The Denver Post

Endangered Species Act foe picked for Interior job

- By Darryl Fears

WASHINGTON» Susan Combs, a former Texas official who compared proposed endangered species listings to “incoming Scud missiles” and continued to fight the Endangered Species Act after she left government, now has a role in overseeing federal wildlife policy.

Combs was selected by Interior Department Secretary Ryan Zinke as acting secretary for fish, wildlife and parks. Zinke made the move after his bid to make her an assistant secretary for policy, management and budget stalled in the Senate. The nomination has been on hold since July because of opposition from Republican­s and Democrats for various reasons.

Zinke made the appointmen­t, first reported by the Austin AmericanSt­atesman last week. “Of course we would rather have Susan Combs Susan confirmed and in Combs her intended position as assistant secretary for policy, management and budget,” Interior spokeswoma­n Heather Swift said Tuesday.

“Until then, she will serve in an acting capacity,” Swift said. She described Combs as “highly qualified” and said Interior officials “are more than confident that she will be an effective manager at Fish and Wildlife and Parks while she patiently awaits her Senate confirmati­on.”

Zinke has teamed with lawmakers in the House in a bid to strip the Endangered Species Act of much of its power. Several bills would remove the act’s provisions to save species from extinction regardless of the economic impact, rely on peer-reviewed scientific data and reward conservati­on organizati­ons that successful­ly sue to protect animals by paying their court costs.

Combs is a rancher and former Texas comptrolle­r with strong ties to the oil industry whose politics align with efforts to weaken the law. As comptrolle­r, she fought the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service repeatedly over its attempts to enforce the Endangered Species Act in the state. In a 2015 report, the Austin AmericanSt­atesman showed how Combs worked to remove endangered protection­s for a native state songbird, the golden-cheeked warbler, claiming that its listing hurt military readiness.

After a successful bid to keep a tiny lizard off the endangered list in 2012, Combs hailed the decision as a victory for the economy.

A year later, in an appearance before the legislatur­e, Combs made the “incoming Scud missiles” remark. The Austin AmericanSt­atesman uncovered records showing she disagreed with “nearly every listing proposal from Washington,” questionin­g the science, estimates of their economic impact and the amount of resident input.

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