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Jul-20-2007 15:24printcomments

Wyden Calls for More Review of Possible ESA Tampering

After recent ethics problems at the Interior Department, Wyden says Congress needs evidence that only eight cases were “improperly influenced”.

Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne
Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne
Courtesy: itc.nps.gov

(WASHINGTON, D.C. ) - U.S. Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) today called on Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne to fully disclose all details leading to a decision to reexamine only eight Endangered Species Act (ESA) decisions “that appear to have been improperly influenced by former Deputy Assistant Secretary Julie MacDonald.”

In a letter to Kempthorne, Wyden wrote, “The Department alleges that its internal review concluded that MacDonald oversaw scores of ESA decisions, but in most of these cases she did not improperly influence the outcome. Respectfully, given the history of this scandal and others at the Department, I do not believe it is credible to accept the Department’s conclusion without evidence, such as access to the working papers of the internal review (documents and correspondence) and the Fish and Wildlife Service scientists and regional directors who participated in the original decisions and in the internal review.”

“The Interior Department’s assurances that their internal reviews are adequate just aren’t enough,” said Wyden. “It’s Congress’ job to perform oversight in these types of cases; and after all of the recent revelations of ethics problems at the Interior Department, Congress needs evidence that these are the only cases Ms. MacDonald interfered with.”

Wyden yesterday asked Kempthorne to clarify the Interior Department’s ethical strategy following the resignation of Mark Limbaugh, who served as chairman of the Department’s newly constituted Conduct Accountability Board, which was charged with reviewing the ethics issues raised in the Inspector General’s report on Julie MacDonald. Sixteen days after Kempthorne wrote to Wyden of Limbaugh’s assignment, he resigned to take a job at the Ferguson Group, a D.C. lobbying firm representing local and state water agencies with interests before the Department.

(For more on this: wyden.senate.gov/media)

The complete text of Wyden’s letter to Kempthorne follows:

Secretary Dirk Kempthorne

U.S. Interior Department

1849 C St. NW

Washington, D.C. 20240

July 20, 2007

Dear Secretary Kempthorne:

I appreciate the Interior Department’s announcement today regarding its intent to reopen Endangered Species Act (ESA) decisions that appear to have been improperly influenced by former Deputy Assistant Secretary Julie MacDonald. It is gratifying to finally see the Department address this scandal in public following months of relative silence.

However, I must question the Department’s decision to reopen only eight ESA decisions. My staff has identified 16 ESA decisions in which MacDonald played a critical role, as identified by the Interior Department’s Inspector General and environmental groups who have tracked MacDonald’s actions. Those include listing decisions for the Greater Sage Grouse, the Gunnison Sage Grouse, the Gunnison’s Prairie Dog, Tabernaemontana rotensis (a rare island tree), the White-Tailed Prairie Dog, Peirson’s Milkvetch (a flowering plant), the Fluvial Arctic Grayling, the Mexican Garter Snake and the Southwestern Bald Eagle; critical habitat decisions for the Southwestern Willow Flycatcher, the Sacramento Splittail, the Vernal Pool Species (which includes four shrimp species and 11 plant species), the Bull Trout and the Arroyo Toad; the recovery plan for the Northern Spotted Owl; and the biological opinion for the Delta Smelt.

According to the Department’s press release, even the Fish and Wildlife Service regional directors recommended a longer list of 11 ESA decisions for reconsideration. Three were eliminated by administrators in Washington.

The Department alleges that its internal review concluded that MacDonald oversaw scores of ESA decisions, but in most of these cases she did not improperly influence the outcome. Respectfully, given the history of this scandal and others at the Department, I do not believe it is credible to accept the Department’s conclusion without evidence, such as access to the working papers of the internal review (documents and correspondence) and the Fish and Wildlife Service scientists and regional directors who participated in the original decisions and in the internal review.

To restore public confidence in the Department’s ESA decisions, this internal review must be transparent and beyond reproach. Additionally, the Department must explain why it allowed MacDonald – a former political aide in California state government with no formal scientific education – to run roughshod over her agency’s scientists for years. Until we understand how this scandal was allowed to happen, we cannot be certain that it will not happen again.

Sincerely,

Sen. Ron Wyden

United States Senator




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Henry Ruark July 21, 2007 11:32 am (Pacific time)

Wyden and others-there illuminate well-known neo-con plan to overwhelm regulatory agencies via appointment of agency officials from business and industry-supporting associations, groups and even from corporations-regulated themselves. More than one-such has been named to agency, done dirty work, joined another agency for same activities, and then finally returned to home-base from whence he/she came. Record was six such agency jobs in row, last I heard... NOT at all a new technique; it fell to my lot in D.C. some decades ago to observe some of same thing, while serving as lobbyist for national educational retail association seeking our own interests in national funding for NDEA. We got it, too...

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