Judges Rebuff Government on Endangered Species
By FELICITY BARRINGER
Published: August 20, 2005
WASHINGTON, Aug. 19 - Federal judges on opposite sides of the country ruled Friday that the Fish and Wildlife Service had acted arbitrarily and violated the Endangered Species Act when it reversed its own decisions and cut back on protections for two disparate species.
The judges - one in San Francisco and one in Brattleboro, Vt. - overturned separate regulations involving California tiger salamanders and gray wolves in New England.
In both cases, the Bush administration had combined sparser, distinct populations of a species with larger, robust populations, and then said protections could be reduced.
In his ruling striking down the agency's 2003 regulation on gray wolves, Judge J. Garvan Murtha wrote that the agency, after making the scientific determination that a species was endangered, could not change its mind "because it lumps together a core population with a low to nonexistent population."...
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In the case of the California salamanders, brought by the Center for Biological Diversity, Judge William Alsup ruled that the wildlife service had "no scientific evidence" for reversing itself in a 2004 regulation that reduced protections for separate populations of the tiger salamander in Santa Barbara and Sonoma Counties. Both populations had been listed as endangered....
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/20/politics/20species.html