ENDANGERED SPECIES:Obama admin drops bid to restore prairie chicken protections
Corbin Hiar, E&E
reporter
Published: Thursday, May 12, 2016
A lesser prairie chicken
in New Mexico. Photo courtesy of Wikipedia.
The Obama administration
this week gave up its legal push to reinstate protections for the lesser
prairie chicken, a move that was celebrated by conservative lawmakers and
lamented by environmentalists.
The Department of Justice
filed a motion Tuesday
with the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to dismiss the administration's
challenge of a ruling by the U.S. District Court for the Western District of
Texas.
Judge Robert Junell's decision
last year overturned a regulation issued in spring 2014 by the Fish and
Wildlife Service that added the imperiled member of the grouse family to the
threatened species list in Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Kansas and Colorado.
The case against the listing was brought by the Texas Permian Basin Petroleum
Association and three oil-rich New Mexico counties.
Junell concluded that FWS
failed to consider the extent to which a rangewide conservation plan crafted
and administered by state wildlife agencies and supported by energy companies
and landowners would ameliorate the chicken's top threats -- including energy
development, livestock grazing, tree encroachment and conversion of rangeland
to crops (Greenwire,
Sept. 3, 2015).
Earlier this year, Junell
also refused to amend his ruling. The Obama administration had asked him to
send the listing decision back to FWS so the agency could make a new
determination taking the rangewide plan fully into account or, at the very
least, to limit his ruling to Texas and New Mexico, the states from which the
plaintiffs who challenged the listing hailed (E&ENews PM,
Feb. 29).
At the time of the prairie
chicken listing, the bird's native grassland and prairie habitat had shrunk
by 84 percent. Since then, the Western Association of Fish and Wildlife
Agencies, which is implementing the rangewide plan, has struggled to offset
the impacts of development on the species (Greenwire,
April 1).
FWS now "intends to
reassess the status of the species based on the court's ruling and the best
available scientific data," agency spokesman Brian Hires said in an
email. "The Service will continue working with states, other federal
agencies and partners on efforts to conserve the lesser prairie chicken
across its range."
Republican members of
Congress celebrated the conclusion of the case and vowed to continue battling
any further attempts by FWS to protect the bird under the Endangered Species
Act.
"The Obama
administration's decision not to appeal a district court ruling, throwing out
the listing of the lesser prairie-chicken as a threatened species, is welcome
and different news from this administration," Oklahoma Sen. Jim Inhofe,
chairman of the Environment and Public Works Committee, said in a statement.
"However, even with this win, I will be looking to put safeguards in
place to block the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service from revisiting the issue
until the states' plan has time to develop and show its success."
Other Republicans hoped
the administration's change of heart would extend to its management of other
imperiled species.
"This is a huge win
for New Mexico," said Rep. Steve Pearce, who has represented the
southern half of the Land of Enchantment for 11 years. "While I am happy
with the administration's decision today, it is disappointing the
administration took this long to realize how successful private landowners
and states are at managing the species. I hope in the future they take local
conservation efforts into meaningful consideration prior to any listing
decision."
Conservationists, many of
whom have long been critical of the rangewide plan, argued that the
administration should take a different lesson from the case.
"It doesn't matter
how much you compromise or appease corporate interests and states, they'll
sue anyway," said Erik Molvar, a wildlife biologist with WildEarth
Guardians, a group that has a similarly litigious relationship with FWS.
"So you might as well stop playing politics and do your job competently,
based on the science, the way the law intended."
Meanwhile, the Center for
Biological Diversity is considering a lawsuit to force a speedy review of the
prairie chicken's status under the law -- even though it fears that may not
be enough to save the bird from extinction.
"We are evaluating
our options, but nothing is going to get this bird the protections it needs
in a timely manner, unless the service is proactive about relisting it,"
said Brett Hartl, CBD's endangered species policy director. "We are
extremely pessimistic on that prospect."
Reprinted from Greenwire
with permission from Environment & Energy Publishing,
LLC
www.eenews.net - 202-628-6500 |
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