Glimmer of hope for ESA

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1995:

WASHINGTON D.C.––The Endangered Species
Act is still in trouble in both the Republican-dominated
Congress and the White House, where President Bill Clinton
has repeatedly shown willingness to compromise species protection
for conservative support––but some backing for a
strong ESA is emerging among eastern Republicans.
Countering a Senate bill introduced by Slade
Gorton (R-Washington) last spring and a similar House bill
introduced in late summer by Don Young (R-Alaska) and
Richard Pombo (R-California), which would effectively
rescind the ESA, Maryland Republican Representatives
Wayne Gilcrest and Connie Morella at the end of September
brought forth a bill to reauthorize the key provisions of the
current ESA, adopted in 1973.
Co-sponsors of the Gilcrest/Morella bill include
Sherwood Boehlert (R-N.Y.), Michael Castle (R-Delaware),
Christopher Shays (R-Connecticut), and Jim Greenwood and
Curt Weldon, both Republicans from Pennsylvania.
“An important facet of this bill is what it doesn’t
do,” said Gilcrest. “It doesn’t abandon species recovery as
the primary focus of the ESA. It doesn’t create an expensive,
bureaucratic compensation entitlement. It doesn’t walk away
from the protection of critical habitat, and it doesn’t relax the
prohibition on international trafficking in endangered
species,” all of which would result from passage of the
Gorton and Young/Pombo bills.
As anticipated, the House Resource Committee,
headed by Young, on October 13 rejected the
Gilcrest/Morella bill, 17-28, but approved the
Young/Pombo bill, 27-17, after allowing an amendment
offered by Representative John Shadegg (R-Arizona) to
weaken endangered species protection still further by requiring
that all federal lands be managed for their “primary mission,”
such as logging, grazing, recreation, or mining,
rather than for multiple use as they are managed now, which
gives conservation equal priority. Both votes split largely
along party lines.
As they stand, Clinton would veto the Gorton and
Young/Pombo bills, says Assistant Interior Secretary George
Frampton Jr.
Confirmed George Miller (D-California), the ranking
Democrat on the House Resources Committee, “The
Young/Pombo bill’s provisions on compensation, gutting the
habitat protection requirements, and redefining species
assures a presidential veto––assuming this travesty could ever
make it to the White House.”
As ANIMAL PEOPLE went to press, Senator
Dirk Kempthorne (R-Idaho) was expected to introduce yet
another bill to undo the ESA, modeled on the Gorton bill.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, meanwhile, reportedly
favors an ESA reauthorization bill offered by Jim Saxton
(R-New Jersey). In Georgia on October 12 to receive an
award from Zoo Atlanta, of which he is a longtime major
patron, Gingrich indicated that whatever ESA bill eventually
clears the House will have to go through his newly formed
Republican Environmental Task Force first––which gives him
rather than Young the most authority over what shape it takes.
Amid the signs of pro-ESA sentiment, proto-wise
use wiseguy Chuck “Rent-A-Riot” Cushman added a new
organization, Repeal ESA Now, to the string he began in
1979 with the National Inholders Association. According to
Roger Featherstone of ESA Action, Repeal ESA Now “is a
typical wise-use stealth tactic to redefine the radical fringe.
The wise-use crowd will use this new ‘group’ to make supporters
of the Young/Pombo bill appear to be moderate.”
Like most of Cushman’s quasi-grassroots groups,
Repeal ESA Now appears to consist of a mailing list, fax and
telephone trees, and a post office box––this one in Coventry,
Rhode Island. The president is Brian Bishop of the rightwing
Alliance for America.
Wildlife budget battle
As important as the structure of the ESA itself may
be the structure of funding and spending for wildlife programs.
The Senate Judiciary Committee on October 18 held a
hearing on a bill parallel to one already passed by the House
which would require the government to pay property owners
for any loss of land value of one third or more resulting from
federal rules, including endangered species and wetlands protection.
Introduced by Senate majority leader Bob Dole (RKansas),
the bill would cost federal agencies $30 million to
$40 million a year to administer, and would pay out a lesser
amount in claims, according to a Congressional Budget
Office estimate. However, the White House Office of
Management and Budget––whose own budget the Republican
House hopes to eliminate––argues that the actual tab would
be close to $4 billion a year.
Earlier, on September 21, a Senate/House conference
committee on the Interior Department budget voted to
open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in northeastern
Alaska to oil and gas exploration, a longtime goal of Young
and Murkowski; voted to continue a moratorium on listing
new endangered and threatened species, cutting off related
funding; voted to merge the National Biological Service
formed by Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt into the U.S.
Geological Service; voted to increase logging in the Tongass
National Forest by about a third while barring the establishment
of new habitat conservation areas within the Tongass,
at the urging of Senator Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), who chairs
the Interior Subcommittee of the Senate Appropriations
