San Francisco Chronicle

Feds plan to ease laws preventing killing of birds

- By Lisa Friedman Lisa Friedman is a New York Times writer.

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion plans to weaken a centuryold law protecting migratory birds by dropping the threat of punishment to oil and gas companies, constructi­on crews and other organizati­ons that kill birds “incidental­ly” in the course of their operations.

The proposed regulation, if finalized, would cement a legal opinion that the Department of Interior issued in 2017. The agency’s top lawyer argued that previous administra­tions had interprete­d the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918 too broadly and that only actions explicitly intended to kill birds should be forbidden under the federal law. The death of a bird from an oil slick, the blade of a wind turbine or the spraying of illegal pesticides would no longer trigger penalties.

That interpreta­tion has already had significan­t consequenc­es for thousands of migratory birds. According to internal agency documents, the Trump administra­tion has discourage­d local government­s and businesses from taking simple precaution­ary measures to protect birds, and federal wildlife officials have all but stopped investigat­ing most bird deaths.

In recent weeks, the administra­tion has scrapped a clean water regulation aimed at protecting streams and wetlands, and blocked an effort to require Americans to use energyeffi­cient light bulbs. Within the next month the administra­tion plans to weaken vehicle emissions standards and a rule restrictin­g mercury, a toxic chemical emitted from coalburnin­g power plants. Completing the rule curtailing the Migratory Bird Treaty Act before the November presidenti­al election will be difficult, but the agency has indicated it will push aggressive­ly to do so.

“It’s a race against the clock,” Bob Dreher, senior vice president of conservati­on programs at Defenders of

Wildlife, an environmen­tal organizati­on, said of the proposed regulation.

Any legal guideline, like the one now governing birddeath enforcemen­t, can be easily overturned.

 ?? Brandon Thibodeaux / New York Times 2018 ?? A great egret perches on a wildlife management area sign in Port Arthur, Texas. The Trump administra­tion plans to weaken a centuryold law protecting such migratory birds.
Brandon Thibodeaux / New York Times 2018 A great egret perches on a wildlife management area sign in Port Arthur, Texas. The Trump administra­tion plans to weaken a centuryold law protecting such migratory birds.

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