AMENDING THE ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT
by Jim Beers 11/14/04
As the Lame Duck session of Congress convenes and
the rare departing
incumbent Congressman bids adieu to colleagues,
thoughts of other endangered
and threatened things come to mind. This coming
week and again in winter
there are meetings being held to discuss reforming
the Endangered Species
Act. As you would expect, the environmental and
animal rights organizations
will accuse all that discuss reforms of hastening
the demise of the planet
and lining the pockets of rich and sinister forces
up to the moment of such
demise.
Reformers for their part will be of two sorts.
There will be the "bomb
throwers" that will represent those harmed by the
Act and therefore
advocates of burying the Act with nuclear waste in
concrete deep in some
subterranean mountain foundation. Then there will
be the enlightened and
"practical" folks that will toy with marginal
aspects of the Act. Terms
such as "making the Act work" and "simplifying the
process" will be mixed
with "sound science" and "peer review" to make the
whole affair appear
well-thought-out by knowledgeable and wise
persons. Some initial
observations and a few simple suggestions at this
point might be worthwhile.
The current situation, more than any other period
in the past decade, gives
us a ray of hope that the Endangered Species Act
(ESA) might be changed
significantly to reverse the widespread harm that
it has caused and
continues to generate. A practical President with
proven common sense has
been reelected and therefore has no need to
calculate about how an action
may affect him in four years. The current
political appointees in the
Departments of the Interior and Agriculture are
known entities. The green
appointees who will oppose and undercut reforms
are known to the radical
organizations and the bureaucrats that will work
with them to resist any
changes other than "more" of everything. Those
appointees that will support
reforms, the majority at the moment, are likewise
known to the reformers.
In Congress a similar picture has emerged. The
House and the Senate can
only be said to have increased the membership of
Representatives and
Senators open to reforms. The two key Committees
have bold and
knowledgeable Chairmen known to be supportive of
reforms. Senator Inhofe,
Chairman of the Senate Environment and Public
Works Committee, has long
championed the combination of our American form of
government with an
effective provision for a diverse and productive
environment.
Representative Pombo, Chairman of the House
Resources Committee, has a
proven record of trying to eliminate the growing
abuses that the Endangered
Species Act generates. His current efforts to
assure that hundreds of
millions of dollars in excise taxes are both
collected and then disbursed to
State fish and wildlife agencies are evidence of
his commitment. For his
efforts in this arena, powerful business
interests, Washington bureaucrats,
and self-serving Washington lobby groups plan to
either bypass him or cause
him political trouble next year as they scheme to
undo the reforms initiated
five years ago. Today, Washington bureaucrats and
their "partners" scheme
to keep more of the money in Washington for their
use rather than disbursing
it to the State agencies as the law states for
on-the-ground improvements
for hunters, fishermen, trappers, and other
outdoor recreationists and rural
citizens.
As reform proposals come up, I suggest you wave
your hand in front of your
face. Like a smoky campfire, you can't see the
fire and what you must do to
stop the smoke unless you move the smoke away so
you can see the fire. THE
problem with the ESA isn't the "process" or the
"science", those are only
symptoms; THE problem is that it is a socialist
process superimposed on a
republican form of government. Like the
imposition of the Zimbabwe form of
property ownership or the Chinese form of
business, the imposition of an
open-ended form of nature worship that trumps all
other considerations and
is administered by central government bureaucrats
can only lead to disaster
in a society like ours based on Constitutional
rights and State
jurisdictions over daily life.
Accepting the fact that we signed a UN
"Convention" concerning endangered
species does not mean that we "had" to or "should"
change our form of
government or incrementally eliminate property
rights or state rights
regarding not only plants and animals but also
public land management,
energy development, or a whole host of other
important aspects of our
national life. This UN "Convention" should be
implemented in the US within
the framework of our system of government that has
proven to be the best
yet-devised by man. The ESA is currently eroding
our system of government.
This poisonous model is spreading and, if not
checked, may destroy our form
of government for good. Current international
efforts to create a similar
UN "Convention" on small arms is intended to
eliminate the 2nd Amendment and
make gun rights, like property rights where an
Endangered Species occurs, a
gift or loss at the whim of government .
