[Republicans are doing their best to gut the
Endangered Species Act. The left has got to take back
the government soon, or there's going to be no saving
the Environment. The Earth may well have reached a
pivotal point now.  Rick.]


Source >
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2006-05-30-endangered-species_x.htm?csp=27



Species on endangered list challenged 

Updated 5/30/2006 11:58 PM ET 
  

By Laura Parker, USA TODAY

Ever since a 3-inch fish protected by the Endangered
Species Act stopped construction of a dam in Tennessee
in 1978, the law has been known as one of the toughest
environmental laws on the books.
Environmental groups have used it to halt development
in pristine lands across the nation. Today, the law
designed to protect animals such as the manatee from
extinction also has become a legal tool of
property-rights groups and developers.

PHOTOS: Global warming affects species from caribou to
harlequin frogs to coral

In a counterpunch to environmentalists who have filed
lawsuits aimed at protecting hundreds of plant and
animal species by listing them as endangered or
threatened, property-rights groups such as the Pacific
Legal Foundation are filing lawsuits to have animals
and plants removed from the list so that development
can proceed.

Meanwhile, industry groups have filed dozens of legal
challenges aimed at allowing development on lands set
aside by the U.S. government to help protect
endangered species.

"The conventional wisdom is that environmental groups
exclusively used this provision in court, but today,
the industry lawsuits challenging critical habitat
designations far outnumber environmental challenges,"
says Pat Parenteau, a law professor at Vermont Law
School in South Royalton, Vt.

In a study he published last August on active
litigation involving the Endangered Species Act,
Parenteau counted 45 lawsuits filed by industry groups
and five filed by environmental groups.

Litigating the list 

At the forefront of the movement is the National
Association of Home Builders, which recently prevailed
in a legal battle over Arizona land that had been
designated as a habitat for the cactus ferruginous
pygmy owl. Two environmental groups have sued to
restore the designation, and a court hearing on the
issue is scheduled for Friday.

Likewise, the conservative Pacific Legal Foundation,
based in Sacramento, is pressing the federal
government to re-examine several animals and plants on
the endangered list.

Both groups have found a relatively friendly audience
in the Bush administration, which in recent years has
loosened many of the restrictions in the Endangered
Species Act. Among other things, the administration
has focused on giving private property owners
incentives to protect vulnerable species, rather than
banning activity on such land.

"We've had property owners coming to us for years,"
says Rob Rivett, chief attorney for the foundation.
"Finally, it became clear we didn't have any choice
but to try to balance the scales."

The foundation, backed by contributions from
foundations of the conservative Pittsburgh billionaire
Richard Mellon Scaife, began filing lawsuits in the
late 1990s, Rivett says. It is involved in more than
30 active suits across the USA. 

Last September, the foundation reached a settlement
with the U.S. government in a lawsuit brought on
behalf of the California Cattlemen's Association,
which wanted a review of the 194 plants and animals
listed as endangered or threatened. Under the
settlement, a review of 10 species must be completed
by 2011, Rivett says.

The Endangered Species Act requires such reviews every
five years, but the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
lags far behind, says Renne Lohoefener, assistant
director for the Endangered Species Act at the Fish
and Wildlife Service.

"We simply never had the resources in terms of people
and money," he says. "As a result, we are way behind
in doing them."

New front in Florida 

The foundation is now representing the Florida Home
Builders Association in a similar lawsuit filed last
November in federal court in Orlando. The lawsuit
seeks to have the status of 106 plants and animals in
Florida reviewed.

The Pacific Legal Foundation also is challenging the
endangered status of:

• Four salmon in four western states, accusing the
government of counting only natural population to
determine listings, and not counting hatchery salmon.
The suit potentially could ease restrictions on
development and activities around rivers and streams
in Oregon, Washington, Idaho and California .

• About 20,000 marbled murrelet birds in Coos County,
Ore. County commissioners hope that delisting the bird
would lead to more logging.

The Endangered Species Act has prompted litigation
from the moment President Nixon signed it 33 years
ago.

"There are more lawsuits now than there were 20 years
ago because there are more species declining and more
habitats being lost than there were 20 years ago,"
says Bill Snape, chief counsel for the Defenders of
Wildlife in Washington, D.C.

There are 1,311 animals and plants listed as
"endangered" or "threatened," according to Claire
Cassel of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. In 1986,
there were 422 listed, she says.

Mike Mittelholzer, a vice president at the home
builders association, says his organization's legal
challenges are in response to lawsuits filed by
environmentalists.

A bill passed last year by the U.S. House of
Representatives would eliminate critical habitat
protections — and essentially eliminate litigation.

Most of the legal battles over the Endangered Species
Act are taking place in rapidly growing urban areas in
the South and West. 

In the Tucson fight over the cactus ferruginous pygmy
owl, The National Association of Home Builders
objected to the government's plan to set aside 1.2
million acres for the animal and fought to have it
removed from the endangered species list. Last month,
the Bush administration announced it would take the
owl off the list.

That decision prompted two environmental groups to sue
in Tucson federal court to block the delisting, says
Kieran Suckling, policy director for Center for
Biological Diversity. 
 


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