
Government Eyes
Changes in Species Protection
By H. Josef Hebert,
Associated Press
March 28, 2007
WASHINGTON -- The Interior Department is considering a broad revamping
of how it protects animals and plants in danger of extinction, including
changes that critics contend will reduce the number of species that will
be saved.
Details of some of the
proposed changes surfaced Tuesday in a number of draft department
documents released by environmentalists, who said the changes would
amount to a gutting of the federal Endangered Species Act.
Department spokesmen said
the drafts were still under review and that no decision had been made by
Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne on whether to proceed.
"The focus is how we
can do a better job of recovering more species," department
spokesman Hugh Vickery said in an interview. He called the documents
that have surfaced preliminary and in some cases out of date.
"There's not going
to be anything done to damage our ability to protect endangered
species" and that the aim is to make the federal law work better,
said Chris Tollefson, a spokesman for the department's Fish and Wildlife
Service, which manages the federal law.
Some of the proposed
changes are outlined in a 117-page draft regulation and in a half-dozen
separate memorandums, some dating back to last summer and others as
recent as mid-February. They have been circulated within the department
and at federal agencies for review.
The proposed changes
"touch on every key program under the Endangered Species Act. It is
a rewrite from top to bottom," said Kieran Suckling of the Center
for Biological Diversity, a national environmental group based in
Tucson
,
Ariz.
The draft was the subject
of a story Tuesday on Salon.com.
Jan Hasselman, an
attorney in
Seattle
with Earthjustice who is
involved in a number of lawsuits involving endangered species, said if
the proposed changes are implemented "it will make it more
difficult to list species and fundamentally weaken the protection the
act offers."
Some of the proposals
would make obscure changes in how the law is implemented while others
would be more direct, said Hasselman, who has analyzed the documents.
Together they would "fundamentally gut the intent" of the law
protecting species in danger of extinction.
One proposed change would
narrow when species can be considered in danger of extinction. Currently
that is widely interpreted as in some time -- as the statute directs --
"in the foreseeable future." The draft papers suggest a more
specific timetable of 20 years for some species and a specific number of
generations for others, Hasselman said.
"This would severely
limit listing of new endangered species," he said.
Also being considered is
giving more power to states in creating species recovery plans and in
determining what plants and animals get protection, including the
ability of governors to block attempts to reintroduce species in their
states.
If governors had such
power, gray wolves would not have re-emerged in
Idaho
or
Montana
, nor would the grizzly have
been reintroduced to
Idaho
, Suckling said in a telephone interview.
"What we want to do
is work more closely with states," said Vickery, adding that the
department has no intention of turning authority over to the states.
The department also hopes
to narrow the geographic range over which a species must be protected.
Protection would be limited to a plant or animal's current habitat and
not the geographic region it has historically occupied.
Another proposal would
allow logging, development and other projects even if they threaten a
species, as long as they do not "hasten" its extinction.
Environmentalists said currently no projects are allowed if they have
any impact on a listed species.
Vickery said the 117-page
document, which includes many of the proposed changes, is old. "It
does not represent the latest thinking by the Fish and Wildlife
Service," he said. "Recommendations are still being
floated."
But Daniel Patterson of
Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, which put the
documents on its Web site Tuesday, said the memos have been circulated
among agencies outside the Interior Department, suggesting that the
proposals are in the late stage of consideration.
"We hope Interior
will back off on this," Patterson said. "It's a radical
weakening of the Endangered Species Act."
------
On the Web:
Public Employees for
Environmental Responsibility: http://www.peer.org
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