| Bush admin wants to give states more control over protections |
|
|
|
|
Following a firestorm of criticism over a leaked document detailing possible changes to regulations implementing the Endangered Species Act, Bush administration officials this week provided some confirmation of expected policy directions but cautioned that the document made public by environmental activists was a stale draft.
In particular, the administration is considering giving greater power to states to protect animals and plants under ESA, Fish and Wildlife Service chief Dale Hall told the House Interior Appropriations Committee on Tuesday. Hall said the administration would also rewrite its "adverse modification" rules that oversee destruction of species' habitat, partially in response to courts that have struck down the administration's approach.
Set as favorite
Bookmark
Email This
Comments (0)
![]() Write comment
You must be logged in to a comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.
|
Related Items
- Kempthorne taking a hard look at changes to ESA
- FWS proposes delisting gray wolves without Wyoming
- Wyoming officials, enviros question wolf delisting plan
- Senator Crapo readies new ESA bill
- Bald eagle delisting muddled by 'disturb' definition
- New guidance minimizes species' historic range in listing decisions
- Yellowstone grizzlies lose ESA protection
- Political appointee pressured scientists to fix ESA findings — IG report
- Senator Crapo readies new ESA bill
- Senate Dems press Kempthorne on 'troubling' ESA rewrite
- Prominent scientists question Interior's ESA guidance
- House appropriators urged to block ESA changes, drilling on public lands
- House Dems slam Interior for politicizing ESA decisions
- House lawmakers ask Interior to halt ESA rewrite
- Enviros fear Supreme Court ruling creates ESA 'loopholes'
- Coalition For Otero Mesa
- Public Lands Partnership
- Endangered Species Act
- Idaho group sues USFWS over sage grouse decision
- Guilty verdict in grizzly bear shooting sets precedent
- USFWS reviewing status of fishers, wolverines
- Federal judge: Idaho, Montana wolf hunts may go on
- Judge's ruling on Idaho, Montana wolf hunt disappoints groups
- Wolves Aren’t Making It Easy for Idaho Hunters
- Decision on fate of quarantined Yellowstone bison delayed
- Aspen's bruin problem has Colorado wildlife agency rewriting rules
- Judge orders grizzly bears back onto endangered species list
- Bald eagle case raises issue of religious liberty
- The fight for arctic grayling forges on in Montana's Big Hole River
- USFWS declines to list prairie dogs as threatened or endangered
- Northern Rockies species make 'hot list'
- USFWS seeks new accord in N.M., Ariz., wolf reintroduction program
- Study: Sage grouse face slate of threats in the West
- Loss of Yellowstone-area whitebark pines could affect grizzlies
- Montana tribes' wolf plan is based on wolves' behavior
- Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
- Montana ends wolf hunt 2 weeks early
- Idaho governor, ranchers dispute slickspot peppergrass listing
- Montana judge reaffirms earlier ruling on grizzly bears
- Wyoming wolf numbers up an estimated 12 percent
- BLM orders some fences, guy wires marked to protect sage grouse
- Federal agents hunt for wolves in 6 packs in W. Montana
- More than 500 wolves killed in 2009 in 3 western states
- Wolf numbers in Yellowstone Park down again, up in Wyoming
- Interior Secretary says new energy lease, species reforms on the way
- Wyoming awaits federal decision on sage grouse
- Pilot program encourages Utah ranchers to protect prairie dogs
- Grizzly bear panel discusses effect of Montana judge's decision
- USFS sides with bighorn, butterfly in California grazing dispute
- USFWS proposes to expand bull trout habitat in 5 Western states
- USFWS agrees to develop plan to protect jaguars in SW U.S.
- Western parks take different paths on bear-human management
- Endangered Species Act continues to evolve
- Idaho groups offer differing opinions on Endangered Species Act
- Debate over Northern Rockies wolves all about the numbers
- Wandering wolves would be protected in Colorado
- What do wolves mean for Colorado?
