The Biden administration has not moved to alter or reverse any Trump-era policies or decisions related to endangered species.
Monarch butterfly...
With the May 28 release of President Biden’s first full budget, the
administration signaled that stemming the wildlife extinction crisis
and safeguarding the nation’s endangered species will not be a top
priority, despite the warnings of scientists that one million
species are at risk of going extinct around the world without
intervention.
The Biden administration is proposing just $22 million — a mere $1.5
million above last year’s levels — to protect the more than 500
imperiled animals and plants still waiting for protection under the
Endangered Species Act. It is at the same level as what was provided
for in 2010.
The budget proposal increases funding for endangered species
recovery by $18 million. While this represents a modest increase
from last year’s budget, the Endangered Species Act has been
severely underfunded for decades, resulting in species waiting
years, or even decades, for protection and already-protected species
receiving few dollars for their recovery.
Based on the Fish and Wildlife Service’s own recovery plans, at
least $2 billion per year is needed to recover the more than 1,700
endangered species across the country. The proposed budget fails to
even come close to closing the gap in needed funding.
“It’s distressing that President Biden’s budget still ignores the
extinction crisis,” said Brett Hartl, government affairs director at
the Center for Biological Diversity. “What’s especially tragic is
that restoring abundant wildlife populations would also reap huge
benefits in helping to stop the climate crisis, reduce toxic
pollution and protect wild places. This was a missed opportunity.”
During the presidential campaign, President Biden touted his early
support for the Endangered Species Act when the law was passed in
1973. In January President Biden launched a review of the Trump
administration’s rollbacks of the regulations implementing the
Endangered Species Act and decisions to weaken protections for the
monarch butterfly, spotted owl and gray wolf.
To date, however, the Biden administration has not moved to alter or
reverse any Trump-era policies or decisions related to endangered
species. With today’s budget, President Biden is adopting the measly
funding levels of the Trump administration.
Over the past year, more than 170 conservation groups have asked for
additional funding for endangered species. This request echoes
similar pleas from 121 members of the House of Representatives and
21 senators.
“Every year, more of our most distinctive animals and plants will
vanish right before our eyes. Perhaps for the sake of his
grandchildren, President Biden will reconsider this disastrous
budget proposal,” said Hartl.
Around 650 U.S. plants and animals have already been lost to
extinction. Some of the plants and animals that have been deemed
extinct in the United States since 2000 include: Franklin’s
bumblebee from California and Oregon; the rockland grass skipper and
Zestos skipper butterflies from Florida; the Tacoma pocket gopher;
the Alabama sturgeon; the chucky madtom, a small catfish from
Tennessee; a wildflower named Appalachian Barbara’s buttons; and the
Po'ouli, a songbird from Maui. Scientists estimate that one-third of
America’s species are vulnerable to extinction and 12,000 species
nationwide are in need of conservation action.