Nearly 70 Policy Groups Warn: Beware of
'Invasive Species' Regulations
Contact: Peyton Knight
(202) 543-4110 or pknight@nationalcenter.org
For Release: October 24, 2006
Washington, D.C. - The National Center for Public Policy
Research has delivered a coalition letter signed by representatives of
nearly 70 policy organizations to Senate Environmental and Public Works
Committee Chairman James Inhofe (R-OK) urging him to protect private
property rights by avoiding the creation of so-called "invasive
species" regulations. Senator Inhofe's committee holds
jurisdiction over such proposed initiatives.
"This ill-advised brainchild of the Bill Clinton era needs to go
the way of the Bill Clinton era," said Peyton Knight, director of
environmental and regulatory affairs for The National Center.
"Regulating the movement of plant and animal species based on
whether or not the fringe of the environmental movement considers them
'native' or 'non-native' has very little to do with sound science and
very much to do with controlling private property."
In 1999 President Bill Clinton signed an Executive Order that created
the "National Invasive Species Council" which broadly defines
"alien species" as "any species...that is not native to
that ecosystem." Since Clinton's Order, numerous regulatory
measures have surfaced in Congress that seek to control so-called
non-native species in ways that would likely harm private property
rights and Americans' access to public lands.
National policy organizations that signed the letter include:
Coalitions for America, the American Conservative Union, the National
Taxpayers Union, the Property Rights Foundation of America, the Capital
Research Center, the National Center for Policy Analysis and the
American Land Foundation.
State policy organizations, including the Oklahoma Council of Public
Affairs, the Bluegrass Institute, the Virginia Institute for Public
Policy, Oregonians in Action, the Rio Grande Foundation, the Mississippi
Center for Public Policy, the Tennessee Center for Policy Research and
Take Back Pennsylvania signed the letter as well.
The letter was also signed by the Honorable Edwin Meese III, who
served as U.S. Attorney General in the Reagan Administration, and former
U.S. Representatives Bob Barr and Jay Dickey.
Noting that invasive species regulations are arbitrary and ignore the
fact that "many non-native species are beneficial to ecosystems,
the environment, human health and the economy," the letter
concludes:
"We have seen how endangered species and wetlands regulations
can wreak havoc on Americans' constitutional right to private property.
Invasive species regulations have the potential to be even more damaging
to this fundamental right."
A copy of the letter can be found online at http://www.nationalcenter.org/InvasiveSpeciesLetter0906.pdf.
For more information on this issue, see "Invasive Species:
Animal, Vegetable or Political?" by National Center Senior Fellow
Dana Joel Gattuso, available online at http://www.nationalcenter.org/NPA544InvasiveSpecies.html.
The National Center for Public Policy Research is a conservative,
free-market think-tank established in 1982 and located on Capitol Hill.
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