- Idaho Fish & Game proposes tougher hand on wolf issues
- For many Idaho hunters, wolves remain elusive targets
- Utah congressional delegation 'outraged' at Interior's plan
- Sage grouse gets limited protection
- U.S. military bases add species preservation to their missions
- USFWS seeks extension of sage grouse deadline
- USFWS asks court to end endangered status of Arizona eagles
- Idaho rancher wants bull trout in Little Lost River delisted
- Idaho federal judge grants USFWS extension on sage grouse
- Sage grouse numbers indicate species doesn't need protection
- Sage grouse will get limited protection
- Federal government: Listing of sage grouse 'warranted, precluded'
- Montana FWP: State has too many wolves
- Western Watersheds Project challenges sage grouse decision
- USFWS: Northern Rockies wolf population post small gains
- Report: Idaho has at least 843 wolves, 94 packs
- Interior Dept.'s annual report on birds adds threat of climate change
- Wyoming national park closes area to protect sage grouse
- Audio High Country Views: the sage grouse decision, states' rights, and fed healthcare
- Comment period on bull trout habitat in 5 states extended to April 5
- Federal commission releases Utah plan to help endangered fish
- Wolves killed a record number of livestock in Montana last year
- Jackson outfitters decide to support Wyoming wolf plan
- Groups tell Interior Department sage grouse lawsuit is coming
- Study finds Colorado mountain lions have a low survival rate
- Wyoming wildlife agency releases guidelines for wind developers
- FWS rejects protections for Idaho whitefish
- Wyoming sage grouse study suggests pipelines lessen impact
- USFWS to do 5-year review of Kootenai sturgeon, Idaho squirrels
- USFWS declines to list mountain whitefish in Idaho river as endangered
- Environmental groups, energy firms await decision on Wyoming gopher
- Coalition to study wind turbines' effect on sage grouse
- Residents of Montana prairie communities not wild about grizzly bears
- USFWS, NRCS team up on sage grouse plan
- Public needs to separate fact from fiction about wolves
- Wyoming wants to smooth path for sage grouse projects
- Wolves divide conservation groups in Yellowstone ecosystem
- Idaho sheep station won't graze border grizzly area
- USFWS: Wolf recovery numbers have changed to reflect science
- National parks await season where grizzlies, guns may intersect
- Plan to double quota in Montana wolf hunt under consideration
- Montana wolf hunt an inevitable step in successful reintroduction
- Idaho wants to broaden perspective of sage grouse groups
- Wyoming national forest seeks $2.5M to buy critical habitat
- USFWS denies black-footed ferret endangered species status
- Feds made right call on protection of ferrets
- Judge asks for more data on rare flower found in Colorado, Utah
- Montana FWP defends wolf management at Missoula meeting
- 9th Circuit upholds habitat designation for Mexican spotted owl
- Glacier Nat'l Park releases new rules on grizzly bears
- Crowds expected Tuesday as wolves return to court in Missoula
- Wolf case a test for endangered species nationwide
- Federal judge questions decision to split ESA protection of wolves
- Court buries Palouse worm's bid for endangered-species list
- USFWS declines to put Utah minnow on endangered list
- $525 million plan aims to protect Columbia, Snake River fish
- Endangered-species advocates file lawsuit against Cape Wind
- Groups join Idaho nonprofit's challenge of sage grouse decision
- We need a solution to too many wild horses
- Wolves in Oregon: Don't be so quick on the trigger
- BLM suspends wild horse roundup after 7 animals die
- Outside species threaten Arizona's native wildlife
- Group challenges feds over troubled species
- Reviving an Arizona native species is sometimes successful
- Experts note river otters' comeback
- Feds to Consider Endangered Status for Whitebark
- Palouse earthworm gets second look for protection
- Company's disclosure decision could change fracking debate
- Petition Seeks to Have Wolves Howl Across US
- BLM rounds up 636 wild horses
- Cleanup crews damaging critical habitat, critics say
- BLM unveils new sage grouse maps
- Ruby pipeline agreements address sage grouse impacts
- Lawsuit seeks stringent ESA analysis for offshore drilling
- Judge tells Forest Service to restudy fire retardant
- Local sportsmen group asks state to control wolves
- Lawmakers seek to end horse roundups in Nevada
- 34 horses dead in roundup in Elko County, according to BLM
- Wolves back on endangered list
- Bureau of Land Management extends wild horse comment period
- Decision to relist wolf undercuts moderates
- Montana, Idaho consider wolf-control options with hunts shut down
- Former top wildlife officials back more protections for Front
- Time for Wyoming to step up
- Molloy’s Wolf Ruling: Just Another Chapter in the Neverending Story
- BLM plans wild-horse roundups
- BLM meeting to focus on horse techniques
- Montana aims to settle lawsuit or remove, kill gray wolves
- Gov: feds should pay for wolves in Wyoming
- Wild horse advocates write in protest of Wyoming wild horse roundup
- Fish and Game fights judge’s wolf ruling: Agency says it doesn’t want to pay for poaching enforcemen
- Stopping invasive species takes community response
- Groups form coalition on wolf issue
- Feds appeal grizzly bear relisting
- Wyoming Gov Freudenthal updates sage grouse conservation plan
- Valvata snails no longer need federal protection
- Wyoming officials not inclined to act on wolves
- BLM seeks independent wild horse study
- Sportsmen's groups want state to kill wolves, protect elk
- F&G proposes year-round stream seasons



