The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service tossed out a Trump-era rule yesterday that weakened the agency's authority to identify lands and waters where declining animal and plant species could receive protection, essentially shrinking species' critical habitat.
In a 48-page document explaining the rationale for withdrawal of the rule, the Fish and Wildlife Service said it gave outside parties an “outsized role” in determining which areas were needed for preserving imperiled species while undermining the FWS' authority to implement the Endangered Species Act (ESA). By reversing the Trump-era rule, FWS is officially reverting to the rule that was previously in place in which critical habitat is considered “essential for the conservation of the species.”
“This rule will allow our biologists to ensure critical habitat designations contribute to the conservation of ESA-listed species,” U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Martha Williams said in a statement, adding, “today’s action helps the Service implement the ESA in ways that support sound science and citizen participation.”
Podcast: Journalist Leah Sottile on the Bundy-January 6 connection
On this episode of The Landscape, Leah Sottile joins Kate and Aaron to talk about the connections between the Bundy family standoffs and the January 6th insurrection, as well as her new book, “When the Moon Turns to Blood,” a wild and tragic case of two murdered children and religious extremism out of Idaho. Sottile is a journalist and author whose work focuses on religious extremism in the West. She is the host of the podcast Bundyville, which explores the family’s standoffs with federal agents at their Bunkerville ranch and the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge.
|