Santa Fe New Mexican

Biden restores wildlife protection­s Trump ended

Rules will aid species that are threatened but not yet endangered

- By Catrin Einhorn The New York Times

After three years of planning and navigating the slow bureaucrac­y of federal rule-making, the Biden administra­tion is restoring a series of protection­s for imperiled animals and plants that had been loosened under President Donald Trump.

The rules, proposed last year and now finalized, give federal officials more leeway to protect species in a changing climate; bring back protection­s for animals that are classified as “threatened” with extinction, which is one step short of “endangered”; and clarify that decisions about whether to list a species must be made without considerin­g economic factors. They come as countries around the world grapple with a biodiversi­ty crisis that has taken hold as humans have transforme­d the planet.

“As species face new and daunting challenges, including climate change, degraded and fragmented habitat, invasive species and wildlife disease, the Endangered Species Act is more important than ever to conserve and recover imperiled species now and for generation­s to come,” said Martha Williams, director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which issued the finalized rules along with the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s fisheries service. “These revisions underscore our commitment to using all of the tools available to help halt declines and stabilize population­s of the species most at-risk.”

Republican­s and industry groups had assailed the initial proposal and are expected to do the same with the finalized version. Rep. Bruce Westerman, R-Ark., who leads the Natural Resources Committee, accused the Biden administra­tion on Thursday of “undoing crucial reforms and issuing new regulation­s that will not benefit listed species.”

The rules are expected to set off a new round of lawsuits.

“The imposed Endangered Species Act restrictio­ns are especially harmful to those, such as our farmer/rancher members, who depend on being able to produce their livelihood­s through access to and use of natural resources,” the Nevada Farm Bureau Federation wrote in a comment to the proposed changes. Others that have spoken out against them include the oil and gas industry, foresters and states that want more control over managing wildlife.

Conor Bernstein, vice president of communicat­ions at the National Mining Associatio­n, said that while his group supports the conservati­on goals of the Endangered Species Act, the law imposes unnecessar­y restrictio­ns on developmen­t and creates regulatory uncertaint­y.

Environmen­tal groups, on the other hand, have been eagerly awaiting the reversal of the Trump-era rules, but many criticized the Biden administra­tion for leaving some provisions in place.

“This administra­tion is restoring some really important rules for endangered species,” said Mike Leahy, a senior director at the National Wildlife Federation. “But given all the threats they face, we would have liked to see them restore more protection­s, so their critical habitats can’t be picked apart piece by piece, or past harms to these species can’t be ignored.”

Leahy said rules protecting threatened and endangered species are especially important because Congress is not providing the funding that federal, state and tribal biologists need to recover them.

The Endangered Species Act, which turned 50 last year, is both lauded and loathed. Those who prioritize environmen­tal health and the protection of America’s wildlife see it as a landmark law that has saved untold species from extinction. Others criticize it for curtailing economic activity and stomping on the rights of states and individual­s.

During the Trump administra­tion, officials weakened the law, undoing protection­s for animals categorize­d as threatened and allowing regulators to conduct economic assessment­s when deciding whether a species warrants protection. Environmen­tal groups had argued those assessment­s had no place in such decisions.

The Biden administra­tion had previously reversed a Trump-era change related to the definition of habitat for endangered animals.

During the public comment period for the new rules, officials received about 468,000 comments from a wide range of groups including those representi­ng various industries, environmen­tal advocates, states and tribes.

 ?? MELISSA PHILLIP/HOUSTON CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A male alligator snapping turtle is held after being trapped for tagging in 2018. The species is among dozens under considerat­ion for federal protection­s.
MELISSA PHILLIP/HOUSTON CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A male alligator snapping turtle is held after being trapped for tagging in 2018. The species is among dozens under considerat­ion for federal protection­s.

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