Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Government holding onto Conservation Funds in 2013

Note: Payments into Trust Funds such as the Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration and Boating Safety Trust Funds are exempt from sequestration, however, payments out of these Trust Funds are not. According to the latest figures released from the White House, this will result in withholdings of approximately $27 million from Wildlife Restoration, $19 million from Sport Fish Restoration, and $6 million from Boating Safety in 2013.  That is not good, but I am not sure if any state will even feel it split 50 ways, as NYs appropriations alone is around $20 million. And, if NY doesn’t kiss & make up with the FWS, that $20 Mill might go right back into the hat!

Also note: Thanks to the Outdoor Writers Association, most sportsmen are only aware of the federal conservation funds known as PR and DJ funds, which are actually wildlife restoration and sport fish and boating restoration funds. However, as listed below, there actually is a myriad of federal conservation funds. To add insult to injury, generally speaking, most of the non-shooting conservationists are better versed in these programs than sportsmen. If that includes you, thank your info sources…

Although ‘sequestration’ in the conservation world usually means carbon sequestration, the latest impacts to wildlife may actually be from the federal government’s budget sequestration. The Budget Control Act language of 2011 was intended to be a last ditch effort to force compromise in a divided Congress, but when an agreed upon budget was not reached by March 1, 2013, the  budget sequestration cuts outlined in the Act [Pub. L. 112-25] were automatically enacted.

In an attempt to lower the federal deficit by $85 billion ($42.667 billion in non-defense spending) through 10 years of austerity, the bill starts with an average of 5 percent cuts in non-defense spending (5 percent discretionary, 5.1 percent mandatory) and defense spending cuts between 5 and 7.8 percent. However, since these cuts must be achieved by September 30 of this year, the effective reductions will actually be around 13 percent for non-exempt defense programs and 9 percent for non-exempt non-defense programs, because the cuts are not spread evenly over all 12 months. Today the Continuing Resolution (CR) was passed to fund the rest of fiscal year 2013, locking in the current sequester cuts for the remainder of the year.

Within the conservation realm, cuts to the National Park Service have been most widely publicized. On March 8, 2013, the National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis released a memo to his employees that “900 permanent positions will not be filled … [and] we will hire over 1,000 less seasonal employees this year.” The possible closure or reduced hours of national parks, as well as the impact to the small businesses surrounding the parks has been well covered by organizations such as the National Wildlife Federation, Congressional Sportsman’s Foundation, and National Parks Conservation Association.

Similarly, national wildlife refuges may be forced to limit public access and recreational opportunities by closing some refuges and visitor centers. The funds for refuges are included in resource management cuts totaling $64 million. Refuges will also be hit by cuts to “construction” ($5 million) that include habitat restoration and erosion control activities, road, building, and visitor services on refuges, and $1 million in cuts to the National Wildlife Refuge Fund.

On March 2, the White House Office of Management and Budget released a report detailing how much will be cut from each agency.

  • U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service: $127 million
    • $64 million from Resource Management
    • $5 million from Construction
    • $1 million from Multinational Species Conservation Fund
    • $21 million from Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration
    • $1 million from National Wildlife Refuge Fund
    • $2 million from Migratory Bird Conservation Account
    • $2 million from Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation
    • $2 million from North American Wetlands Conservation Fund
    • $3 million from State Wildlife Grants
    • $23 million from Sport Fish Restoration
  • U.S. Forest Service (USFS): $298 million
  • Department of Defense: $526 Million
  • $94 million from Department of Defense environmental restoration accounts
  • $26 million from Environmental Restoration (formerly Used Defense Sites)
  • $394 million from Defense Environmental Cleanup
  • $12 million from Non-Defense Environmental Cleanup
  • Bureau of Land Management: $75 million
  • Natural Resources Conservation Service: $223 million
  • National Park Service: $153 million
  • Environmental Protection Agency: $472 million
  • $125 million from USFS Wildland Fire Management
  • $38 million from the Department of the Interior’s Wildland Fire Management
  • Fire Management: $163 million

States will also be affected, as funds that come from the federal government are cut.  View an interactive map for information on your state (click on the environmental protection tab).

