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Thursday, December 26, 2024

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Advocates urge broader clemency despite Biden's death row commutes; Bald eagle officially becomes national bird, a conservation success; Hispanic pastors across TX, U.S. wanted for leadership network; When bycatch is on the menu.

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The authors of Project 2025 say they'll carry out a hard-right agenda, voting rights advocates raise alarm over Trump's pick to lead the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, and conservatives aim to cut federal funding for public broadcasting.

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From the unprecedented election season to the latest environmental news, the Yonder Report looks back at stories that topped our weekly 2024 newscasts.

A New Danger for the Endangered Species Act

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Wednesday, August 20, 2008   

Washington, D.C. - As though avoiding extinction weren't already tough enough, another hurdle for endangered species is on the horizon. New rules being proposed by the Bush Administration could let each federal agency, rather than expert scientists, determine if the agency's actions or projects might harm a species.

Glen Besa, director of the Virginia Chapter of the Sierra Club, says that means the Department of Transportation could end up deciding, for example, whether a highway project would harm a species.

"They literally build this conflict-of-interest into the process, so that an agency that wants to build a project is the same agency that decides whether or not it will have an impact on threatened or endangered species."

The regulation specifically excludes the climate change impacts of proposed projects, which seems to conflict with another, recent Bush Administration action, Besa observes.

"This Administration did recognize that the polar bear was threatened by global warming. But these new regulations would prohibit agencies from considering the impacts of global warming when evaluating projects."

The Administration's view is that the changes would allow agencies to more easily approve new projects that reduce risks to wildlife. Besa contends that instead, it would allow federal agencies to do whatever they want, without oversight by scientists or wildlife professionals.

A 30-day public comment period will begin as soon as the proposed rule revisions are published in the Federal Register.





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