Reforming the Endangered Species Act
10/31/03 -- Pacific Legal Foundation
The Endangered Species
Act Reform Project - a
nationwide project of Pacific Legal Foundation
www.pacificlegal.org
There has been a lot of activity on the Endangered
Species Act front over
the past few months. PLF continues to expose the
shoddy science used in
species listing and critical habitat designations;
the battle over water
rights is intensifying; and a surprising CWA
decision in the Sixth Circuit
defied SWANCC. We hope you find the following
update on PLF's cases
useful.
In addition, we've included highlights of other ESA
matters we thought
would be of interest.
PLF MOVES TO DELIST WESTERN SNOWY PLOVER
On September 24, 2003, PLF filed a 60-day notice of
intent to sue the
federal government, charging the Fish and Wildlife
Service with maintaining ESA protections for the
western snowy plover based on junk science. PLF
filed the notice on behalf of the Surf Ocean Beach
Commission (SOBC), which filed a delisting petition
for the plovers in July 2002. Although FWS is
required to act on SOBC's petition within 90 days,
they have yet to do so.
PLF is charging the government with sitting on
scientific information that justifies removing the
plover from protected status. Specifically, PLF
argues that data about the Pacific plover
demonstrates that the western snowy plover is not a
distinct population or separate species entitled to
its own set of ESA protections. As a result of the
government's designation of critical habitat for the
birds, beachgoers and small businesses from
Washington to California face severe use
restrictions, and even beach closures, on over 200
miles of beaches.
To read the PLF press release, please copy and paste
the following URL into
your web browser: http://www.pacificlegal.org/list_PLFNews.asp
FWS SKIRTS SCIENCE IN LAKE SHREW LISTING
PLF is fighting another bogus ESA listing in Kern
County Farm Bureau v. Norton. In September, PLF
filed a brief in support of the Farm Bureau and
others who challenged the listing of the Buena Vista
Lake Shrew as endangered last year. If the legal
challenge is unsuccessful, this case could have a
significant impact on the ability to use vested
water rights.
The listing process violated several federal laws,
including the ESA. FWS failed to rely on recent
scientific data in the administrative record, used
secret studies not subject to public review, failed
to concurrently designate critical habitat, and
failed to prepare an environmental assessment. Most
significantly, the Service failed to address recent
scientific information that indicates the lake shrew
is not
distinguishable from other ornate shrew subspecies,
is not a valid subspecies, and therefore, does not
meet the legal criteria for listing. An October
2001 report by scientists at California State
University Stanislaus concluded "we do not believe
that Buena Vista Lake Shrews are endangered now, nor
are there foreseeable threats to remaining
populations in the near future."
For a full summary of this case, please cut and
paste the following URL into
your browser:
http://www.pacificlegal.org/view_SearchDetail.asp?tid=Publication&sField=Pub
licationID&iID=202
PLF FIGHTS DANGEROUS PRECEDENT FOR WATER RIGHTS IN
THE WEST
On August 14, 2003, a three-judge panel of the Ninth
Circuit Court of Appeals sided with the Forest
Service and against farmers' water rights in
Okanogan v. National Marine Fisheries Service. Last
Friday, the Court denied PLF's petition for
rehearing en banc. The case sets a precedent that,
if not overturned, could wreak economic upheaval in
the western states where water is scarce and water
rights invaluable. Accordingly, PLF will be filing
a petition for certiorari to the U.S. Supreme Court.
The case centers around the century-old water rights
of dozens of Methow River Basin farmers. Underlying
the action is a convoluted permitting process that
farmers must comply with because their water crosses
federal land through ditches. Until recently, the
permits had not contained conditions regulating
water use. For the past three growing seasons,
however, irrigators have been deprived of water due
to a controversial decision by the Forest Service
and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) to limit stream flows so that
"optimal habitat conditions" might be achieved for
listed species such as salmon, steelhead and bull
trout.
Representing plaintiffs on appeal, PLF argued that
the lower court decision wrongly focused on use of
federal land, rather than the privately-owned water
rights. That is, the water is the subject at issue
-- not the ditches -- and the farmers have a right
to the water based on long-standing federal and
state law. The Ninth Circuit disagreed. In an
unpublished decision, the Court affirmed the lower
court's ruling, holding that a host of land
management statutes "give the Forest Service
authority to maintain certain levels of flow in the
rivers and streams within the boundaries of the
Okanogan National Forest to protect endangered fish
species," and that this authority extends to the
ditches.
PLF Northwest Center Managing Attorney Russ Brooks
describes the case this
way: "Settled water rights throughout the West are
in jeopardy."
