Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Finally, a plan to save Joshua trees — from bureaucrac­y

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Climate change is the single greatest threat to the long-term survival of the Joshua tree, a beloved symbol of California’s high desert. But the biggest shortterm obstacle is an impasse by state wildlife officials, who have been unable to agree whether to list it as threatened under the state Endangered Species Act.

Gov. Gavin Newsom’s administra­tion is proposing a promising solution, legislatio­n that would provide comprehens­ive protection for the imperiled trees at the center of a battle over competing uses of the Mojave Desert and the interconne­cted threats of rising temperatur­es, drought, developmen­t and wildfire.

The proposal would protect the trees from being wiped out by the next century while allowing for renewable energy and housing developmen­t — no matter what the California Fish and Game Commission decides. It’s a well-thought-out compromise that acknowledg­es both scientific and political realities, and would still allow designatio­n as threatened, though that move seems unlikely.

Scientists have long warned that climate change poses an existentia­l threat to the western Joshua tree, one of two distinct species that live in California, and that the tree could lose more than 90% of its current habitat by the end of the century without greater protection­s. But powerful interests oppose listing it as threatened, saying it would put up too many barriers to urban developmen­t and solar and wind energy projects that California needs to slash greenhouse gas emissions.

These trees have been under temporary legal protection since 2020, making it illegal to kill them without special permits. But those safeguards would go away if the Fish and Game Commission decides not to list Joshua trees as threatened, returning authority to issue permits to remove Joshua trees to county sheriffs or county agricultur­al commission­ers.

The governor’s proposal would allow wildlife officials to permit the killing or removal of a western Joshua tree only if certain conditions were met, and would give property owners and developers the option of paying mitigation fees instead. The money would be pooled into a state-controlled conservati­on fund that could be used for large-scale projects, like the acquisitio­n of land in the tree’s northern range and in higher elevation areas where survival is more likely as the climate continues to warm.

One of the strengths of the proposal is a requiremen­t that the Department of Fish and Wildlife, by 2024, develop a conservati­on plan to save the species across its range. That proactive approach is fitting for this climate-driven threat, and an improvemen­t on the usual process, where threatened and endangered species aren’t subject to serious action to prevent their extinction until their numbers are already so low that it’s almost too late.

The legislatio­n was crafted with input from Native American tribes, renewablee­nergy companies, the constructi­on industry, organized labor and environmen­talists, and has the support of the Center for Biological Diversity, the group that in 2019 petitioned to protect the western Joshua tree on climate change grounds, triggering the temporary protection.

Prospects for making those protection­s permanent seemed to dim last year, when state wildlife scientists recommende­d against listing the Joshua tree as threatened, despite criticism by independen­t peer reviewers that the analysis had mischaract­erized the science and understate­d the threat climate change poses. In June, the state Fish and Game Commission deadlocked on whether to designate it as threatened, and has since delayed making a decision.

It’s clear that listing the Joshua tree presents challenges unlike any of the roughly 250 other species protected under the California Endangered Species Act. There are millions of Joshua trees spread across a vast area of the state, and about half the tree’s range is on private land, including in fast-growing communitie­s such as Lancaster and Yucca Valley. State wildlife officials predict that the listing of the Joshua tree would create the single biggest permitting workload in its history, requiring them to weigh in on thousands of projects, from home additions to large-scale solar energy arrays.

State wildlife officials’ inability to move proactivel­y to protect the doomed species has been disappoint­ing.

Yes, this legislatio­n would make getting a permit for the removal of Joshua trees easier, cheaper and faster than if they were designated threatened under current law. But this approach is still vastly better than the likely alternativ­e of doing nothing. It includes transparen­cy measures, with annual reviews and public reports detailing the effectiven­ess of the program and how mitigation fees are being spent. It allows the department to periodical­ly adjust the rules and fees to ensure conservati­on efforts are working.

California wildlife officials’ inability to move proactivel­y to protect the Joshua tree from the warming climate has been disappoint­ing. But this legislatio­n creatively bypasses that and imagines something better: the rare kind of compromise that could actually provide broader, more effective conservati­on than the Joshua tree would otherwise receive under the current legal and political process.

State lawmakers should advance this legislatio­n and get California a step closer to ensuring the Joshua tree’s survival.

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