Good science, peer review vital
for ESA
September 30, 2005
When the Klamath
Reclamation Project was shut down in 2001 and
the water normally used for farmers' fields went
to fish instead, the blame went to the
Endangered Species Act and the government
agencies that enforce it.
Those agencies -
the Bureau of Reclamation, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service and the National Marine
Fisheries Service - shut the project down on
short notice to growers in April of that year so
more water could be saved for suckers upriver
and coho salmon downstream. Project farmers paid
the price.
The Project is
administered by the Bureau of Reclamation,
which, we suspect, would have found a way to
share that year's water shortage without a total
cutoff to farmers, if it hadn't had a legal gun
to its head. It took the intervention of
high-level Bush administration officials to
restore some of the water later in the season,
but a lot of damage had been done by then.
The event focused
attention on the Endangered Species Act as
perhaps no other issue had since the debate over
the snail darter and the Tellico Dam project in
Tennessee more than two decades prior. After a
dispute through much of the 1970s, Congress
approved an exemption for the dam, and the
project moved ahead despite the tiny fish's
status under the Endangered Species Act as
threatened. More populations of the fish were
found after the exemption was approved.
Perhaps a little
better science in advance would have prevented
all of that 1970s turmoil. That's one of the key
issues involved in a proposal to rewrite the
Endangered Species Act into what's known as the
Threatened and Endangered Species Act of 2005.
The rewrite is now in Congress.
After the Basin's
water cutoff in 2001, a review by a National
Research Council panel of scientists said the
decision couldn't be justified by the available
science.
The rewrite of the
Endangered Species Act, which has been approved
by the House of Representatives and now goes to
the Senate, puts an emphasis on making decisions
based on the "best available science" that's
also been subject to peer review. "Peer review"
means that other scientists with credentials
would evaluate the basis used for proposing
species as endangered or threatened, along with
reviewing the programs to proposed to improve
their status.
The new law would
instruct the secretary of interior to determine
what constitutes "the best available science," a
proposition that environmental organizations
find upsetting since the secretary is a
presidential appointment and a good grounding in
science is not legally required for the
position.
Given what happened
in the Klamath Basin in 2001, though, leaving
the decision up to the professionals in
government agencies is no guarantee that the
right thing will get done.
The emphasis on
peer-reviewed science is something the
Endangered Species Act needs. It's essential
because not only should it improve the accuracy
of the findings, it should make the public more
willing to accept the human accommodation that
might be necessary to rescue a species.
Preservation of
habitat also has to be at the heart of the
Endangered Species Act. If the ability to
preserve habitat is lost, the act will have no
meaning. Anything that emerges from Congress
needs to include a reasonable way to save
habitat.
The 2001 water
crisis didn't need to happen. Government
agencies looked to the Klamath Project - as they
have done so often - as their only answer to a
drought because the Project had the only spigot
they could turn off. A lot of people got hurt,
and that's something that better science could
have prevented. |