To read a PLF press release, please cut and paste
the following URL into
your browser:
http://www.pacificlegal.org/view_SearchDetail.asp?tid=Release&sField=Release
ID&iID=204
TENTH CIRCUIT PUTS MINNOW BEFORE PEOPLE
A petition for rehearing in Rio Grande Silvery
Minnow v. Keys at the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals
has been requested after a decision by a three-judge
panel caused an uproar earlier this year. The case
involves the Rio Grande Silvery Minnow, a small fish
listed under the ESA, which lives in the Rio Grande
basin. In recent years, water that the fish rely
upon for survival has become scarce due to drought
conditions. However, environmental groups, and now
the court, seem oblivious to the fact that
the drought is also affecting humans.
Last year, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, after
consulting with FWS, proposed that the minnows be
relocated to upstream portions of the Rio Grande,
which would not dry out. Environmental plaintiffs
filed suit demanding that, instead, the water from
the Heron Reservoir be released into the Rio Grande
for the minnow. This complete disregard for
scientific findings and expert opinions, not to
mention the lack of concern for agriculture and
municipal water needs, has become increasingly
common among such groups.
Unbelievably, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals
ruled that the government's first duty was to the
fish and that it may divert water contractually
obligated to farmers and cities for the benefit of
the silvery minnow. PLF's AC brief asked the court
to require federal regulators to rely on sound
science and balance species protections with
important human needs.
To read PLF's article "The ESA: A Growing Question
of Whose Ox is Gored,"
please cut and paste the following URL into your
browser:
http://pacificlegal.org/view_Commentaries.asp?iID=106&sTitle=The+Endangered+
Species+Act%3A+A+Growing+Question+of+Whose+Ox+is+Gored
SIXTH CIRCUIT DEFIES SWANCC
On August 5, 2003, the Sixth Circuit Court of
Appeals handed down an unexpected opinion in United
States v. Rapanos. Although this is a Clean Water
Act case, we continue to keep you updated on it
because what the government is putting Mr. Rapanos
through is so outrageous. John Rapanos was
criminally convicted of filling wetlands on his
Michigan property without a federal Clean Water Act
permit. The conviction was upheld in the Sixth
Circuit. However, the U.S. Supreme Court vacated
the appellate court decision and remanded the case
in light of its decision in SWANCC v. Army Corps of
Engineers.
In that landmark decision, the Supreme Court
determined that federal authority under the Clean
Water Act does not extend to wetlands that are
isolated, or not adjacent to a traditional navigable
waterway. On remand to the District Court, the
government argued that Rapanos' wetlands were
"adjacent" to navigable waters because they had a
surface connection to a navigable waterway - twenty
miles away. Relying on SWANCC, the District Court
rejected this argument holding that "adjacent" means
directly adjacent to navigable waters. The
government appealed, and PLF's brief not only
supported Mr. Rapanos, but strongly supported the
Supreme Court's earlier decision and the precedent
set which the government is so diligently
attempting to ignore.
A three-judge panel of the Sixth Circuit Court
narrowly construed SWANCC, reversed the District
Court decision, and reinstated the conviction
against Rapanos. The decision is surprising, to say
the least, in light of the remand. PLF will be
briefing the case in support of Rapanos before the
U.S. Supreme Court.
To read the Sixth Circuit decision, please cut and
paste the following URL
into your browser:
http://pacer.ca6.uscourts.gov/cgi-bin/getopn.pl?OPINION=03a0268p.06
ADDITIONAL ESA NEWS
PUBLIC COMMENT DEADLINE EXTENDED TO OCTOBER 31 FOR
PROPOSED LISTING OF THE CALIFORNIA TIGER SALAMANDER
FWS extended the public comment period for the
proposed listing of the California tiger salamander
as a threatened species to October 31, 2003. The
proposed listing has serious implication for
ranchers and farmers in Stanislaus, San Joaquin and
Merced counties. As a result, Congressman Dennis
Cardoza (D-Merced) has been an outspoken critic of
the proposed listing and says he is skeptical of its
scientific basis. "The facts simply do not warrant
a listing in this situation," Cardoza said in a
press release. According to the Turlock Journal,
the Stanislaus County Board of Supervisors sent a
letter to FWS opposing the listing "primarily
because the Service's proposal is not backed by
thorough and credible scientific evidence." Last
week, PLF joined a panel with Congressman Cardoza
and Congressman George Radonovich (R-Mariposa) as
part of a public information session on the proposed
listing.
The mailing address for comments is U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, Sacramento Fish & Wildlife Service
Office, 2800 Cottage Way, Suite W-2605, Sacramento
95825. Comments may also be submitted
electronically to catiger@R1.fws.gov.
