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Help Us Save the Endangered Species Act

Save the Endangered Species Act!

The Bush administration wants to severely weaken the Endangered Species Act – we need your help to make sure this doesn't happen.

For more than 30 years, the ESA has been a safety net for plants and animals on the brink of extinction, including grizzly bears, bald eagles, and gray whales, but now President Bush wants to gut these protections.

Please fill out the form below to send a letter to Secretary of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne and tell him you oppose Bush's assault on the Endangered Species Act!

Sample Letter for Campaign

Subject: Join me in supporting the Endangered Species Act!

Dear [ Decision Maker ] ,

I am writing to voice my opposition to proposed regulations, that would significantly weaken the Endangered Species Act.

These proposed changes would drastically limit our nation's ability to protect our most endangered wildlife - from polar bears and wolves to whooping cranes and whales. Under current law, before moving forward with projects like a dam or a mine, Fish and Wildlife Service and National Marine Fisheries Service biologists give input and advice about impacts on endangered species. The proposal would instead allow agencies to decide a project's level of harm themselves, removing the step where expert advice is offered.

A real-time example of why this system of scientific checks and balances is so important: a report by biologists at the National Marine Fisheries Service found that three EPA-approved pesticides are causing serious harm to endangered stocks of west coast salmon. This review was triggered under the very section of the Endangered Species Act that the Bush administration is now hoping to undo.

The proposed regulation is also intended to stop consideration of global warming impacts on species that are imperiled by climate change. Species like polar bears, salmon, and many others are harmed through the numerous actions that incrementally are driving climate change. Turning a blind eye to this kind of analysis has no basis in the law and makes no sense as a matter of policy.

Also troubling, the administration seems to be working to keep the public out of the decision-making process by limiting the comment period to just 30 days. At a minimum, the public comment period should be extended to 120 days.

Animals on the brink of extinction need consideration and protection. To ensure the future of our most vulnerable species, we should continue the requirement for independent scientific review and abandon these proposed changes.

Sincerely,

Campaign Launched:
September 08, 2008



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While all the organizations participating in the Save Our Environment Action Center share the common goal of
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