This appeared here and I wish to thank Marita for allowing me to publish her work. RK
For years
environmentalists have usurped individual private property rights and thwarted
economic development. Now, thanks to Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt, it
appears that the job creators may have finally learned something from the
extreme tactics of groups, like the Wild Earth Guardians and the Center for
Biological Diversity (CBD), which have been using the courts to their advantage
by filing lawsuits against the federal government.
On Monday,
March 17, on behalf of the state of Oklahoma and the Domestic Energy Producers
Alliance (DEPA), Pruitt filed a lawsuit
against the federal government, specifically the U.S. Department of the
Interior and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS). The lawsuit alleges the
“FWS engaged in ‘sue and settle’ tactics when the agency agreed to settle a
lawsuit with a national environmental group over the [Endangered Species Act]
listing status of several animal species, including the Lesser Prairie
Chicken.”
The Lesser
Prairie Chicken (LPC) is especially important, as the FWS is required—based on
the conditions set forth in the settlement
of a 2010 lawsuit—to make a determination, explicitly, on the LPC by
March 31, 2014. A “threatened” listing would restrict the land use in the
bird’s 40-million-acre, five-state habitat: Oklahoma, Colorado, Texas, New
Mexico, and Kansas. The affected area includes private, state, and federal
lands—lands rich in energy resources, ranch and farm
land—plus, municipal infrastructure, such as water pipelines
and electric transmission.
Understanding
the negative impact
a listing would have, industry (oil and gas, electric transmission and
distribution, pipelines, agriculture and wind energy), states, and the FWS have
collaborated to develop a historic range-wide plan (RWP) to demonstrate that
the LPC and its prairie habitat can be protected without needing to list it. The
RWP includes habitat management goals and conservation practices to be applied
throughout the LPC’s range. According to a press release
about the Oklahoma law suit, the cooperative effort has spent $26 million
dollars on the voluntary conservation plan—which would be more than enough to
protect restore LPC habitat, as well as to develop an elaborate
state-of-the-art LPC hatchery. RWP enrollees are optimistic the FWS can cite
the conservation commitment as justification for a decision not to list the LPC
as a threatened species.
A DEPA
spokesman states:
“this designation could disrupt drilling and exploration on hundreds of
thousands of very promising oil and gas lands in this part of the country.” The
CBD has made no secret of their disdain for oil
and gas extraction and has filed many successful lawsuits
specifically to block development.
Pruitt says:
“the sue-and-settle timelines force the FWS to make determinations without a
thorough review of the science. This violates the original statute requiring
sound science before listing species.”
Stephen Moore,
formerly with the Wall Street Journal, explains:
“Under the Obama administration, the feds have entered into a consent agreement
with the environmentalists to rush forward a judgment on an unprecedented
number of species. A 2012 Chamber of
Commerce study found record numbers of such ‘sue and settle’
cases under Obama.” Pruitt adds: “Under President Obama, we have had sue and
settle on steroids.”
Political
impacts
The “rush” as
Moore calls it, is being driven by the desire to get the decisions made under
the friendly Obama Administration—which may appease the environmental base
while, unwittingly, hurting Democrats in the 2014 elections and handing the
Senate to Republicans.
The LPC
decision impacts five western states, from which even Democrat Senators, aware
of the potential economic impact, sent a letter
to the FWS asking to delay listing the LPC as threatened. The next big listing
is the Greater Sage Grouse (GSG) with a habitat covering eleven western states.
If the LPC is listed, after the groundbreaking efforts to preserve its habitat,
there will be no similar cooperation on the GSG. The GSG will surely be
listed—triggering a modern Sage Brush Rebellion and costing Democrats the
Senate (and some House seats, too).
The Democrats
are in a bind. The rushed listings are being forced by the environmental base,
which is myopically focused on the anti-fossil-fuel (job-killing) agenda of
restricting oil-and-gas development on western lands and isn’t looking at the
bigger political consequences.
It appears the
decision has been made. Sources tell me that Dan Ashe, Director of the FWS, has
called a meeting on Capitol Hill to brief the stakeholders prior to Thursday’s
announcement. If he decides to list the LPC, Pruitt’s lawsuit could be just the
first shot that ignites the new rebellion pushing states to take control of the
lands within their borders.
Kent
Holsinger, a Colorado-based attorney specializing in Endangered Species Act
(ESA) issues, told me: “State wildlife management is much more efficient and
effective than federal listings. Oklahoma and DEPA should be commended for
pushing back on these issues.”
The
environmentalists are looking at the end, but not the political means.