Sources: ABC News (March 13, 2013), American Institute of Biological Sciences (March 11, 2013), Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies, Federal Budget Sequestration Fact Sheet, CARE –Fiscal Cliff and Wildlife (2012), Environment News Service (March 1, 2013), Fairfax News (March 7, 2013), National Geographic News (Feb. 28, 2013), National Wildlife Federation, Conservation Impacts of the Fiscal Cliff, NorthJersey.com News (March 4, 2013), Sequester could hurt NJ’s environment, NPSretirees.org, OMB Report to the Congress on the Joint Committee Sequestration For Fiscal Year 2013, USFWS 2013 Budget

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

  • Similar Content

    • By mike rossi
      http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?ca=86d58958-23ff-41f0-8a0e-27bd650518a3&c=0ef02960-1f28-11e3-a3de-d4ae52754dbc&ch=0f2bd2d0-1f28-11e3-a438-d4ae52754dbc
    • By mike rossi
      Pennsylvania could lose $27 million over bills to amend endangered species laws GOP measures would cost two state agencies more than 20% of their budgets, the U.S. Interior Department warns.
         August 28, 2013   HARRISBURG — Republican-backed bills to give the Legislature more control over the protection of endangered and threatened wildlife could cost the state more than $27 million annually, according to the federal government.
      If the bills become law, Pennsylvania could lose eligibility in two of the nation's oldest grant programs geared toward preserving, restoring and protecting wildlife and waterways, according to an Aug. 9 letter the state Game Commission got from the U.S. Interior Department's Fish and Wildlife Service.
      "I have significant concerns with this bill and the risk it presents to the Game Commission relative to loss of federal funding," wrote John F. Organ, chief of the division of Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration.
      But Rep. Jeff Pyle, R-Armstrong, the prime sponsor of the House bill, said the legislation does not strip the Game or Fish and Boat commissions of their authority. Rather, he said, the bill, which was the subject of a public hearing Monday, is meant to check the commissions' authority.
        Pyle said they are the only state agencies that do not have their policy decisions vetted through the Independent Regulatory Review Commission, which sets up public forums for new government regulations prior to final approval by lawmakers. The bill is needed, Pyle said, because the Game Commission made his local school district spend extra money to preserve Indiana bats, which are endangered, even though the bats were not on the land where a new school was being built. "Those guys are the judge, jury and executioner," he said.
      The threat of losing federal money is "hollow," Pyle added.
      House Republican Caucus lawyers, Pyle said, have assured him that the state would not lose federal money because other state agencies, such as the Department of Environmental Protection and the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR) also have jurisdiction over environmental protection.
      "We got a bunch of safety checks built into this thing," said Pyle.
      Drew Crompton, chief of staff to Sen. Joe Scarnati, R-Jefferson, who has sponsored a similar bill in that chamber, said the federal government's concerns can "be easily addressed" in the legislative process.
      But Rep. Steve McCarter, D-Montgomery, a critic of the bills, said the threat of lost federal revenue should be taken seriously. The bills are meant to appease industry at the expense of the environment, he said, because they would create a prolonged, 11-step process to having species listed or delisted as threatened and endangered through the Independent Regulatory Process.
      "The chance of any species getting through the process would be impossible," McCarter said.
      In addition to putting the commissions under the scrutiny of the regulatory review process, the bills call for the commissions, plus the state Agricultural Department and DCNR, to create a centralized database to replace the decades-old computerized system of endangered species and fauna.
      The commissions argue that the database would jeopardize wildlife because it would pinpoint their locations.
      The bills also would require the agencies to remove species from the endangered or threatened lists within two years if the agencies cannot produce "acceptable data" that the species' numbers remain weak. The agencies also could not define new endangered or threatened species if their numbers are acceptable outside of Pennsylvania, or if they are not already covered under the federal Endangered Species Act.
      Those changes could make the state ineligible for federal funds, says Organ's letter to Game Commission Executive Director Carl Roe.
      According to the letter, Game Commission could lose $19 million — or 24 percent of its 2012-13 budget — because it may not be eligible for the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Program. The program dates to 1937 and is used to "restore, conserve, manage and enhance wild birds and mammals" while making their habitats accessible for hunting, shooting and other recreation.
      The Fish and Boat Commission could lose $8.3 million — 29 percent of its 2012-13 budget — from the federal Dingell-Johnson Sport Fish Restoration Program. That program, started in 1950 and modeled after Pittman-Robertson, seeks to make fishing and boating more accessible to the public.
      To be eligible for both grants, state have to have fish and wildlife agencies that have sole discretion over how revenue for fishing and hunting licenses are used. The agencies also have to have the authority to ensure "the conservation of fish and wildlife."
       
