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Tuesday
May
17, 2005 Pombo Releases Oversight Report on ESA Implementation Review of agency data shows little evidence of progress in species recovery Source: House Committee on Resources
Washington, D.C. -- Today
Chairman Richard W. Pombo (R-CA) released a report, Implementation of
the Endangered Species Act (ESA) of 1973, prepared at his request by
the House Resources Committee's Oversight & Investigations staff.
"The Endangered Species
Act's less than one percent success rate for species recovery is a
well-documented and readily-available statistic, but the status of the
remaining species on its list has not been as clear until now,"
Chairman Pombo said. "This exhaustive review of government data
makes it clear the vast majority of these species have not improved
under implementation of current law." 1. After more than 30 years
only 10 of nearly 1300 domestic species have recovered and, in many
cases, the ESA was not the primary factor in the recovery. 2. According to the FWS's most recent report to Congress, 77 percent of listed species are classified in the Service's lowest 'recovery achieved' category, having only met 0-25 percent of recovery objectives. Only 2 percent fall into the highest 'recovery achieved' category, having met 76-100 percent of recovery objectives. (Report pages 19-21) 3. According to the FWS's most recent Report to Congress, the recovery status of 60 percent of listed species is either 'uncertain' or 'declining'; 30 percent are classified as stable; 6 percent are classified as improving; and 3 percent (35 species) are classified as possibly extinct. 4. Of the 33 species reclassified by the FWS in the Act's history, only 10 domestic species were downlisted (status from endangered to threatened) because the species had improved. (Report page 12-16) 5. Erroneous data/data error has significantly adversely affected the implementation of the ESA.
6. According to the FWS, in 30 years of implementing the ESA, the service has found that the designation of statutory critical habitat provides little additional protection to most listed species, while consuming significant amounts of conservation resources. The Service's present system for designating critical habitat is driven by litigation rather than biology. (Report page 56) 7. The current program clearly costs billions of dollars, but insufficient economic information is collected to reasonably determine the true cost of the law, as all federal, state, and private expenditure reporting cannot be assessed. 8. Given the Act's poor recovery rate, the pool of future possible additions, current agency species data (77% of species having achieved only 0 to 25% of recovery), litigation demands and conservative consideration of cost data, the current program is not sustainable.
"The ESA is obviously in
need of a legislative update that will focus the law on strengthening
results for species recovery," Pombo said. "This report will
be an invaluable guide as Congress considers the best way to do just
that. It has certainly become a question of how we improve this law,
not a question of if." Copyright
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