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Michigan lawmakers target predatory loan companies; NY jury hears tape of Trump and Cohen Discussing Hush-Money Deal; flood-impacted VT households rebuild for climate resilience; film documents environmental battle with Colorado oil, gas industry.

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President Biden defends dissent but says "order must prevail" on campus, former President Trump won't commit to accepting the 2024 election results and Nebraska lawmakers circumvent a ballot measure repealing private school vouchers.

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Bidding begins soon for Wyoming's elk antlers, Southeastern states gained population in the past year, small rural energy projects are losing out to bigger proposals, and a rural arts cooperative is filling the gap for schools in Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

Groups Press Feds to Allow Industry Prosecution for Bird Killings

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Friday, July 6, 2018   

LANSING, Mich. – The Migratory Bird Treaty Act turns 100 this week, leading conservation groups to dub 2018 the "Year of the Bird" – and to ask the Trump administration to live up to the spirit of the law.

The MBTA made it illegal to pursue, hunt, take or capture migratory birds. Last December, the U.S. Interior Department rescinded Obama-era guidelines about prosecuting companies that cause bird deaths. Then the DOI issued a new legal opinion, saying companies may not be prosecuted for unintentional bird deaths, or an "incidental take."

Bob Dreher, senior vice president for conservation with Defenders of Wildlife says the new guidelines amount to a license to kill.

"The new administration's position, which is that the act just doesn't cover industrial 'take' at all, gives these industries just a free hand,” says Dreher. “They don't have to do anything in order to avoid the killing of migratory birds, even though they know that it will occur from what they're doing, and even though there may be reasonable and cost-effective things they could do to avoid killing birds."

The government used the MBTA to prosecute BP for the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion in 2010 and the Exxon Valdez spill in 1989. A Trump administration spokesman said the Obama-era guidelines "criminalized all actions that killed migratory birds, whether purposeful or not," and called the new rules "a victory over the regulatory state."

Dreher says taking protective action to avoid bird deaths is a simple matter – like adding nets to oil waste ponds to keep birds from landing on what they think is a water source.

"When they land on those oil pits or oil tanks, they immediately get immersed in oil and they die in the pit,” says Dreher. “And there can be tens of thousands of birds that will get killed in a single large oil pit or oil tank."

Several conservation groups have filed suit to challenge the administration's actions. Public records show that oil companies spent almost a half-million dollars last year lobbying the Trump administration to revise the Migratory Bird Treaty Act.


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