Committee; and voted to kill $2 million in funding for
National Park Service administration of the newly created
East Mojave preserve, and instead allocate $600,000 for continued
administration by the Bureau of Land Management.
The resolution on the East Mojave was authored by California
Representative Jerry Lewis (R-Redlands), who owns land
within the preserve and wants to keep it open to mining,
ranching, hunting, off-road vehicle use, and economic
development.
Faced with the likelihood of a White House veto,
House Budget Committee chair John Kasish is reportedly
ready to introduce a substitute budget bill which would eliminate
the provision for oil and gas drilling in ANWR. “There
is a growing feeling in the Republican Party,” Kasish told the
Journal of Commerce, “that just like we have to save our
financial future for our kids, we have to save the environment
for our kids, too.” Thirty moderate Republicans have
asked Gingrich to endorse such a bill on behalf of ANWR.
Non-game funding
Reluctant to allocate general revenues toward
species protection, but hearing increasing clamor on behalf
of endangered species, Congress may look toward alternatives,
in particular one long advocated by the International
Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies. IAFWA, chiefly
representing state fish and game departments, wants
Congress to impose a tax on camping equipment, cameras
and film, field guides, binoculars, bird feeders and birdhouses,
and recreational vehicles, as a funding source for
nongame conservation programs, including endangered
species protection. Modeled on the Pittman-Robertson levy
of 11% on hunting and fishing equipment, which has
financed game programs since 1937, the proposed tax is
energetically backed by hunting fronts including the National
Wildlife Federation, National Audubon Society, Ducks
Unlimited, Society for Conservation Biology, World
Wildlife Fund, and Pennsylvania Federation of Sportsmen’s
Clubs. Hunters argue that the use of any Pittman-Robertson
or hunting license revenues for nongame programs is an
unfair diversion––even though very little money actually is so
diverted. A 1992 IAFWA study found that about 250 game
species and high-profile endangered species are beneficiaries
of more than 95% of the money spent by public agencies on
U.S. wildlife, leaving 1,800 other mammals, birds, reptiles,
and amphibians to share just 5%.
Spreading the funding basis of wildlife programs to
non-consumptive users could break the hunting/fishing stranglehold
on wildlife management. A wildlife agency not
dependent upon hunting and fishing for revenue would have
much more freedom to close seasons and enforce conservation
and property protection laws unpopular with hunters.
Seeking enforcement
The Biodiversity Legal Foundation, the Fund for
Animals, and grassroots groups meanwhile continue to seek
court mandates for ESA enforcement despite the will of
Congress and the concessions of the Clinton administration.
On October 17, BLF filed notice of intent to sue the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service for issuing the July 19 directive that
implemented the moratorium on listing endangered and
threatened species by erasing the C-2 list of nearly 4,000 proposed
candidate species.
BLF also served notice of intent to sue USFWS for
failure to add the blacktailed prairie dog to the C-2 list. “A C2
designation would not provide any legal protection for the
prairie dog,” a BLF release stated, “but would encourage
conservation measures and allow for maximum flexibility in
land management. It is clearly a reasonable course of action
for this grassland keystone species, but it was rejected by
USFWS due to political pressure. Improved protection of the
prairie dog ecosystem would help to conserve a fascinating
diversity of native wildlife on the Great Plains, including the
blackfooted ferret, swift fox, ferruginous hawk, burrowing
owl, and many other species now in decline. The eventual
listing of a number of these species under the ESA could be
avoided if state and federal agencies were to adequately protect
and restore the prairie dog ecosystem.”
On October 4, the Fund, BLF, and Swan View
Coalition won a round when U.S. District Judge Paul
Friedman ruled that USFWS acted in an “arbitrary and capricious”
manner in issuing a recovery plan for grizzly bears in
1993 that “fails to establish objective, measureable criteria
which when met would result in a determination, in accor
dance with the provisions of the ESA, that the grizzly bear be
removed from the threatened species list.”
Said Fund attorney Eric Glitzenstein, “This is the
first time a species recovery plan has been successfully challenged
in court. Our victory sets a precedent that USFWS is
required by law to base recovery plans on scientific data and
objective evidence of real recovery––not on the desires of
those who wish to hasten delisting for their own purposes,”
namely the game agencies of Montana and Wyoming.
Montana permitted grizzly bear hunting until forced to stop by
a Fund lawsuit in 1991, while the Wyoming administration
also has indicated interest in starting a grizzly season when
and if the bears are delisted.
Two days later, on October 6, the Fund and
Australians for Animals served notice of intent to sue if
USFWS fails to act on a May 1994 petition to list the koala as
endangered. “By law,” explained spokesperson Mike
Markarian, “USFWS must publish a finding on the petition
one year after receiving it.”

