
Appeals
Court Will Rule on
Oregon
Salmon Plan - Activists
challenged decision by state, federal officials
February 1, 2008
(released
January 14, 2008
)
Written By: E. Jay Donovan
Published In: Environment News
Publication Date:
February 1, 2008
Publisher: The Heartland Institute
19 South LaSalle Street, Suite 903
Chicago
,
IL
60603
312-377-4000
think@heartland.org
The state of
Oregon
's determination that
Oregon
coast coho salmon no longer
require Endangered Species Act (ESA) protection is headed for review in
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
The issue reached the
appellate court after a district court judge overruled the scientific
judgment of Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife officials and the
U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service.
Salmon Population
Rising
The population of
Oregon
coast coho salmon had been
in a long-term decline until 1997, when 14,000 salmon made spawning runs
in
Oregon
coastal rivers. The salmon
were given ESA protection the next year, and the number of salmon
spawning in
Oregon
coastal rivers has
significantly risen in the 10 years since.
In 2006,
Oregon
fish and wildlife officials
determined ESA protection was no longer needed, and the U.S. National
Marine Fisheries Service agreed, making the
Oregon
coast coho the only species
of salmon in the
Pacific Northwest
not protected under ESA.
Environmental activist
groups sued in federal district court and won. Attorneys with the
Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF) on December 13 appealed the district
judge's decision.
Law Requires Deference
"In deciding that a
federal ESA listing was not necessary, the National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS) concluded that the State of
Oregon
's own salmon conservation
plan provided adequate protection," said Sonya D. Jones, an
attorney with PLF's
Pacific Northwest
office in
Bellevue
,
Washington
. "The federal court
overruled this decision and instructed NMFS not to take the State's
conservation efforts into account.
"We're appealing the
court ruling because the plain language of the ESA requires federal
regulators to consider state conservation efforts -- and defer to them
when they provide sufficient protection for species," Jones added.
Economic Concerns
Oregon Fish and Wildlife
Service officials had drafted a 10-year, multi-agency protection plan
for the salmon species. The Ninth Circuit will determine whether
Oregon
's proposed protection plan
is adequate.
"For federal courts
to treat state programs as irrelevant would undermine the confidence of
private property owners in local officials' regulatory efforts -- and
deter people from working cooperatively with state conservation
officials. It would also weaken incentives for the states themselves to
be creative and resourceful in protecting species within their
borders," said Jones.
"A substantial
portion of
Tillamook
Forest
-- both state-owned and
private lands -- would be affected by such a federal listing. This could
hurt local communities that depend, in part, on responsible timber
harvesting for jobs and economic well-being. It could also affect
fishing families and communities that rely on the fishing
industry," Jones added.
E. Jay Donovan edonovan@gte.net
is a freelance writer based in
Tampa
,
Florida
.
No copyright located at
originating website address / URL or website's home page.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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Source:
http://www.heartland.org/Article.cfm?artId=22616
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