In 1973, Congress passed the
Endangered Species Act, a monumental law that was designed to protect and
restore threatened species to healthy and sustainable populations. After more
than three decades of implementation, however, the act has failed to achieve
these goals. Furthermore, the unintended consequences of this law have caused a
tremendous amount of conflict among landowners and their communities.
Last fall, the House of Representatives approved a bipartisan
bill I coauthored with my Democratic colleague, Rep. Dennis Cardoza of
California, entitled the Threatened and Endangered Species Recovery Act of 2005
(TESRA). This legislation would update and modernize the Endangered Species Act
for the first time in more than 10 years by taking broad, bold steps focusing on
recovering species, establishing meaningful scientific standards, requiring more
openness and greater roles for states and affected members of the public.
WORTH FORUM How should private property owners be compensated when their
land is designated a protected habitat under federal conservation laws? A debate over changes to the Endangered Species Act. | Under current law, landowners are merely regulatory subjects,
forced to swallow federal edicts in the name of conserving not only endangered
eagles and manatees but also bugs, rats and the like. They are compelled to
personally bear the costs of a national conservation program.
Not too surprisingly, this approach has been a failure. About
1,300 domestic species are now on the endangered list, but only 10 have ever
been recovered and removed from the list–a success rate of less than 1 percent.
The endangered species list has been a one-way street: Species go on, but seldom
come off.
If we are serious about recovering endangered species,
landowners must be part of the solution. The single most important change we can
make to better address species recovery is to make private property owners
partners rather than impediments to conserving species. This is vital because
the vast majority of endangered species have habitat on private property.
Due Process Under my bill, property owners are encouraged to participate in
conservation through agreements to manage land to benefit endangered species.
Property owners deserve the right to get a straight answer from the government
if use of their property–whether for farming, ranching, building a home or any
other purpose that would otherwise be consistent with state and local law–would
encounter endangered species restrictions.
If a property owner finds that his property use is restricted
because Uncle Sam needs it for our national endangered species effort, then he
would become eligible for compensation for the lost fair-market value of his
property. The fair-market value would be determined by two appraisers, one
representing the government and one representing the property owner, to ensure
the compensation is just for both. If we are going to have a national
conservation program, individual landowners should not be forced to suffer a
loss for national species recovery.
|