       
    • By mike rossi
      Is this the new face of conservation? Is this a sincere promotion of the federal migratory bird hunting and conservation stamp? Are they mocking hunters who 1) boast about paying for conservation / being conservationists? 2) take pictures of themselves posing with harvested game? This was in Western New York, by the way and is a movement not an isolated incident... The money and the volunteer hours they are donating is no small piddly amount either...  On a related note the University of California and other colleges have acknowledged that most wildlife biology graduates have no experience with hunting which is different than in the past and quote: "People without any exposure to hunting will soon be managing hunters"
       
    • By mike rossi
      Are “they” delivering?
      Prior to 2013 NY Governor Cuomo proposed a sporting license fee reduction justified to increase non-resident hunting and simplify the existing program. NY already ranks 7th in non-resident hunters, likely due to bordering states with little hunting opportunity rather than abundance of game.
      The Governor’s proposal was backed by the NY State Conservation Council because they said that sportsmen are paying more and getting less from the DEC and therefore it is not necessary to maintain such a high balance in the conservation fund.  In 2013 the proposal was signed into law and takes effect in February 2014.
      A number of years ago a lifetime sporting license was created along with a separate account within the conservation fund in which revenue from lifetime licenses was to be staged and then turned over to the state comptroller to be used in the short term investment pool.
      On the federal level during 2013 Congress and President Obama began to sequester five percent of federal conservation trust funds derived from the Pitman-Robertson and Dingell-Johnson Acts.
      The trust funds are not the only programs affected this year. Despite federal conservation investment being less than one percent of the total budget; Congress and the administration opted to make deep cuts into conservation funding cutting 20 programs by either eliminating them or zeroing them out. Those same programs have already been cut by 25% the last few years.
      The federal Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp has not seen a price increase since the 1990s and is still only $15. This year a complicated scheme was launched to allow the fee to float with economic factors.  New York phased out its state migratory bird stamp a number of years ago and is unwilling to take advantage of increased conservation funding which would be generated by instituting a mourning dove hunting season. 
      Conservation funding is correlated to sporting license revenue. In 2012 license sales stabilized nationwide but the long term trend is a decline in license revenue every year as less and less people hunt.  Four special youth seasons have been established in NY under the rationale of sustaining hunter numbers thereby conservation funding. While residents desire more access and opportunity non-residents, mostly from New Jersey and Connecticut flock to NY for better hunting and public land opportunities.
      At a very minimum it is very arguable that the state chose a bad time to increase the burn-rate of its conservation fund considering the simultaneous negative activity with federal conservation programs.
       
