
Senators
question Bush endangered wildlife plan
By
Deborah Zabarenko, Environment Correspondent
Reuters
April 25, 2007
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A
Bush administration plan to change rules of the Endangered Species Act
protecting American wildlife drew pointed questions on Wednesday from
five
U.S.
senators, who called the
proposed changes "troubling."
The senators posed 15
questions to Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne, asking for full
responses within one month, with no forward movement on rule-making
until they are answered.
"If the draft
revisions had been in place thirty years ago, it is hard to imagine that
we ever could have achieved the successes -- with bald eagles, grizzly
bears, sea turtles, sea otters and many other species -- of which we now
are deservedly proud," the senators wrote in a letter to
Kempthorne.
The letter was signed by
independent senators Joseph Lieberman of
Connecticut
and Bernard Sanders of
Vermont, and Democrats Barbara Boxer of
California
, Frank Lautenberg of
New Jersey
and Benjamin Cardin of
Maryland
.
An Interior Department
spokesman, Hugh Vickery, said the proposed rules the senators questioned
were part of an old document not now under consideration. He said the
department is looking for recommendations on how to administer the
Endangered Species Act more consistently.
Environmental activists
raised alarms about the draft rules change last month, saying the
revisions would weaken the act so much that about 80 percent of the
1,300 species now on the endangered list would lose protection.
The activists also said
government documents they obtained indicate revisions were being made as
recently as February.
QUESTIONS
Among other things, the
lawmakers asked how the proposed changes would improve wildlife
conservation and recovery and which industry or commercial groups had
"input" on them.
The National Audubon
Society's Mike Daulton criticized the Bush administration. "The
public is clamoring for conservation solutions to problems like energy
and global warming and what they're getting are half-baked ideas like
gutting the Endangered Species Act and shutting down wildlife
refuges," Daulton said in an e-mail.
Daulton referred to
problems caused by long-running money troubles in the National Wildlife
Refuge System, the subject of a report released on Wednesday by a
coalition of conservation and sporting groups.
The report,
"Restoring America's Wildlife Legacy 2007," said
U.S.
wildlife refuges are
operating at half the funding levels needed for proper maintenance, and
recommended $765 million in annual funding.
David Eisenhauer of the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which has responsibility for the
refuges, acknowledged the financial problems.
"Do we repair this
road or do we build an addition to a visitor center? (Regional
officials) are really going through a soul searching now in terms of
priorities, with the ultimate goal of being able to carry out their
trust responsibilities," Eisenhauer said by telephone.
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Source:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/25/AR2007
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