In 'Brutal Blow' to Wildlife and Gift to Big Oil, Trump Finalizes Rollback of Migratory Bird Treaty Act
By Julia Conley, staff writer
for Common
Dreams
Just over two weeks before President Donald Trump is set to leave the White House, his U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Tuesday finalized a rollback of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act—a law that's been in place since 1918 and which conservation groups credit with holding corporate polluters accountable for harming bird species.
In what the Western Values Project
called a "parting gift to Big Oil by corrupt former oil lobbyist Interior
Secretary David Bernhardt," the USFWS announced a new rule under which the
federal government will no longer penalize or prosecute companies when their
actions cause the inadvertent death of birds.
In the case of oil spills like the
Deepwater Horizon disaster, which killed more than one million birds in 2010;
electrocutions by power lines; ducks and other species stuck in fossil fuel tailings ponds; and
illegal actions like the spraying of banned pesticides, companies will no
longer be held to account as long as they don't intentionally kill birds.
When it was passed into law more
than 100 years ago, the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA) made it illegal to
hunt, take, capture, or kill birds from endangered species "by any means
or in any manner."
Bernhardt said Tuesday the new rule "reaffirms the original meaning and intent of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act," while the Center for Western Priorities called it a "radical interpretation of the law."
"The Trump administration
wants to make sure extractive industries can continue to kill birds after they
leave office," said Jennifer Rokala, executive director of the group.
"Secretary Bernhardt's former oil industry clients have explicitly asked
for this policy change, and now he is delivering, just days before returning to
the private sector. By finalizing this proposal, the Trump administration is
signing the death warrants of millions of birds across the country."
Conservation groups pointed to data
showing that three billion birds have been lost in North America since 1970,
while six million fewer birds were counted by the Audubon Society in 2019 than
previous tallies showed.
As Common Dreams reported in September, the wildfires
that overwhelmed the West Coast last year were thought to be behind the deaths
of thousands of migratory birds in the southwest.
"This brutal blow hits
America's birds when many populations are already plummeting, so it's really
the last thing they need," said Noah Greenwald, endangered species
director at the Center for Biological Diversity. "Trump officials are
giving oil companies and other polluters a license to kill birds. Vast numbers
of birds will be electrocuted by power lines, drowned in oil waste pits and
killed in other easily preventable ways."
Advocates say the MBTA has worked in
recent years to show the oil and gas industry that it will be held accountable
if its activities kills birds. The federal government reached a $100 million settlement with
BP after the Deepwater Horizon disaster.
Rep. Deb Haaland (D-N.M.), who was
named as President-elect Biden's nominee for Interior Secretary last month, is
expected to repeal the USFWS's rule, but that process could take time.
Meanwhile, Rep. Alan Lowenthal (D-Calif.) introduced the Migratory Bird
Protection Act last year as the administration was considering the rollback,
with the aim of reaffirming the original law's intent of protecting vulnerable
birds—not corporations.
Advocates also expressed hope that
the federal courts will strike down what Greenwald called the Trump
administration's "reckless attack on one of America’s oldest and most
important conservation laws," as Judge Valerie Caproni of the
Southern District of New York did in August.
"There is nothing in the text
of the MBTA that suggests that in order to fall within its prohibition,
activity must be directed specifically at birds," Caproni said in her ruling at the time.
"Nor does the statute prohibit only intentionally killing migratory
birds."
Jamie Rappoport Clark, president and
CEO of Defenders of Wildlife said the group would call on the Biden
administration "to restore protections for birds immediately and affirm
that the Migratory Bird Treaty Act prohibits incidental take."
"Even though a federal court
already ruled that the Trump administration cannot eliminate protections for
migratory birds, the administration continues its relentless campaign to
undermine environmental protections and harm wildlife," said Clark.