Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumHouse Republicans Hold Anti-Endangered Species Hearing on Bills to Weaken Endangered Species Act
April 7, 2014
5:43 PM
House Republicans Hold Anti-Endangered Species Hearing on Bills to Weaken Endangered Species Act
Witnesses Cherry-picked for Hostility to Wildlife Protection
WASHINGTON - April 7 - House Republicans will hold a hearing Tuesday on four bills that would divert funding from protecting species and discourage citizens from helping enforce the United States landmark law for protecting endangered wildlife. The four bills would weaken the Endangered Species Acts effectiveness and redirect scarce agency resources from species recovery to pointless reporting requirements. To create a facade of support, Rep. Doc Hastings, the Washington Republican who chairs the House Natural Resources Committee, has invited several witnesses with a long history of outright hostility to endangered species and the Endangered Species Act itself.
There isnt a single provision or even single word in any of these bills that would help any species anywhere in the country move toward recovery, said Brett Hartl, endangered species policy director at the Center for Biological Diversity. Protecting species has never been of genuine interest to Doc Hastings or to the witnesses who will heap praise on these ludicrous Tea Party bills. No one should be fooled by their calls for reform, because all they want to do is weaken the Endangered Species Act and restrict the right of the American public to make sure its enforced.
The Republican witnesses for this hearing have made a consistent practice of attacking the Act, as follows:
Dr. Rob Roy Ramey II relied on genetic samples that showed evidence of contamination to determine that the Prebles meadow jumping mouse was not a separate species a decision that incorrectly led to a proposal to remove the species from the list of endangered species until an independent peer-review panel of genetics experts determined that no reliable evidence supported Rameys analysis. Ramey was also hired by former Bush administration Deputy Interior Secretary Julie MacDonald, who herself resigned under a cloud of controversy, to write a report that concluded that the Gunnisons sage grouse was not a separate species that could be protected under the Endangered Species Act. The subsequent 2006 decision not to protect the sage grouse was one of 20 decisions investigated in a 2008 Inspector General report on the influence of political considerations on species listings; the increasingly rare bird is now proposed for endangered species protections.
Karen Budd-Falen has been vocal in her opposition to the Endangered Species Act, the Clean Water Act and the National Environmental Policy Act, and believes that most management of public lands is nothing more than bullying to achieve a cleansing of rural America. Budd-Falen represents the extreme far-right wing of the Republican Party and has spoken in support of controversial groups such as the constitutional sheriffs who refuse to enforce federal laws they believe do not comport with the U.S. Constitution.
More:
https://www.commondreams.org/newswire/2014/04/07-9
newfie11
(8,159 posts)If there is evil in this world it is these sons of bitches!
All bought and paid for of course.