BLOOD SPORTS

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1995:

Facing the release of undercover
video obtained at a summer live
turkey shoot by the Chicago Animal
Rights Coalition, the Lone Pine
Sportsman’s Club of Middleport,
Pennsylvania cancelled an encore shoot set
for October 15. “Lone Pine agreed to permanently
stop live animal shoots almost
immediately when they found out we had
the video,” CHARC president Steve Hindi
said, “even before we released the footage
to media. They specifically said they
didn’t want their town to become the next
Hegins. We know other live turkey shoots
are still held in the area, and we will now
be hunting them.”

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Dolphin-safe tuna law erased by treaty

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1995:

PANAMA CITY, Panama– – The
U.S. embargo against imports of tuna netted
“on dolphin” collapsed October 4 as the Bill
Clinton administration signed the Declaration
of Panama, a treaty which redefines “dolphin-safe”
from zero preventable dolphin
deaths to killing under 5,000 per year.
Accepted under pressure from the
anti-regulation Republican Congress and the
enforcement panels of the General Agreement
on Trade and Tariffs and the North American
Free Trade Agreement, the treaty is expected
to be quickly ratified by the Senate.

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Republicans charge against ESA

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1995:

WASHINGTON D.C. – – T h e
Congressional rush to gut the Endangered
Species Act gained momentum on September
7 when Republican representatives Don
Young (R-Alaska) and Richard Pombo (RCalifornia)
introduced the most aggressive
rollback measure yet. Titled HR 2275, the
Endangered Species Conservation
Management Act of 1995, it was immediately
endorsed by Rep. Billy Lauzin (R-La.) and
Rep. Bill Brewster (D-Okla.) Young
claimed to have 95 cosponsors in all.
The Young/Pombo bill would
repeal the portion of the ESA cited in the
Supreme Court’s June 29 verdict that it does
cover critical habitat as well as individuals of
protected species. Tax breaks would be
given to landowners who protect habitat, but
the government would have to compensate
landowners for any mandatory conservation
measures that harm property values. The
Secretary of the Interior would be allowed to
determine that a species should go extinct.
A peer review requirement for all
listing decisions was cited by Defenders of
Wildlife analysts as a prescription for indefinite
delay. Added Defenders, “Under the
pretense of creating a National Biological
Diversity Reserve, the Young/Pombo bill
would eliminate habitat protection requirements
on many federal lands. In addition,
the consultation requirements of the ESA
would be drastically altered to allow federal
agencies to destroy habitat and needlessly
harm threatened and endangered species.”
Subspecies and geographically or
biologically isolated populations, such as
particular salmon runs, could only be protected
through special acts of Congress.
While Young pledged that his bill
would be on the floor of the House for a vote
by November, it is not expected to advance
unamended. However, as chair of the House
Resources Committee, with fellow Alaska
Republican Frank Murkowski chairing the
counterpart Senate committee, Young is
well-positioned to push for passage of the
central features of his bill, which are likely
to be merged with similar features from previously
introduced bills addressing the ESA.
The Young/Pombo bill most resembles
the Endangered Species Act Reform Act
of 1995, drafted by a coalition of lobbyists
for the timber and construction industries,
and introduced last spring by Sen. Slade
Gorton (R-Wash..) Like the Gorton bill, it is
opposed not only by animal and habitat protection
groups, but also by the Pacific Coast
Federation of Fishermen’s Associations,
which is engaged in an ongoing conflict with
timber interests over the preservation of
spawning streams.
Traffic encouraged
The Endangered Species Coalition
online briefing for September 8 noted that
“Provisions in the ESA which protect foreign
wildlife including elephants, leopards, and
antelope would be eliminated” by the
Young/Pombo bill, reflecting “recommendations
made to Young in a March 10 letter
from the governments of Zimbabwe,
Botswana, Malawi, and Namibia. The bill
lifts all ESA controls on the import of sporthunted
trophies of threatened species,” the
briefing added, “and forbids the U.S. from
imposing stronger import restrictions on
threatened species than those required by the
Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species.”
Some pressure for amendments
favorable to animals could come from House
Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.), who on
July 13 took the floor during trimming of the
Interior Department budget to defend aid to
rhino, tiger, and elephant conservation programs
abroad.
Hoping for passage of the parts of