Power Shift
For CBD, it
isn’t even about the science. Its staff page
boasts three times as many attorneys as biologists.
In a High
Country News interview
with CBD co-founder Kieran Suckling, he explains how their strategy was
developed through their first “major victory” over the Mexican wolf.
Previously
environmental groups had no leverage with the government, other than saying
“pretty please.” In the case of the wolf, groups proposed introducing it onto
New Mexico’s White Sands Missile Range. The general in charge of the range had
no interest. Suckling reports: “The strategy of the wolf coalition was to wait
for the general to retire. We decided, let’s just sue instead. It got settled
with the Service agreeing to do a wolf study, which led to reintroduction. That
was the moment when we looked at it and said, ‘Wow.’ The environmental movement
spent a decade going to meetings and demanding action and getting nothing done.
They were asking powerful people for something from a position of no power. We
realized that we can bypass the officials and sue, and that we can get things
done in court.”
Suckling
called lawsuits: “one tool in a larger campaign.” He explained: “we use
lawsuits to help shift the balance of power from industry and government
agencies, toward protecting endangered species. That plays out on many levels.
At its simplest, by obtaining an injunction to shut down logging or prevent the
filling of a dam, the power shifts to our hands. The Forest Service needs our
agreement to get back to work, and we are in the position of being able to
powerfully negotiate the terms of releasing the injunction.”
When asked if
his lack of a degree in science was a hindrance, he answered: “No” and pointed
out that “the professionalization of the environmental movement has injured it
greatly.” He added: “I’m more interested in hiring philosophers, linguists and
poets. The core talent of a successful environmental activist is not science
and law. It’s campaigning instinct.” They operate on emotion, not science.
Sue and
Settle
It is these
tactics, along with a friendly Obama government, that has led to the “sue and
settle” procedure that Pruitt’s lawsuit is hoping to end. The lawsuit is
seeking “declaratory and injunctive relief for violations of the ESA.” Moore
reports: “The relief is intended to overturn designations of dozens of species
added to the threatened or endangered list through the ‘sue and settle’
process.”
The Oklahoma
lawsuit asserts: “the Fish and Wildlife Service violated the Endangered Species
Act by agreeing in its settlement with Wild Earth Guardians to not consider the
statutorily-created ‘warranted but precluded’ category when determining the
listing status of the 251 candidate species.” Additionally, the lawsuit states:
“the FWS violated the law by agreeing to a truncated timeline to the
decision-making process on the listing status of the 251 candidate species,
essentially sidestepping the rule making process.”
Pruitt
believes that: “because these settlements are taking place without public
input, attorneys general are unable to represent the respective interests of
their states, businesses, and citizens.” Forbes Contributor Larry Bell agrees:
“While the environmental group is given a seat at the table, outsiders who are
most impacted are excluded, with no opportunity to object to the settlements.”
Bell describes
the “sue and settle” practice—sometimes referred to as “friendly lawsuits”—this
way:
Cozy deals through which far-left radical environmental groups file
lawsuits against federal agencies wherein court-ordered “consent decrees” are
issued based upon a prearranged settlement agreement they collaboratively craft
together in advance behind closed doors. Then, rather than allowing the entire
process to play out, the agency being sued settles the lawsuit by agreeing to
move forward with the requested action they and the litigants both want.
In a succinct
soliloquy about the LPC and GSG, Fox Business’ Stuart Varney says:
“I’ve always been amazed at the ability of a very small, but well-funded, group
to get their way using the court system. But, that is what really is happening.
The Sage Grouse and the Lesser Prairie Chicken interests are obviously far more
important than America’s interest in energy independence.”
Gratefully,
Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt has stepped up to the plate and used the
environmentalists’ tactics and filed a lawsuit against the federal government.
It will not delay the March 31 deadline for the FWS decision on the LPC, but it
could “overturn designations of dozens of species added to the threatened or
endangered list through the ‘sue and settle’ process.” It could prevent the
unnecessary listing of thousands of other flora and fauna—allowing companies to
continue providing the jobs, producing the oil, natural gas, and other
commodities such as timber and critical minerals that are so important to
America and our energy freedom.
The author
of Energy Freedom, Marita Noon serves as the executive
director for Energy Makes America Great Inc. and the companion educational organization, the Citizens’ Alliance for Responsible Energy (CARE). Together they work to educate the
public and influence policy makers regarding energy, its role in freedom, and
the American way of life. Combining energy, news, politics, and, the
environment through public events, speaking engagements, and media, the
organizations’ combined efforts serve as America’s voice for energy.
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