In a move environmental groups
says strikes at the heart of the Endangered
Species Act, the Bush administration on Thursday
announced a new rule that would let federal
agencies decide on their own whether their
projects harm endangered species, instead of
requiring them in many cases to get a second
opinion from federal wildlife experts.
Opponents said the move
destroys the checks and balances that have
helped the government save hundreds of species
from extinction under the 1973 law.
Conservation groups argued the
changes were illegal and threatened to file
lawsuits to get them thrown out. They also said
they hoped President-elect Barack Obama would
take steps after he takes office to limit the
effects of the rules and start a new process to
rewrite them.
Interior Secretary Dirk
Kempthorne said the reason for the rule change
was linked to global warming.
Kempthorne listed the polar
bear as a threatened species in May but said
that the Endangered Species Act could not be
used to try to halt global warming. The new
regulation specifies that there is no need for
consultations when the harm to endangered or
threatened species is a result from a global
process that's too broad to measure.
Kempthorne said it's
impossible to pinpoint the death of any single
animal from emissions from any single polluter.
In fact, emissions of heat-trapping gases
disperse evenly in the atmosphere around the
globe and remain there for centuries. The
resulting warming and melting of polar ice have
put the polar bear at risk of extinction by
mid-century, scientists have said.
"We made it very clear that
the Endangered Species Act was never intended to
be a backdoor for climate change policy," he
said. "We felt it important that we make
modifications to the rules so that the door
isn't allowed to be opened and it's not
beneficial."
The rule changes also go
further and specify that federal agencies are
not required to consult with the biologists of
the two agencies that enforce the act - the Fish
and Wildlife Service and the National Marine
Fisheries Services - if they think a project
such as a timber sale or construction of a power
plant won't harm or kill a threatened or
endangered species. The changes do not rule out
voluntary consultations.
The Interior Department on
Thursday also finalized a rule implementing
another section of the Endangered Species Act to
clarify that it will not protect polar bears
from oil and gas development or greenhouse gas
emissions.
The Endangered Species Act
makes it illegal to kill or harm an animal
listed by the government as threatened or
endangered. The federal government issues
permits for construction and other activities
but must ensure that these animals or plants and
their habitat would not be jeopardized.
The Interior Department
proposed the rules changes in August and offered
a 30-day comment period, which it extended by
another 30 days. It received nearly 235,000
comments, and about 200,000 of those were
against the change, said Secretary for Fish and
Wildlife and Parks Lyle Laverty. About 150,000
of those comments were form letters.
Kempthorne said some people
within the Interior Department also disagreed
with his proposal.
The Interior Department sent
the new regulations to the Federal Register on
Thursday, the last step in making them final.
They will take effect before President George W.
Bush leaves office.
Laverty said agencies could
still voluntarily seek the experts' advice when
they weren't sure if endangered species would be
harmed. But, he added, "most agencies have the
skills that can help make that determination."
He also said the rule change
would free up the wildlife and fisheries
agencies' experts to focus on priority problems.
Jamie Rappaport Clark, who
headed the Fish and Wildlife Service under the
Clinton administration, said the changes put
more species in jeopardy.
"It's clearly allowing the fox
to guard the chicken coop," she said.
Although other agencies employ
biologists, their main mission isn't
conservation, said Clark, who now heads the
conservation group Defenders of Wildlife. What's
more, it's not always readily apparent that an
action will have a harmful effect, and agencies
could make unintentional mistakes, she said.
"Wildlife and marine
biologists form the pillars of scientific
integrity that support the Endangered Species
Act," John Kostyack of the National Wildlife
Federation said in a statement. "Knocking them
out of the decision-making process will erode
the foundation of this bedrock law and make it
significantly harder to protect endangered
species."
Andrew Wetzler of the Natural
Resources Defense Council said the changes were
illegal.
"I think we will see them in
court," he said.
Dale Hall, director of the
Fish and Wildlife Service, said there would be
fewer consultations under the new rules.
Hall said he told Kempthorne
earlier that he worried there would not be
enough time for Interior staff to look carefully
at the comments and evaluate them. In the end,
however, he said he was satisfied and had no
problem with the final regulations themselves.
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