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The following statement was delivered to the House Resources Committee on
Wednesday, Sept. 2o, in relation to the Young-Pombo bill to revise the US
Endangered Species Act.

STATEMENT OF CONGRESSMAN GERRY E. STUDDS
ON HR 2275
September 20,1995

I would have liked to come here today to say that the bill before us
represented a genuine effort to reform the Endangered Species Act. I can not.

I wish I could tell you that this committee had undertaken something
resembling an honest review of the statute. It has not.

I had hoped that our proceedings might value science over anecdote, that we
could all concede that matters as important and complex as this Act have
shades of gray - or at the very least, we could show common respect to
witnesses who actually might have differing views. We did not.

I believe Members of this committee know that I am not given to shrill
accusation.  And given my decades-long friendship with the gentleman from
Alaska, and our remarkable history of working cooperatively to reconcile our
considerable differences, I scoured this bill for redeeming qualities. I can
find none.

As we convene this hearing, let us at least be clear about our intentions.
This legislation constitutes, in substance, an outright repeal of the
Endangered Species Act. If the subtext of the debate pits science against
politics, then we now know who wins.

This bill barely gives lip service to the overwhelming weight of testimony
from respected scientists. Rather, it validates uncritically the
pseudo-science purchased and packaged for us by special interests, which are
aching to resume timbering on salmon streams and -- believe It or not --to
require the United States government to seek permission from the likes of
Muammar Khadhafi to protect threatened gazelles.

We set out to heal an ailing Endangered Species Act. Instead, HR 2275
amputates its key provisions, then decapitates it. I am saddened to have to
conclude that the results of our work over the past many months are as
discouraging as the way in which we conducted that work - and I emphasize
the word saddened.

We have a long tradition in this institution of approaching this matter
consistent with the huge bipartisan majorities in both Houses that
originally sent this law to the White House, where President Richard Nixon
signed it into law.

That broad understanding and appreciation across the nation for the basic
premises of this statute rest on the kind of comity and reflection that have
now fled the scene. I hope we don't have to wait too long for their return.
--
Ronald I. Orenstein                           Phone: (905) 820-7886 (home)
International Wildlife Coalition              Fax/Modem: (905) 569-0116 (home)
Home: 1825 Shady Creek Court                  Messages: (416) 368-4661
Mississauga, Ontario, Canada L5L 3W2          Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Office: 130 Adelaide Street W., Suite 1940    
Toronto, Ontario Canada M5H 3P5             

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