A draft policy released for comment last week by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and National Marine Fisheries Service took on the challenging question of defining the circumstances under which only a portion of an ailing species may be eligible for federal protection under the Endangered Species Act. Unfortunately, the Services’ proposal continued the agencies’ trend toward restrictively interpreting the ESA’s listing provisions. If finalized, the new policy will likely result in fewer protections for formerly widespread species, such as gray wolves, that now inhabit only a fraction of their former range.
The ESA defines “endangered species” as species in danger of extinction “throughout all or a significant portion of its range.” Litigation over the past decade raised a host of questions as to exactly what Congress meant by the latter phrase: Can the Services list a species as threatened or endangered in only a “significant portion” of its range even if the species is doing relatively well in other portions of its range? Does the “range” of a species mean its historic range or its current range? And just what is a “significant portion” of a species’ range?
Though such questions may seem rather arcane, they go to the heart of significant listing controversies under the ESA. Perhaps the highest profile dispute involves gray wolves, which last year became the first species delisted by Congressional fiat (though only in the Northern Rocky Mountains) in response to court decisions overturning FWS attempts to delist that population of the species. Wolves once roamed throughout much of North America, but were reduced to scattered remnant populations due to habitat loss and a persistent drive to exterminate them. They were listed as endangered in 1967 under a predecessor to the ESA. After reintroduction efforts in the 1990s established wolf populations in the Yellowstone ecosystem and central Idaho, FWS attempted to remove the Northern Rockies wolf population from the endangered roll even though the three populations in existence (including the northern Rockies in and around Glacier National Park in Montana) inhabited only a small fraction of the area over which wolves once roamed. But conservation advocates pointed out that wolves remained absent in a significant portion of their historic range, which they asserted meant that the species still fit into the ESA’s definition of endangered.
FWS, however, took another view of the law. Arguing that “range” in the definition of endangered species refers only to the area where a species is now present, the agency determined that the three wolf populations no longer needed the Act’s protections. However, FWS left wolves on the endangered list in Wyoming, where state officials had refused to adopt state law protections to protect the species after federal delisting. When a federal court found this action unlawful and invalidated the entire delisting decision, the stage was set for Congress to step in. Lawmakers’ delisting delighted ranchers, but of course brought scorn from environmentalists, whose court challenge to the constitutionality of the legislative delisting remains before the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
The Services’ new draft policy proposes to officially sanction the notion that the term “range” within the statutory definition of endangered species refers only to a species’ current range. This would have the effect of essentially making irrelevant to listing decisions the extent to which a species’ range has shrunk from its historic occurrences. This interpretation of what it means for a species to be threatened or endangered essentially sanctions a “museum piece” approach to conserving biodiversity. Wolves provide a good example (ignoring for the moment that Congress removed the Northern Rockies population from the list as a matter of law). Despite the fact that wolves remain extirpated over the majority of their historic range, they would not qualify for listing so long as their existing populations have a probability of survival over time that FWS deems adequate to define as “recovered.” Under this narrow view of what it means to be endangered, it would be irrelevant under the ESA that wolves no longer roam throughout vast areas of the West. Research revealing the crucial role that wolves play in maintaining ecosystem function underlines the ecological cost of such a policy.
The ESA is often seen as the United States’ primary legal protection for biological diversity, with a strong mandate to recover species facing extinction. However, with their latest proposal for defining endangered species – and thus in effect defining recovery as well – the agencies that implement the statute have suggested that it is OK under the law if species no longer exist throughout much or even most of their former habitat. This brings to mind a thought from Aldo Leopold on the dangers of such a narrow approach to conserving species: "Relegating grizzlies to Alaska is about like relegating happiness to heaven; one may never get there.”
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Dan Rohlf | December 13, 2011
A draft policy released for comment last week by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and National Marine Fisheries Service took on the challenging question of defining the circumstances under which only a portion of an ailing species may be eligible for federal protection under the Endangered Species Act. Unfortunately, the Services’ proposal continued the […]
Sidney A. Shapiro | December 7, 2011
On Tuesday, Senators Susan Collins (R-ME) and Claire McCaskill (D-MO) introduced the Bipartisan Jobs Creation Act, legislation that offers a number of proposals for jump-starting the economy. The bill includes two provisions that would hobble the regulatory system without generating the new jobs that the Senators seek. If these provisions were enacted, the bill would […]
Sidney A. Shapiro | December 7, 2011
Within the last hour, the House of Representatives approved the Regulations from the Executive in Need of Scrutiny Act – the REINS Act. The bill was among House Republicans’ top priorities for the year, and they’ve made it and a series of other anti-regulatory bills a centerpiece of their agenda. The plain purpose of the […]
Isaac Shapiro | December 7, 2011
Cross-posted from the Economic Policy Institute’s Working Economics blog. Isaac Shapiro is EPI’s Director of Regulatory Policy Research. The House of Representatives is poised to vote for the REINS (Regulations From the Executive in Need of Scrutiny) bill today; this would come on top of votes on two bills last week that would also upend […]
Rena Steinzor | December 6, 2011
Booth Goodwin, the U.S. Attorney for the southern district of West Virginia, and Attorney General Eric Holder announced today a landmark settlement with Alpha Natural Resources, the coal company that bought out its rival Massey Energy after a catastrophic explosion deep within the Big Branch mine killed 29 miners. Alpha recently announced that its third […]
Rena Steinzor | December 6, 2011
New York Times columnist David Brooks weighs in this morning on CPR’s latest report, Behind Closed Doors at the White House: How Politics Trumps Protection of Health, Worker Safety and the Environment. To his credit, he begins by dismissing one of congressional Republicans’ principal lines of argument for 2011 – that an imagined tsunami of […]
Ben Somberg | December 2, 2011
The CPR white paper on OIRA earlier this week looked at how this little office within OMB facilitates an industry-dominated process that serves to weaken regulations proposed by federal agencies. Appearances by industry representatives have outnumbered those by public interest lobbyists more than 5-to-1 in meetings at OIRA in the last ten years, the paper […]
Ben Somberg | December 1, 2011
The “Regulatory Flexibility Improvements Act” (RFIA) and the “Regulatory Accountability Act” (RAA) are headed for votes on the House floor shortly (today and/or tomorrow). The “Gum Up Public Health and Safety Protections Act” apparently wasn’t going to sell as well. A quick recap of the Regulatory Accountability Act, via CPR Member Scholar Sidney Shapiro’s Congressional testimony […]
Matt Shudtz | December 1, 2011
This week OSHA expanded a two-year-old enforcement program aimed at preventing catastrophic release of highly hazardous chemicals—the type of headline-grabbing event that ruined thousands of lives in Bhopal in 1984 and was narrowly avoided in West Virginia in 2008. Originally targeted at just three regions (and optional for state-plan states in those regions), the National […]