seeking federal tribal
recognition. Pombo supported the resumption of commercial whaling while
accepting thousands of dollars in international travel from a private foundation
funded by the seafood industry and a whaling association.
According to
data compiled by the Campaign Finance Analysis Project, Pombo has, during his
congressional career, collected more than $800,000 from agriculture, timber and
fishing interests. The building industry has given him $205,000; oil and gas,
$169,000; mining, $55,000; and casinos and gambling, $147,000.
Pombo
denies any improprieties and says he has no fear of being tainted by the
Abramoff scandal. "I met the guy a few times. He never lobbied me on anything.
Never set foot in my office.
"I am fighting for the things that I believe
in," he added. "The positions I've held on issues haven't changed since I first
ran. Do people who agree with me on legislation donate to my campaign?
Absolutely. But my opinions haven't changed."
The second of five boys
raised on a farm and ranch operation just outside town, Pombo says his mother,
Onita, shaped his political views more than his easygoing father, Ralph. She's a
Republican and his father was a Democrat — although he changed his party
registration to vote for his son in the GOP primary.
Pombo and several of
his brothers live in houses they've built on a 500-acre cattle ranch that
spreads into the hills a few miles beyond Tracy's creeping subdivisions. Nearly
every weekend he returns from Washington to meet with constituents and be with
his wife, Annette, and three children: his 17-year-old son and two girls, 12 and
9.
The family lands figure prominently in Pombo lore. It was the
government riding roughshod over the family's property rights, he says, that
spurred him to get involved in national politics.
In 1994 he told a
Senate subcommittee that he ran for Congress after the ranch was declared
critical habitat for the endangered San Joaquin kit fox, stripping his land of
its value and forcing his family to run the ranch "with an unwanted, unneeded,
un-silent partner — the federal government."
The tale turns out to have
been embroidered. Pombo's ranch is a corridor for the kit fox, the smallest fox
in North America. But it is not critical habitat, which the government has never
designated anywhere for the tiny fox. Pombo paid $5,137 into a regional habitat
conservation plan to compensate for houses he and relatives were building on the
ranch. But that was years after his congressional testimony.
Today, Pombo
concedes his characterization was "mistaken" and says having kit fox habitat on
his land "didn't prevent me from doing anything."
More recently, in the
introduction to a report about "government abuse" issued by a conservative think
tank, Pombo blamed the deaths of four firefighters in a 2001 Pacific Northwest
forest fire on endangered salmon protections that fatally delayed aerial scoops
of river water.
"Highly inaccurate…. The whole thing was a bunch of
baloney," Jim Furnish, a former deputy chief of the U.S. Forest Service who
headed an investigation of the deaths, said in an interview. The probe found
that although there was some confusion about whether a helicopter could draw
from the river, endangered species regulations did not forbid it and most of the
delay in using the chopper was unrelated. Moreover, investigators concluded the
four died because of command misjudgments and because the fire crew disregarded
standard safety procedures.
Brian Kennedy, Pombo's communications
director, dismissed the Forest Service investigation as a whitewash.
Part
of the conservative tide that swept over the House of Representatives in the
early 1990s, Pombo has sat on the resources committee since first elected. He
vaulted to the chair over half a dozen more senior Republicans in 2003 with the
help of DeLay, an equally voluble critic of environmental
regulation.
After he became chairman, Pombo tempered his
anti-environmental rhetoric. He worked with Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein of
California to pass a forest-thinning bill and get funding for a major water
program in California.
But, at least in critics' eyes, Pombo dropped all
semblance of moderation last fall. Next on Pombo's list is a major reworking of
another landmark law, the National Environmental Policy Act.
A thorn in
the side of business and a boon to environmental activists, the act requires the
federal government to review the probable environmental effects of everything
from logging projects on public land to highway construction. In December, a
resources staff report recommended limiting reviews and making it harder to
bring lawsuits under the act.
Meanwhile, Pombo's supporters are
applauding his perseverance on endangered species legislation.
"This is
so much better than anybody thought was possible," Myron Ebell of the
Competitive Enterprise Institute said. "We may end up with something less good
than that. But it will be a lot better than if he had compromised to begin
with."