the Young/Pombo bill pertaining to international
wildlife traffic, the Southern African
Development Community is already setting
up a joint marketing plan for elephant ivory
culled from state-owned herds. Members of
the SADC include Angola, Botswana,
Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia,
South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania,
Zambia, and Zimbabwe––but not all of them
favor selling ivory.
The plan was announced in the
wake of a World Wildlife Fund warning that
the Vietnamese elephant herd has dropped
from 2,000 in 1980 to barely 300, due to
habitat loss and ivory poaching. WWF
argues that resuming the sale of ivory from
Africa will undercut Asian poachers, but the
market didn’t exactly work that way before
1989, when the present CITES moratorium
on international ivory sales was imposed.
WWF also warned that there are no
more than 1,500 tigers left in all of Indochina
due to poaching stimulated by traditional
Chinese medicinal demand for tiger bone.
Another reminder of the reality of
wildlife trafficking came from Virunga
National Park in Zaire, where six members
of an Italian family including two children
were massacred by poachers on an August 6
expedition to see gorillas. A week later, two
mountain gorillas were killed nearby.
Canada
The anti-endangered species political
mood in Congress seemed to flow north.
On August 17, more than 20 years after
Canada joined CITES, and three years after
Canada ratified the United Nations
Convention on Biological Diversity, a draft
Canadian Endangered Species Protection Act
was finally introduced into Parliament.
Purporting to protect 244 species officially
believed to be at risk, the bill was crafted to
avoid any hint of infringing on either provincial
sensibilities or private property rights.
“Canada’s proposed ‘national’
endangered species legislation will proffer
protection, if every vested interest in Canada
agrees, to the minute fraction of Canadian
wildlife inhabiting federal lands and waters,”
assessed International Wildlife Coalition representative
Anne Doncaster, “and provide
virtually no protection to wildlife habitat.”
Added Ronald Orenstein, also of
IWC, “Listing a species will not require the
federal government or anyone else to do one
thing to protect it. All it requires is that a
Response Statement be prepared––but this
statement may conclude that no effort will be
made to recover the species.”
No refuge
Other bills affecting endangered
species with a likelihood of passage include
HR 1977, the Interior Appropriations Bill,
already passed in draft form by both the
House and Senate. The House and Senate
versions are now being reconciled before
final ratification. They include a moratorium
on new endangered and threatened species
listings pending passage of a revised ESA,
and either the abolition (House) or significant
reduction of the budget of (Senate) the
National Biological Survey.
Less threatening to species but with
i 2mplications for habitat, the House has also
advanced measures that if ratified by the
Senate could reduce the National Park system,
accelerate logging in the National
Forests, and open the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling, a longtime
goal of Alaskan politicians because every
state resident would get a royalty from the
proceeds. And then there was HB 1112,
from Rep. Brewster, which would turn the
Tishomingo National Wildlife Refuge over to
the state of Oklahoma so that food plots
could be used to lure an estimated 100,000
ducks and 45,000 geese within range of
hunters’ shotguns––Brewster’s admitted goal.

Thrill-killing

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1995:

Heeding an appeal from Brigitte Bardot, the cabinet of
Lebanon on August 30 reaffirmed a national ban on hunting imposed
effective January 1. The Association of Gun Salesmen had pushed for the
opening of a 14-week hunting season, to have begun on September 15.
The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, spending $50,000 to
restore elk to the Chequamegon National Forest in Illinois, in hopes of
building a huntable herd, has included in this year’s budget $5,500 for
30,000 posters explaining to hunters how to tell an elk from a deer and
why none of the recently released elk seed stock should be shot just yet.
Canada has begun phasing out the legal use of lead shot, to
prevent lead posioning of waterfowl and raptors who eat fish containing
lead pellets, and will ban lead shot entirely by 1997, says environment
minister Sheila Copps. The U.S. has been phasing out legal use of lead
shot for more than a decade, banning it from use over water at the
Missisquoi National Wildlife Refuge in Vermont in 1985 and proposing
to ban it from more sites each year since, including use over land against
small game at 43 refuges effective in 1996 under amendments to federal
regulations published on August 16. However, U.S. ammunition makers
continue to sell lead shot; Canadians buy $6 million worth per year.