       20 Programs and Agencies Zeroed Out in FY 2014 Interior and Environment Appropriations Bill
      1. Bureau of Land Management Land Acquisition (-$22.3 million)
      2. Fish and Wildlife Service Construction (-$19.1 million)
      3. Fish and Wildlife Service Land Acquisition (-$54.6 million)
      4. North American Wetlands Fund (-$35.4 million)
      5. Neotropical Migratory Birds Conservation Fund (-$3.7 million)
      6. State and Tribal Wildlife Grants (-$61.3 million)
      7. National Park Service Land Acquisition and State Assistance (-$101.8 million)
      8. Forest Service Land Acquisition (-$52.5 million)
      9. Forest Service Special Acquisitions (-$0.9 million)
      10. Forest Service Land Exchange Acquisitions (-$0.2 million)
      11. Forest Legacy Program (-$53.3 million)
      12. Forest Service Planning (-$39.2 million)
      13. Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation (-$7.7 million)
      14. Institute of American Indian and Alaska Native Culture and Arts (-$8.5 million)
      15. Woodrow Wilson Center (-$10.9 million)
      16. Eisenhower Memorial Commission (-$1 million)
      17. Environmental Protection Agency Brownfields (-$90 million)
      18. Environmental Protection Agency Alaska Native Villages Water Infrastructure
      (-$9.5 million)
      19. Environmental Protection Agency US Mexico Border Water Infrastructure
      (-$4.7 million)
      20. Environmental Protection Agency Smart Growth (-$1.7 million
    • By mike rossi
      The North American Model of Wildlife Conservation
      The model illustrates how conservation evolved in the U.S. and Canada since its beginning during the Teddy Roosevelt era. Although The Model is considered to have seven basic tenants, its roots go back to the fundamental reasons that our European ancestors got on boats and came to the New World.  That is, that fish and game should not belong to a king or nobleman, but should be held in public trust. (Probably not what were you taught in elementary school about why Europeans immigrated to the USA.)
      Video (43 minutes) Note: The video does not address the fact that the public majority, not just hunters, is heavily engaged in conservation these days. : http://youtu.be/xRx-HcVQDRQ
      North American Model of Wildlife Conservation
      The North American Model of Wildlife Conservation is the world’s most successful. No other continent has conserved as many species of native wildlife as North America. While other countries struggle to conserve the wildlife they have left, we enjoy great abundance and diversity of wildlife.  This is due, in large part, to forward thinking by early conservationists who saw the need to conserve wildlife and their habitats. Their efforts were the source of the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation, which strives to sustain wildlife species and habitats through sound science and active management. 
      There are TWO basic principles to the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation 
      Our fish and wildlife belong to all North American citizens, and are to be managed in such a way that their populations will be sustained forever. 
      In addition to these two basic principles there are “Seven Sisters” that make up the framework of this model.
      THE SEVEN SISTERS
      Wildlife Is Held In The Public Trust:  The public trust doctrine means that wildlife belongs to everyone. Through shared ownership and responsibility, opportunity to enjoy wildlife is provided to all.  Commerce In Wildlife Is Regulated:  Early laws banning commercial hunting and the sale of meat and hides ensured the sustainability of wildlife through the regulation of harvest and the sale of wildlife parts such as teeth, claws and antlers. Hunting And Angling Laws Are Created Through Public Process:  Hunting seasons, harvest limits and penalties imposed for violations are established through laws and regulations.  Everyone has the opportunity to shape the laws and regulations applied in wildlife conservation.  Hunting And Angling Opportunity For All:   The opportunity to participate in hunting, angling and wildlife conservation is guaranteed for all in good standing, not by social status or privilege, financial capacity or land ownership. This concept ensures a broad base support for wildlife law enforcement, habitat conservation and research. Hunters And Anglers Fund Conservation:  Hunting and fishing license sales and excise taxes on hunting and fishing equipment pay for management of all wildlife, including wildlife species that are not hunted. Wildlife Is An International Resource:   Proper stewardship of wildlife and habitats is both a source of national pride and an opportunity to cooperate with other nations with whom we share natural resources. Cooperative management of migrating waterfowl, songbirds and marine life is one example of successful international collaboration. Science Is The Basis For Wildlife Policy:  The limited use of wildlife as a renewable natural resource is based on sound science.  Wildlife agency professionals adapt management strategies based on population and habitat monitoring to achieve the sustainability of wildlife populations and their habitats.  Source: Georgia Wildlife Resources Division
      2070 U.S. Hwy. 278, SE, Social Circle, GA 30025
      A Primer on the Wildlife Trust
      Source: Jeremy Bruskotter
      The wildlife trust doctrine–a branch of the broader public trust doctrine that deals specifically with wildlife–was established in a series of court cases that provide the foundation for state-based conservation of wildlife that some refer to as the North America Model of Wildlife Conservation.  Two Supreme Court cases (i.e., Martin v. Waddell 41 U.S. 367 (1842) and Geer v. Connecticut 161 U.S. 519 (1896)), provide the basic foundation of this legal doctrine.  In Martin v. Waddell, the court applied English common law to reject a landowner’s claim to an oyster fishery that was located under the public waters of the state of New Jersey.  The court concluded that with the formation of the United States, the lands that had once belonged to England passed to the state of New Jersey; applying English common law, the court held that the “land under navigable waters…were to be held…in the same manner and for the same purposes that the navigable waters of England and the soils under them are held by the Crown.”  English policy, since the time of the Magna Carta, was to preserve such resources “for the benefit of the public”.   Thus, the landowner could not lay claim to the oyster fishery because his actions deprived the citizens of New Jersey any access to this resource, which was held collectively by the citizens of that state.