Likewise, Washington bureaucrats
and their extremist "partners" are using this
model to obtain Federal
Invasive Species authority to initiate a Federal
mandate of unlimited
proportions to "restore Native Ecosystems." For
these and many other
reasons, the ESA must be made to conform with our
governmental system.
Additionally, successful reforms will provide
applicable models to
similarly-necessary reforms of other such laws
like the Animal Welfare Act
and the Marine Mammal Protection Act.
Whenever the topic of ESA reform comes up, here
are a few things to keep in
mind.
1.) Federal proclamations of "Endangered" or
"Threatened" should be
absolutely limited to Species (not subspecies or
any smaller subdivision)
that are in trouble worldwide. A Distinct
Population Segment of mice or
local lynx populations when worldwide populations
are numerous and
widespread should never be of concern above the
level of State governments
and the voters of each individual State.
2.) Federal or national interest in any plant
or animal, whether based on
the UN "Convention" requirements or simply an
interest of national
interests, should recognize State jurisdiction
except where a species is
named on a genuine and enforceable treaty between
the US and a sovereign
nation. This means that where the Federal
government wants to protect
ground squirrels or sage grouse or some plant they
should REQUEST that the
State do certain things that the Federal
government is willing to PAY for.
The decision to do so or not remains with the
State. The ESA should not be a
vehicle for powerful groups or bureaucrats to
blithely rob States of their
authority any more than it should be a vehicle for
Iowans (who benefit from
the absence of free-ranging buffalo) to tell
Idahoans that they must
tolerate wolves.
3.) When State jurisdiction is restored, issues
such as Taking Without
Compensation and Taking (by government) Not For a
"Public Use" become moot.
If they were to reassert themselves, it would have
to be at the State level
where it is far more amenable to judicial erasure
or voter response than
where it is currently conducted at the Federal
level.
Restoring State Constitutional authority over
plants and animals (not named
on international treaties) and making Endangered
and Threatened species
actions voluntary and PAID for by listing entities
does several things. It
puts a brake on the egregious misuse of the
listing authority by limiting it
to SPECIES in trouble worldwide and requiring that
all necessary actions
(agreed to by the concerned State) are PAID for by
either the Federal
government or national organizations. Such a
straightforward (and American)
approach would minimize the perversion of academic
"science" and the
influence of extremist organizations by narrowing
the loose money (reduced
listing "targets") and eliminating the potential
harms from the listing of
any and every plant stand or animal flock located
where the latest
development, road, or activity is targeted for
closure.
If there is any complaint from "international"
quarters, let them explain
why we, more than any other nation, list jumping
mice and willows with
abandon and others only grudgingly accept such
international designations
and then ignore them without consequence.
Competing with others economically is a tough
business in the modern world.
Changing challenges whether from Chinese or Indian
businesses or European
subsidies requires hard work and minimal waste on
the part of all Americans.
When something makes us keep much-needed oil and
gas in the ground; when it
makes us waste billions of board feet of timber,
wood products, and wood
energy; when it makes us close public lands and
roads; when it destroys our
rural communities and raises the prices of
commodities like beef and grain;
when it destroys hunting and fishing industries by
diminishing the fish and
game; and when it provides a model to destroy the
very fabric of the
freedoms and liberties that have made this country
great: it is time to
either change it or get rid of it.
More than at any other time in the history of man,
we have the knowledge and
experience to manage our environment and live free
and productive lives as
we develop energy and build homes and raise
families. If we cannot do this
regarding plant and animal SPECIES in need of help
now, we never can. If we
cannot do this within the State/Federal system of
government that has made
us the envy of the world, it cannot be done.
Dictators, Kings, Chairmen,
and Tin-Pot "Presidents" and their mandates always
wind up in the dustbin of
history. What sensible person believes that this
ESA-mandate system isn't
doing the same to us? The time for reform is now
and only if it is "real"
is there any reason to expect that it will both
help plants and animals and
preserve the American way of life.
Jim Beers
14 November 2004
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