Community | December 12, 2008 | 3 comments

Bush 'revises' protections for endangered species

Image
julesrs007
WASHINGTON – Just six weeks before President-elect Barack Obama takes office, the Bush administration issued revised endangered species regulations Thursday to reduce the input of federal scientists and to block the law from being used to fight global warming.

The changes, which will go into effect in about 30 days, were completed in just four months. But they could take Obama much longer to reverse.

They will eliminate some of the mandatory, independent reviews that government scientists have performed for 35 years on dams, power plants, timber sales and other projects, a step that developers and other federal agencies have blamed for delays and cost increases.

The rules also prohibit federal agencies from evaluating the effect on endangered species and the places they live from a project's contribution to increased global warming.

Interior Department officials described the changes as "narrow," but admitted that the regulations were controversial inside the agency. Environmentalists viewed them as eroding the protections for endangered species.

Interior officials said federal agencies could still seek the expertise of federal wildlife biologists on a voluntary basis, and that other parts of the law will ensure that species are protected.
  1. groups:
    Community,   Politics,   Green,   Health,   3 more
  2. tags:
    News Politics Green Environment 21 more
  3.     
    |

3 comments // Bush 'revises' protections for endangered species

  • Social_Fuzz
    • 0
      Social_Fuzz  
    • Vile, Sick, and stupid. If anything regulation should get tighter if we want to save any sort of beauty and diversity. Its disgusting what the Bush administration is doing before leaving office. There should be limitations on this shit. Why did no one put a bullet in that idiots head + cheneys?

    • 3 years ago
  • TheDodge
more from Community:

top videos