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NEWS RELEASE
For
Immediate Release
May 8, 2007
Contacts:
Josh Pollock, Conservation Director, Center for Native Ecosystems ·
(303) 546-0214
Nicole Rosmarino, Ph.D., Conservation Director, Forest Guardians ·
(505) 988-9126
Mark Salvo, Director, Sagebrush Sea Campaign · (503)
757-4221
Conservationists
to Interior Department: Fix Politically Tainted Decisions Now
Denver - As the House Natural
Resources Committee holds a hearing today to investigate the manipulation
of science in endangered species management, conservation groups urged
the Department of the Interior to immediately revisit many recent politically
tainted decisions by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to deny protection
to imperiled wildlife under the Endangered Species Act.
"We applaud Congress for pushing the Interior Department to fix its
pervasive problem of political interference in endangered species science,
but we can't forget the victims of this manipulation who are still on
the path to extinction: the white-tailed prairie dog, Gunnison sage grouse,
Gunnison's prairie dog, and others," said Josh Pollock, Conservation
Director at Center for Native Ecosystems. "The decisions that denied
them protection under the Endangered Species Act were corrupted and must
be revisited immediately."
Several of the experts testifying at today's hearing highlighted solutions
that the Interior Department must consider if it is going to fix the systemic
problems that allowed political appointees such as former Deputy Assistant
Secretary Julie MacDonald to repeatedly reverse the scientific findings
of her staff. National organizations such as the Union of Concerned Scientists
echoed the sentiments of local conservation groups in urging the Secretary
of the Interior to reevaluate the endangered species decisions where political
interference has been documented.
"Secretary Kempthorne should immediately order new findings where
political interference in endangered species decisions has been documented,"
said Nicole Rosmarino, Conservation Director of Forest Guardians. "The
Secretary should also publicly examine all recent listing, critical habitat,
and recovery decisions to determine the extent of political interference
in the endangered species listing program," stated Rosmarino.
Some members of Congress have also called for reform within the Interior
Department. Last week Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) put a hold on the confirmation
of former Colorado state parks director Lyle Laverty for a position at
Interior until Secretary Kempthorne reassures the Congress that the environment
at the Interior Department is improved to prevent further cases of political
tampering.
"The agency scientists who make expert decisions about endangered
species management should be buffered from political manipulation,"
said Mark Salvo, Director of the Sagebrush Sea campaign. "The endangered
plants and wildlife they work to protect cannot afford to be used as pawns
by political appointees."
Among the solutions proposed by the Union of Concerned Scientists and
others are greater transparency in the decision-making process for endangered
species listing, critical habitat designation, and recovery planning;
protection for the right of agency scientists to communicate their research
results and give final review to public characterizations of their conclusions;
and protection for whistleblowers, which is proposed in recent legislation
that has passed the House and is now before the Senate. At the top of
this list must also be the reexamination of the decisions to deny Endangered
Species Act protections to several regional species.
"If the Interior Department went back and fixed these broken decisions
now, they could save the taxpayers a lot of money and wasted time on litigation,"
said Pollock. "With 279 species on the candidate list awaiting protection
and no new Endangered Species listings in a full year, the Bush administration
has got a lot of catching up to do. Bush administration inaction has already
pushed so many species towards extinction."
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