      Although the dispute in Martin v. Waddell focused on the lands under the navigable waters and the oyster beds attached thereto, the Court in Geer v. Connecticut, using a similar rational, extended the trust obligation to terrestrial wildlife (woodcock, ruffled grouse and quail).  In this case, again relying on English common law, the court held that wildlife (ferae naturae ) were public property – “the ownership of the sovereign authority . . .  [to be held in] trust for all the people of the state” and that it was the” duty of the legislature to enact such laws as will best preserve the subject of the trust and secure its beneficial use in the future to the people of the state.”  These cases set the stage for modern wildlife management by state agencies, in which states act as trustees, managing and conserving wildlife resources on behalf of their citizens.  This doctrine underpins our system of wildlife conservation in the United States, and is recognized by the Wildlife Society as one of the seven “pillars” of the North American Model.
      An Obligation to Conserve?
      While the notion of sovereign ownership of wildlife is well established, there has been little discussion regarding states’ obligations under the wildlife trust doctrine.  The Court in Geer made it clear that the trustee-beneficiary relationship establishes an obligation on the part of the state to “to enact such laws as will best preserve the subject of the trust” (emphasis added). The court added that:
      “..the power or control lodged in the state, resulting from this common ownership, is to be exercised, like all other powers of government as a trust for the benefit of the people, and not as a prerogative for the advantage of the government as distinct from the people, or for the benefit of private individuals as distinguished from the public good” (emphasis added).
      Yet, the nature of states’ obligations is ill-defined for, as Freyfogle and Goble (2009:33) noted, “there is no trust document that sets forth the precise terms of the trust.”  Moreover, there has been little opportunity–or need–to establish the case law necessary to “flesh out” these obligations because the statutory protections provided by the federal Endangered Species Act of 1973 and the associated federal control have largely precluded the need for protecting species outside the ESA framework; that is, because the ESA provides federal protections for species that are imperiled, there has been no need for interested citizens to force states to protect species through litigation, thus establishing the case law necessary to formalize states’ obligations. (Note: We disagree with part of this; lawsuits against state wildlife agencies and the FWS of the nature described have actually been common for at least 15 years and are not always the subject of federally or state listed species, although true most are ESA issues.)
      Confusion at the crux: Science, policy and wildlife management
      The interplay between science and policy and how it affects the objectives of wolf management lies near the heart of the wolf issue.  Scientifically-collected and analyzed data has traditionally played an essential role in wildlife management in the United States.  Time-tested methods are used to assist wildlife managers in understanding population trends and the factors (e.g. immigration, mortality, birth rates) that can potentially impact wildlife populations.  This tradition has been symbolically codified as one of seven “components” or principles of the so-called North American Model of Wildlife Conservation (see also Organ & Mahoney 2007).  It has also led to the wide-spread perception that wildlife management objectives should be determined by science rather than politics.  Thus Malloney (2011:179) recently expressed frustration that “wolf management…tends to be guided by opinion and politics rather than science.” This perception misunderstands the role of science in wildlife policy; in fact, it misunderstands what types of questions science is capable of answering.  Science can answering factual or “is” questions–bounded, of course, by some error.   Science, cannot answer questions questions are fundamentally subjective or “normative”  in nature.
      According to the Wildlife Society, the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation demands that  “science is the proper tool for the discharge of wildlife policy” (Batcheller et al. 2010 ). Here the use of the word “discharge”, which Merriam-Webster’s online dictionary defines as “to throw off or deliver a load, charge, or burden” further contributes to the confusion regarding the role of science.  Science simply is not capable of “discharging” (or “delivering”) wildlife policy (or any other policy, for that matter); to set such high expectations for science is to set it, and scientists, up for failure.  Rather, science merely informs policy decisions, which, as the term “policy” implies, are ultimately discharged via political processes.  Some may think this distinction trivial, but it is a fundamental source of conflict where wolves are concerned. Until stakeholders–including wildlife professionals–recognize the limitations of science and the types of information it provides, the role of science will be a continued source of friction and conflict. (Note: the average person is a stakeholder and usually there are public comment opportunities, both by attending hearings and giving oral testimony or by submitting written comment. For science to inform a stakeholder, that person must distinguish between propaganda, pseudo-science, real science, and science journalism. Science Journalism is the most frequent form of information which is confused with scientific reports).
      Further Reading:
       
      60 page PDF: http://www.gallatinwildlifeassociation.org/documents/scientific/North%20American%20Model%20of%20Wildlife%20Conservation.pdf
      43 page PDF: http://www.wafwa.org/html/pdfs/AZ_NAM%20Training%20and%20Resource%20Guide%20-%20july2009.pdf
      7 page PDF: http://fp7hunt.net/Portals/HUNT/4%203%20Scandinavia%20plus%20cover.pdf
      17 page , non PDF document: The History of Wildlife Conservation and Research in the United States – and Implications for the Future
      http://cnr.ncsu.edu/fer/directory/documents/Article-HistoryofWildlifeResearch.pdf
       
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    No registered users viewing this page.

×
×
  • Create New...