NINTH CIRCUIT CALLS ARIZONA PYGMY-OWL LISTING
"ARBITRARY AND CAPRICIOUS"
The cactus ferruginous pygmy-owl may be removed from
the endangered species list. On August 19, 2003,
the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that FWS
"acted arbitrarily and capriciously" in designating
the Arizona pygmy-owl as a distinct population
segment in National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)
v. Norton. The court found that "[n]owhere in the
listing rule...does the FWS mention the existence of
any genetic differences between the pygmy-owls in
Arizona and northwestern Mexico, nor does the record
provide any evidence to that effect." The court did
not set aside the listing, but instead remanded the
case back to the District Court to
decide.
According to NAHB, the decision "marks the first
time in over a decade that a court has ruled that
the Service was wrong in listing a species." FWS
wants to designate 1.2 million acres of southern
Arizona as critical habitat for the owl.
To read the items below, please cut and paste the
URL into your browser:
Ninth Circuit Decision (August 19, 2003)
http://www.ca9.uscourts.gov/ca9/newopinions.nsf
NAHB Press Release
http://www.nahb.org/news_details.aspx?sectionID=122&newsID=468
CRITICAL HABITAT FOR ARKANSAS RIVER SHINER VACATED
AND REMANDED
In September, a federal court in New Mexico vacated
and remanded the critical habitat designation for
the Arkansas River Shiner. The plaintiffs
challenged the designation on several grounds,
including that FWS improperly used the "incremental
baseline approach" in assessing the economic impacts
of designation. The Tenth Circuit rejected the use
of the baseline approach in New Mexico Cattle
Growers Association v. USFWS.
In response, the plaintiffs and FWS reached a
settlement agreement that granted FWS until 2007 to
complete the new designation. The court rejected
the agreement, holding that "in no case may the
Service exceed the statutory time limits set forth
in the ESA for the promulgating critical habitat
designations." FWS must issue a proposed
designation no later than one year from the court's
order and a final rule no more than one year later.
The court did not agree with the argument by
Intervenor Center for Biological Diversity (CBD)
that the critical habitat rule should remain in
place pending remand. Instead, the court vacated
the designation, finding that the CBD had presented
"little, if any, evidence of resulting harm to the
shiner" if the restrictions were lifted and that the
listing itself affords significant protections.
In a separate ruling the same day, the court also
gave FWS the same two-year time limit to propose a
new designation for the southwestern willow
flycatcher. The Tenth Circuit specifically set
aside the flycatcher designation in New Mexico
Cattle Growers more than two years ago.
To read the Shiner opinion, please cut and paste the
following URL into
your browser:
http://www.eswr.com/903/arkshinerorder.pdf
GAO CALLS ON FWS TO PROVIDE "CLEAR STRATEGIC
DIRECTION" FOR CRITICAL HABITAT PROGRAM
In September, the General Accounting Office released
a new study in response to concerns about endangered
species listing and critical habitat decisions and
"the role that 'sound science' plays in the
decision-making process." GAO found that "experts,
peer reviewers, and others generally support the
science behind" listing decisions. (PLF strongly
disagrees.) However, GAO reports that "peer
reviewers often expressed concern about the specific
areas designated, while other experts expressed
concerns about the adequacy of the data available to
make designations." GAO recommends that FWS
provide "clear strategic direction" for the program
by "clarifying the role of critical habitat, how and
when it should be designated, and recommending
policy/guidance, regulatory, and/or legislative
changes" to improve it. You may recall from the
last letter that PLF provided the GAO with "15
Suggestions for Legislative Reform of the Endangered
Species Act" last year.
Unfortunately, the GAO report pays very little
attention to the correct analytical model FWS should
use in designating critical habitat, a model the
federal court carefully delineated in PLF's Alameda
whipsnake victory. Instead, the GAO spent most of
its time on how FWS is not able to carry out its
duties under the ESA very effectively due to the
heavy burden of having to meet court-ordered CHD
schedules.
To read the full GAO study, please cut and paste the
following URL into
your browser:
http://www.gao.gov/atext/d03803.txt
We encourage you to write op-eds, articles, or in
other ways to educate the public about the issues
discussed above. Should you have any questions
about the cases or any of the items in this update,
please don't hesitate to contact me at: esarp@pacificlegal.org,
or fax to my attention at (916) 362-2932. As ususal,
please forward this letter to any party who might
have an interest.
Sincerely,
Dave Stirling
Vice President
(916) 362-2833
Founded in 1973 as an IRC Section 501(c)(3) public
interest legal organization, Pacific Legal
Foundation litigates in the courts on behalf of
limited government, individual and economic
freedoms, ownership and reasonable use of private
property, environmental balance, and free
enterprise. PLF's ongoing legal caseload averages
about 180 cases and is advanced by a staff of 25
attorneys, working in state and federal courts
around the country, including the United States
Supreme Court. PLF's
headquarters office is in Sacramento, CA, with
regional offices in Bellevue, WA; Honolulu, HI; and
Miami, FL.