|
|
|
|
|
| Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
From the day it became
law 34 years ago, the federal Endangered Species Act has been
politically hot – a flash point of contention between defenders of
nature and advocates of economic progress. Now, the ESA is embroiled in
new controversy.
Two different government
entities are investigating decisions by Bush administration officials
related to species recovery. In one, the US Interior Department is
reviewing the scientific integrity of decisions under the law made by a
political appointee, who recently resigned under fire. At the same time,
Congress is investigating evidence that Vice President Dick Cheney
interfered with decisions involving water in
Both episodes illustrate
what critics say is the Bush administration's resistance to the law.
During President Bush's
time in the White House, the listing of endangered and threatened
species has slowed down considerably. It's a fraction of the number his
father made in four years (58 new listings compared with 231 by the
senior Bush), and most of those were court-ordered.
New funding for
protection of such species has been cut as well. As a result, 278
"candidate species" are waiting to join the list of 1,352
plant and animal species now listed as "endangered" or
"threatened."
Scientists and activists
see the ESA as the last chance for preventing extinction of dwindling
plants and animals ranging from the obscure – the rock gnome lichen,
for example – to the grizzly bear and other "charismatic
megafauna."
But to developers, it can
be a very costly impediment to business. And to farmers, ranchers,
loggers, and others whose work is land-based, it can threaten a
traditional way of life. Many fights over species protection have ended
up in federal court.
But it is the political
pressure on government scientists that is the current focus.
Following a critical
report by the inspector general of the Interior Department in March,
Julie MacDonald – the official in charge of fish and wildlife,
including those listed under the ESA – resigned.
Fish and Wildlife Service
employees complained that Ms. MacDonald had "bullied, insulted, and
harassed the professional staff … to change documents and alter
biological reporting," according to the report.
"We confirmed that
MacDonald has been heavily involved with editing, commenting on, and
reshaping the endangered species program's scientific reports from the
field," the inspector general wrote, also noting that "she has
no formal educational background in natural sciences, such as
biology."
The Interior Department
inspector general also found that MacDonald had "disclosed
nonpublic information to private sector sources" – special
interests that had a financial stake in species listing and protection
– including the California Farm Bureau Federation and the Pacific
Legal Foundation, a public interest law firm that specializes in
property rights advocacy and litigation.
Government officials
moved quickly to fix the political damage.
Last week, the director
of the US Fish and Wildlife Service (the Interior Department agency in
charge of endangered species programs) announced that eight decisions
MacDonald had made under the ESA would be examined for scientific and
legal discrepancies.
In a phone conference
with reporters, Fish and Wildlife Service director H. Dale Hall called
the episode "a blemish … on the scientific integrity" of the
agency. "When I became director, I made scientific integrity my
highest priority, and these reviews underscore our commitment to species
conservation," Mr. Hall said.
Critics welcomed the
action. But they want the internal review to include many more of some
200 species decisions that MacDonald had a hand in, such as those for
the marbled murrelet (a shore bird), the bull trout, and the
controversial northern spotted owl. Also, they say, the problem goes
deeper.
"The real culprit
here is not a renegade political appointee," says Francesca Grifo,
director of the Union of Concerned Scientists' (UCS) scientific
integrity program. "The real culprit is a process where decisions
are made behind closed doors."
In 2005, UCS surveyed
about 450 Fish and Wildlife Service scientists. Two-thirds said they
knew of cases where Interior Department political appointees had
interfered with scientific reports and decisions, and 84 said they had
been ordered to remove or change technical information from scientific
documents.
Political pressure is
alleged to have taken place during a summer drought in 2002 when
As reported in detail
recently by The Washington Post, Vice President Cheney intervened in
decisions involving a 10-year water plan for the
As a result of the low
water flows that summer, which make the water warmer and the fish more
prone to disease, some 70,000 salmon died. Since then, fish runs have
remained low, causing economic hardship for Indian tribes as well as
commercial and sport-fishing businesses along the West Coast.
The House Natural
Resources Committee has scheduled a hearing next week to investigate
"political influence … on agency science and decision
making." Cheney has been invited to testify, but he is not expected
to attend the hearing.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to:http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0725/p02s01-uspo.html