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NEWS RELEASE
For Immediate Release

March 24, 2009
Contacts:
Mark Salvo, Director, Sagebrush Sea Campaign, WildEarth Guardians
· 503-757-4221
Becky King, Assistant County Attorney,
San Miguel County, Colorado · 970-728-3879
Erin Robertson, Senior Biologist, Center for Native Ecosystems ·
303-546-0214 x 5
Amy Atwood, Senior Attorney, Center for Biological Diversity ·
541-914-8372
Gunnison
Sage-grouse May Get Federal Protection
Interior Department Calls for New Decision
following Latest Investigation of Bush Administration's Interference in
Species Conservation
Telluride,
Colo. - The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has
filed a notice
with the U.S. District Court in Washington, DC, stating that, in light
of the latest investigative report on the Bush Administration's misapplication
of the Endangered Species Act, the agency will reconsider its decision
to deny protection to the Gunnison sage-grouse rendered in April 2006.
The report, released in December, was the second by the Inspector General
for the Department of the Interior that found that former Deputy Assistant
Secretary of the Interior Julie MacDonald and other Bush Administration
officials interfered with federal biologists' decisionmaking for multiple
endangered species, including the Gunnison sage-grouse. The Fish and Wildlife
Service has indicated that it will confer with plaintiffs concerning next
steps for the Gunnison sage-grouse.
"We are eager to secure protection for the Gunnison sage-grouse
as soon as possible. Long term viability of the species is unquestionably
at risk now, and every additional delay decreases the likelihood of full
recovery," said Commissioner Joan May of San Miguel County, Colorado.
San Miguel County led a coalition of conservation and government accountability
organizations to sue the Fish and Wildlife Service over its denial of
Endangered Species Act protection for the Gunnison sage-grouse in November
2006. Significant evidence was already available that Julie MacDonald
and other officials had interfered with the agency biologists' findings.
The latest report by the Inspector General confirmed previous information
that Bush Administration appointees pressured Fish and Wildlife Service
biologists and other staff to avoid protecting endangered species.
"I am not surprised that the Service will reconsider the earlier
decision by officials in the Bush Administration stripping 'candidate'
status from Gunnison sage-grouse," said Dr. Clait Braun, former Avian
Research Program Manager for the Colorado Division of Wildlife. "It
is time to move forward to benefit Gunnison sage-grouse and the habitats
they depend upon before it is too late for some populations to recover."
Audubon has identified Gunnison sage-grouse as among the ten
most endangered birds in the United States.
The Endangered Species Coalition also released a report in December identifying
Gunnison sage-grouse as one of
the most imperiled species in the country. Secretary of the Interior
Ken Salazar released another report last week, The
State of the Birds 2009
that found that western deserts and grasslands -- home to Gunnison sage-grouse
and other sensitive species -- are among the most degraded habitats in
the country.
"Endangered wildlife like Gunnison sage-grouse deserve a fair chance
at protection," said Erin Robertson, Senior Staff Biologist for Center
for Native Ecosystems in Denver. "After years of political interference,
it is time for a speedy, unbiased decision that will provide the Gunnison
sage-grouse the help it needs."
In addition to San Miguel County, plaintiffs in the current litigation
include (in alphabetical order) Audubon, Black Canyon Audubon Society,
Center for Biological Diversity, Center for Native Ecosystems, The Larch
Company, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, Sheep Mountain
Alliance, and WildEarth Guardians. Plaintiffs are represented by attorneys
with the Center for Biological Diversity, San Miguel County, and Western
Environmental Law Center.
"The Fish and Wildlife Service has recognized its error," said
Mark Salvo, Director of the Sagebrush Sea Campaign for WildEarth Guardians.
"The next step is to protect the Gunnison sage-grouse under the Endangered
Species Act."
The Gunnison sage-grouse is distinct from greater sage-grouse, identified
by researchers as early as the 1970s and recognized as a new species by
the American Ornithologists' Union in 2000. While its historic range may
have included parts of Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, and Arizona, the species
now occurs only in eight small populations in southwestern Colorado and
southeastern Utah. Gunnison sage-grouse have experienced significant declines
from historic numbers and only about 4,000 breeding individuals remain.
Livestock grazing, oil and gas drilling, motorized recreation, and urbanization
have contributed to the long-term decline of Gunnison sage-grouse.
"It is promising that the Department of Interior has apparently realized
that defending Julie MacDonald's antics in this matter would be a waste
of resources, and has voluntarily gone back to the drawing board,"
said Amy Atwood, senior attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity
and one of the attorneys in the litigation.
Gunnison sage-grouse inhabit sagebrush
steppe, among the most threatened
ecosystems
and avian habitats in the
United States. 
A factsheet on Gunnison sage-grouse is available
here 
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