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Hog slurry isn’t the only stench in North Carolina

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 1995:

RALEIGH, N.C.––”Boss Hog,” a
two-section expose of the political influence
and environmental consequences of the pork
industry, published on March 19 by the
Raleigh News & Observer, became a hot item
after a manure storage lagoon broke on June 21
at Oceanview Farms in Onslow, North
Carolina, spilling more than 25 million gallons
of slurry into nearby fields and streams.
By contrast, Henry Spira of the
Coalition for Nonviolent Food pointed out, the
Exxon Valdez spill involved “only” 11 million
gallons of crude oil.
The same day, a similar spill
occurred in Sampson, N.C., and less than two
weeks later, a lagoon in Duplin County, N.C.,
dumped 8.6 million gallons of poultry slurry
into tributaries of the Cape Fear River.

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TRIPLE TROUBLE FOR HUMANE SOCIETY OF US

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 1995:

WASHINGTON D.C.––August 10 dawned bright
for the Humane Society of the U.S., as newspapers across the
country carried a photo of HSUS director of legislative affairs
Wayne Pacelle and Senator Rick Santorum (R-Pa.) decrying
puppy mills at a press conference held the day before to
announce that Santorum and 14 other Senators had jointly
signed a letter to Agriculture Secretary Daniel Glickman,
seeking stiffer enforcement of the Animal Welfare Act.
Then someone noticed that the letter Santorum sent
was markedly different from the letter sent by 110 House
members and three Senators in the same cause––and the
effect of Santorum’s letter was to undercut the House letter,
whose signers were rallied by Rep. Glenn Poshard (D-Ill.)
The Poshard letter, circulated to potential signers
on June 27 and delivered to Glickman on August 8, asked for
Glickman’s “strong support” in imposing ten specific new
standards for puppy and kitten breeding facilities: “Increase
basic cage size for companion animals permanently housed in
the facilities; improve flooring within the primary enclosures
by requiring plastic-coated wire of a specific width; increase
the size and material of the resting surface for each animal in
a primary enclosure; require constant access to potable water
for all animals housed in the facility; limit the number of
times/frequency breeding stock can be bred over a certain
time period; strengthen the sanitation requirements for the
primary enclosure; eliminate the ability to tether animals;
reexamine temperature guidelines; require more specific
daily exercise of animals at the facilities; exclude ‘another
dog’ as acceptable exercise.”

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Momentum for ESA revision slows

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 1995:

WASHINGTON D.C.––Congressional observers predict that proposed revisions
to the Endangered Species Act won’t be taken up in earnest by the House and Senate until
1996––and that could be favorable for species protection, since drastic actions are less like-
ly in an election year. With polls showing the Republican House majority winning an
approval rating of less than 35%, and continued strong public support for the ESA in prin-
ciple, a severely damaged ESA could cost many first-term Republicans their seats.
Showing awareness of the importance of good positioning on endangered species,
the Senate on August 9 crushed an amendment proposed by Jesse Helms (R-N.C.) to delete
funding for the red wolf recovery program in North Carolina and Tennessee. Helms
claimed there are 170 red wolves at large in his state, killing livestock and on one occasion
attacking a child—but was corrected by red wolf supporters, who reminded him that the
Fish and Wildlife Service puts the North Carolina wolf population at from 39 to 66; none
have ever attacked either livestock or a child; and a recent survey by North Carolina State
University found that the majority of North Carolinians favor the wolf recovery program.

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YELLOWSTONE: The steam isn’t all from geysers

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 1995:

YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK––Filmed in Grand Teton National Park, just south of Yellowstone, the 1952 western classic Shane depicted stubborn men who thought them-selves reasonable in a tragic clash over limited range. Alan Ladd, in the title role, won the big showdown, then rode away pledging there would be no more guns in the valley.

But more than a century after the Shane era, the Yellowstone range wars not only smoulder on, but have heated up. To the north, in rural Montana, at least three times this year armed wise-users have holed up for months, standing off bored cordons of sheriff’s deputies, who wait beyond bullet range to arrest them for not paying taxes and taking the law into their own hands.

One of the besieged, Gordon Sellner, 57, was wounded in an alleged shootout and arrested on July 19 near Condon. Sellner, who said he hadn’t filed a tax return in 20 years, was wanted for attempted murder, having allegedly shot a sheriff’s deputy in 1992. A similar siege goes on at Roundup, where Rodney Skurdahl and four others are wanted for allegedly issuing a “citizen’s declaration of war” against the state and federal governments and posting boun-ties on public officials. At Darby, near the Bitterroot National Forest, elk rancher Calvin Greenup threatens to shoot anyone who tries to arrest him for allegedly plotting to “arrest,” “try,” and hang local authorities. Greenup is Montana coordinator of the North American Volunteer Militia.

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