Guest guest Posted May 18, 2005 Report Share Posted May 18, 2005 The Boston Globe GLOBE EDITORIAL Source > http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/editorials/articles/2005/05/1\ 3/a_vanishing_wildlife_fund/ A vanishing wildlife fund May 13, 2005 THE DISCOVERY last month in Arkansas that the magnificent ivory-billed woodpecker is not extinct after all should prove to Congress the value of land conservation and the protection of endangered species. But Congress is moving in exactly the opposite direction. A House subcommittee has dropped all money for land acquisition from the Land and Water Conservation Fund, and other lawmakers are working to strip the Endangered Species Act of much of its authority to protect critical habitats. The Land and Water Conservation Fund is supposed to receive as much as $900 million a year in royalties collected from federal leases for offshore oil and gas drilling. The House Interior Appropriations Subcommittee left it with nothing but operating funds. The subcommittee was only slightly less stingy with the Forest Legacy program, approving just $25 million, the lowest amount in six years. This program is a crucial source of money for states seeking to protect privately owned forestlands from development. President Bush has not lived up to his campaign pledge in 2000 to fund fully the Land and Water Conservation Fund, but his budget is much more generous than the subcommittee's. It calls for $132 million for the fund and $80 million for Forest Legacy, including $5 million toward preservation of the 37,000 Katahdin Iron Works land in Maine. This former International Paper Co. woodland, southwest of Maine's Baxter State Park, should not be allowed to fall victim to second-home development. At the same time Congress is stripping funds from land acquisition programs, it is proposing to waste millions on building roads for timber cutters in Alaska's Tongass National Forest, the largest intact temperate rain forest in the world. Last year the Forest Service spent $48 million more on the Tongass than it received in loggers' payments. A bill to stop such wasteful subsidies will be voted on next week.The ivory-billed woodpecker has survived the clearing of the South's bottomland river forests because its home is in the Cache River National Wildlife Refuge. But other critical habitats for endangered species are threatened by a bill now before Congress. Under legislation sponsored by Representative Dennis Cardoza, Democrat of California, the focus would shift from ensuring the recovery of species to merely their continued existence. Also, some habitats, such as migratory bird feeding areas, might not get the protection they now have under the 32-year-old Endangered Species Act. That law, a hallmark of the environmental movement, passed the Senate unanimously and received just five no votes in the House. Sadly, that consensus in favor of preserving wildlife is now more endangered than the ivory-billed woodpecker. Printer Friendly Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.