President George W. Bush is
requesting more than $1.3 billion -- $22.6 million
more than last year, for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service’s 2005 budget. The
request represents the administrations continuing
commitment to protect
America’s natural resources and support conservation
partnerships in
communities across the country.
Among the key features of this budget package are an
increase for partnership and
cost-share grant programs under the President’s
Cooperative Conservation
Initiative, and $2 million for a new Science
Excellence Initiative. Budget
increases for hatcheries and migratory bird programs
help to round out a package
that will allow the Service to conserve, with its
partners, the nature of America.
"President Bush’s budget for the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service illustrates his
continued strong commitment to protect and conserve
our nation’s fish and
wildlife and its habitat," said Interior Secretary
Gale Norton. "In particular, the
budget significantly boosts funding to support
partnerships with states, tribes,
local communities, private landowners and others to
protect and enhance our
fisheries, recover species, and increase
opportunities for Americans to enjoy our
public lands."
New funding in the 2005 budget to support the
Cooperative Conservation
Initiative includes:
• An increase of $20.4 million for a total of $50
million for
Landowner Incentive Grants that provide state and
tribal fish and
wildlife agencies grant funds needed to establish or
expand habitat
protection and restoration programs on private land
for "at risk"
species.
• An increase of $2.6 million for a total of $10
million for Private
Stewardship Grant programs that provide cost-share
grants to
landowners for wildlife conservation.
• An increase of $10.9 million for a total of $80
million for the State
and Tribal Wildlife Grants Fund that aids wildlife
conservation on
State and Tribal lands.
• An increase of $16.5 million for a total of $54
million for the
North American Wetlands Conservation Fund that
provides
matching grants to private or public organizations
and individuals
to carry out wetlands conservation projects in the
United States,
Canada, and Mexico.
• Increases of $8.4 million for a total of $90
million for the
Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund
that helps
states increase participation in a wide array of
voluntary
conservation projects for candidate, proposed and
listed species.
The states award these funds to private landowners
and groups for
conservation projects.
• Increases of $2.2 million for a total of $12
million for the National
Wildlife Refuge System’s Challenge Cost Share
program that
provides grants that match federal and private funds
for
conservation projects on refuges.
• New funding of $5 million for the High Plains
Partnership under
the Partners for Fish and Wildlife programs. This is
a publicprivate
collaboration initiated to pro-actively conserve
declining
species and their habitats and preclude the need for
further species
listings. The 2005 requested increase will allow the
Service to
pursue this effort with state fish and game agencies
in the 11 high
plain states, agencies within the Department of
Agriculture, private
conservation organizations and private landowners.
Sage grouse
conservation efforts will receive $300,000 of this
money. The
Upper Klamath Basin Restoration, another
conservation initiative,
will receive an increase of $6.2 million. The
initiative will fund
habitat restoration, removal of fish migration
barriers, land
acquisition and diminish the likelihood of water
crises.
• An increase of $2.9 million for a total of $13.1
million for Coastal
Programs grants for on-the- ground conservation of
wetlands and
tidal lands. Controlling invasive species will be a
significant focus
of this program in 2005.
"The most effective conservation projects are the
ones that are conceived and
carried out at the local level, by the people who
live and work on the land,"
Norton said. "Our goal is to empower the American
people to become citizen conservationists, working
together to achieve what the government alone cannot
achieve."
The budget request of $2 million for the Science
Excellence Initiative is one of
Director Steve William’s priorities. Science
excellence is the foundation for all of
the Services work. Through this initiative, the
Service will be taking many steps
to increase our ability to acquire and apply science
in the conservation of the
nation’s fish and wildlife resources. The budget for
this initiative is divided up
into two components. One million dollars will be
used to shape new approaches
to the science of natural resource conservation. The
remainder will be used to
bolster the resources of our partners to help the
Service better shape the direction
of conservation efforts and to meet the changing
needs of science-based
conservation.
“The ever-escalating complexity of natural resource
conservation demands
scientific information that is rigorous, timely and
relevant. This initiative
supports the underpinnings of good science, promotes
good decision making, and
supports continuous learning and professional
development, as well as stronger
partnerships with other Federal or state natural
resource agencies, non-profit
organizations, and private industry,” Williams said.
Other notable parts of the Services 2005 budget:
• The Migratory Bird Management program would
receive more
than a $4.5 million increase for permits and
monitoring. This will
be an important step towards identifying and meeting
the needs of
the program. An increase of $1.2 million, for a
total of $11.4
million for the North American Waterfowl Management
Plan will
help manage waterfowl as well as the 15 Joint
Ventures around the
country. This successful model for achieving
migratory bird
conservation goals through cooperation and
consultation with
partners has increased the interest and number of
potential
partnerships.
• The Endangered Species program will receive an
extra $5.0
million, for a total of more than $17.2 million, in
its listing budget
to alleviate the backlog in dealing with new
listings and critical
habitat designations. This program has been subject
to a great deal
of litigation in recent years, particularly in
regards to designation
of critical habitat for already listed species. This
increase will
address litigation-driven workloads and should also
provide
additional funding to address other high-priority
actions that are
not the subject of litigation.
• An increase of nearly $1 million for a total of
nearly $16.9 million
will help address maintenance needs at national fish
hatcheries.
The budget also provides an increase of $1 million
for hatchery
operations, for a total of $40.1 million.
• The National Wildlife Refuge System’s Law
Enforcement budget
would increase more than $3 million.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is the principal
federal agency responsible for
conserving, protecting and enhancing fish, wildlife
and plants and their habitats
for the continuing benefit of the American people.
The Service manages the 95-
million-acre National Wildlife Refuge System which
encompasses more than 542
national wildlife refuges, thousands of small
wetlands and other special
management areas. It also operates 69 national fish
hatcheries, 64 fishery resource
offices and 81 ecological services field stations.
The agency enforces federal
wildlife laws, administers the Endangered Species
Act, manages migratory bird
populations, restores nationally significant
fisheries, conserves and restores
wildlife habitat such as wetlands, and helps foreign
governments with their
conservation efforts. It also oversees the Federal
Aid program that distributes
hundreds of millions of dollars in excise taxes on
fishing and hunting equipment
to state fish and wildlife agencies.
-FWS-
For more information about the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service,
visit our homepage at
http://www.fws.gov