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The changes are fiercely
technical and complicated, but make future listings extremely difficult,
redefine key concepts to the detriment of protected species, virtually
hand over administration of the act to hostile states, and severely
restrict habitat protections.
Many of the changes --
lifted from unsuccessful legislative proposals from then-Senator (now
Interior Secretary) Dirk Kempthorne and the recently defeated
congressman Richard Pombo -- are reactions to policies and practices
established as a result of litigation filed by environmental
organizations including Earthjustice.
"After the failure
of these legislative proposals in the last Congress, the Bush
administration has opted to gut the Endangered Species Act through the
only avenue left open: administrative regulations," said Hasselman.
"This end-run around the will of Congress and the American people
will not succeed."
A major change would make
it more difficult for a species to gain protection, by scaling back the
"foreseeable future" timeframe in which to consider whether a
species is likely to become extinct. Instead of looking far enough ahead
to be able to reasonably determine whether a species could be heading
for extinction, the new regulations would drastically shorten the
timeframe to either 20 years or 10 generations at the agency's
discretion. For species with long generations like killer whales and
grizzly bears, this truncated view of the future isn't nearly enough
time to accurately predict whether they are at-risk now.
"These draft
regulations represent a total rejection of the values held by the vast
majority Americans: that we have a responsibility to protect imperiled
species and the special places they call home," said Kate Freund,
Legislative Associate at Earthjustice.
According to several
sources within the Fish and Wildlife Service quoted by Salon, hostility
to the law within the agency has never been so intense. "I have 20
years of federal service in this and this is the worst it has ever
been," one unnamed source is quoted as saying.
In addition, the proposal
would allow projects by the Forest Service and other agencies to proceed
even if scientific evidence suggests that the projects might drive
species to extinction so long as the rate of decline doesn't accelerate
owing to the project.
The Bush administration's
antipathy to the law is shown by the numbers of species it has
protected, in each case as the result of litigation -- 57. By
comparison, 253 species were listed during the Reagan administration,
521 under
The administration
reportedly had expected to reveal the new regulations in a few weeks.
The draft regulations must be published in the Federal Register for
public comment before they can become final, which is likely to be at
least a year off.
Contact:
Jan Hasselman,
Earthjustice, (206) 343-7340, ext. 25
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Source: http://www.earthjustice.org/news/press/007/bush-administration-rewrite-of-
endangered-species-act-regulations-would-gut-protections.html