Dayton Daily News

Trump wild bird policy revoked

- By Matthew Brown and John Flesher

The Biden BILLINGS, MONT. — administra­tion on Monday reversed a policy imposed under former President Donald Trump that drasticall­y weakened the government’s power to enforce a century-old law that protects most U.S. bird species.

Trump ended criminal prosecutio­ns against companies responsibl­e for bird deaths that could have been prevented.

The move halted enforcemen­t practices under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act in place for decades — resulting most notably in a $100 million settlement by energy company BP after the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill killed about 100,000 birds.

A federal judge in New York in August struck down the Trump administra­tion’s legal rationale for changing how the bird treaty was enforced.

But the administra­tion did not abandon its policy, rejecting concerns that many more birds would die and remaining adamant that the law had been wielded inappropri­ately to penalize accidental bird deaths.

Interior spokesman Tyler

Cherry said the Trump policy “overturned decades of bipartisan and internatio­nal consensus and allowed industry to kill birds with impunity.”

Cherry said in a statement that the agency plans to come up with new standards “that can protect migratory birds and provide certainty to industry.”

Former federal officials and environmen­tal groups said many of the Trump rules were meant to benefit private industry at the expense of conservati­on.

More than 1,000 North American bird species are covered by the treaty.

Janet Yellen, the first woman to head the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury Department, says women seeking to pursue careers in economics face a number of obstacles from the way beginning economics courses are taught to overly aggressive questionin­g in college seminars.

“There is a cultural problem in the profession, and we need to change the culture,” Yellen said Monday. She was appearing at an event with Kristalena Georgieva, only the second woman to head the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

The two, who spoke at the event recognizin­g Internatio­nal Women’s Day, discussed the obstacles they both faced embarking on economics careers, a profession where even today, women are in a distinct minority to men.

Yellen said studies have shown that the way economics is taught in introducto­ry courses is often a “turn off ” for women because the beginning courses do not focus enough on how economics can improve people’s lives.

“The pipeline issue really starts early,” Yellen said. “There are a lot of people who are thinking about how can we reach economics in such a way that it shows women that it is a great way to improve human welfare.”

She said women pursuing degrees in economics often face more hostile questionin­g in college seminar classes from the men in the class, adding to the hurdles women have to face in pursuing advanced degrees.

Georgieva, who was a top

official at the World Bank before taking over at the IMF, said she often encourages women to “don’t be shy, please apply” as a way to overcome the reluctance of women to pursue promotions. “Women may be more self-critical and forego opportunit­ies” in male-dominated organizati­ons.

She said on her first visit to the World Bank to make a presentati­on, she was wearing a colorful dress but immediatel­y turned around and went to a store to buy a dark suit when she saw how all the men were dressed.

Asked how she handled setbacks in her career, Yellen said that after getting her PhD in economics at Yale she took a job as an assistant professor at Harvard but was passed over for one of a limited number of tenured jobs at Harvard. She said she decided to take a job at the Federal Reserve, and in that position realized how

much she enjoyed pursuing economic research as part of making government policy decisions.

“I came to the Fed and discovered how much I enjoyed doing public policy,” she said. “It was a different path but it really took me into a large part of my career.”

It was in this Fed job that Yellen met her future husband and both moved to the University of California at Berkeley where they taught for many years before Yellen returned to Washington during the Clinton administra­tion. Yellen is the first person to head all three top economic jobs: the Council of Economic Advisors, the Fed and the Treasury.

Georgieva said she was drawn to studying how economics can influence environmen­tal issues because growing up in Bulgaria, she had a relative who became very sick from ground water pollution that was preventabl­e.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2017 ?? Janet Yellen says women seeking to pursue careers in economics face a number of obstacles.
CAROLYN KASTER / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2017 Janet Yellen says women seeking to pursue careers in economics face a number of obstacles.

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