Update: June 2, 2006
MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS:
On May 17, 2006, the House passed (amended) H.R. 4200, proposing to authorize
emergency procedures to comply with ESA §7 for pre-approved management practices for
federal land damaged by a catastrophe and for catastrophic event research and recovery
projects. On May 16, 2006, the House passed S. 1165, proposing to expand Hawaii’s James
Campbell National Wildlife Refuge to protect habitat for endangered waterbirds. On May
4, 2006, the House Committee on Resources reported (amended) H.R. 4200. On April 25,
2006, the House Committee on Resources reported S. 1165.
Previous Releases:
/NLE/CRSreports/06feb/IB10144.pdf
/NLE/CRSreports/05nov/IB10144.pdf
/NLE/CRSreports/05aug/IB10144.pdf
/NLE/CRSreports/05apr/IB10144.pdf
Abstract: The 109th Congress is considering
various proposals to amend the Endangered
Species Act of 1973 (ESA; P.L. 93-205, 16
U.S.C. §§1531-1543). Major issues in recent
years have included changing the role of
science in decision-making, modifying critical
habitat (CH) procedures, reducing conflicts
with Department of Defense activities,
incorporating further protection and incentives
for property owners, and increasing protection
of listed species, among others. In addition,
many have advocated enacting as law some
ESA regulations promulgated during the
Clinton Administration.
The ESA has been one of the more
contentious environmental laws. This may
stem from its strict substantive provisions,
which can affect the use of both federal and
nonfederal lands and resources. Under the
ESA, species of plants and animals (both
vertebrate and invertebrate) can be listed as
endangered or threatened according to
assessments of their risk of extinction. Once
a species is listed, powerful legal tools are
available to aid its recovery and protect its
habitat. The ESA may also be controversial
because dwindling species are usually
harbingers of broader ecosystem decline: the
most common cause of listing species is
habitat loss.
The authorization for spending under the
ESA expired on October 1, 1992. The prohibitions
and requirements of the ESA remain in
force, even in the absence of an authorization,
and funds have been appropriated to
implement the administrative provisions of the
ESA in each subsequent fiscal year. In the
109th Congress, H.R. 3824 and S. 2110
propose to extensively amend and reauthorize
the ESA; the House passed H.R. 3824
(amended) on September 29, 2005.
Other bills under consideration in the
109th Congress would modify the definition of
CH as well as the process for determining and
designating CH (H.R. 1299) or would amend
the ESA to limit CH designation for certain
aquatic habitats (H.R. 1837). Several bills
would expand species eligible for assistance
from the Multinational Species Conservation
Fund by creating a Flagship Species
Conservation Fund (H.R. 93), by creating a
Great Cats and Rare Canids Conservation
Fund (H.R. 1707), or by creating a Crane
Conservation Fund (S. 943/H.R. 3520).
Also in the 109th Congress, bills would
authorize the Bureau of Reclamation to assist
in implementing fish passage and screening
facilities at non-federal water projects in the
Columbia River Basin to meet ESA
obligations (S. 232) or would require analysis
of federal salmon recovery efforts and a study
of the effects of partially removing four lower
Snake River dams, and would authorize
partial removal of these dams under certain
conditions (H.R. 1615). Section 3 of H.R. 411
proposes compensation for ESA activities that
eliminate or reduce grazing privileges.
S. 260 and H.R. 2018 propose to expand
the authority of the Secretary of the Interior to
assist landowners in restoring and managing
endangered and threatened species habitat on
private land through the Partners for Fish and
Wildlife Program. Section 365 of P.L. 109-
58, the Energy Policy Act of 2005, establishes
a pilot project in Wyoming, Montana,
Colorado, Utah, and New Mexico designed to
improve coordination of federal permits,
including ESA §7 permits.
[read report]
Topics: Biodiversity, Legislative, Risk & Reform