[env-trinity] Miller and Rahall Launch Inquiry into New Conflict of Interest at Interior Department
Dan Bacher
danielbacher at fishsniffer.com
Mon May 21 17:53:03 PDT 2007
NEWS
Congressman George Miller, California's 7th District
Monday, May 21, 2007
Danny Weiss, 202-225-2095
Miller and Rahall Launch Inquiry into New Conflict
of Interest at Interior Department
Senior lawmakers press Bush Administration on
manipulation of science in a California
endangered species decision
WASHINGTON, DC - Two senior House Democrats launched an inquiry today
into reports that a Bush Administration political appointee may have
improperly removed a California fish from a list of threatened
species in order to protect her own financial interests.
According to an investigative report published Sunday by the Contra
Costa Times, Julie MacDonald, who resigned this month as Interior
Department Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish, Wildlife and Parks,
was actively involved in removing the Sacramento Splittail fish from
the federal threatened and endangered species list at the same time
that she was profiting from her ownership of an 80-acre farm in
Dixon, CA that lies within the habitat area of the threatened fish.
MacDonald's financial disclosure statement shows that she earns as
much as $1 million per year from her ownership of the 80-acre active
farm. Federal law bars federal employees from participating in
decisions on matters in which they have a personal financial interest.
The Sacramento Splittail, a small fish found only in California's
Central Valley, depends on floodplain habitat and has been described
by the Fish and Wildlife Service as facing "potential threats from
habitat loss."
Today, Rep. George Miller (D-CA) and Rep. Nick Rahall (D-WV),
chairman of the Natural Resources Committee, wrote to Interior
Secretary Kempthorne requesting a full accounting of MacDonald's role
in the Sacramento Splittail decision, an explanation of her apparent
conflict of interest, and a thorough review of the science underlying
the decision to remove the Sacramento Splittail from the threatened
species list.
"It looks like another Bush Administration official was protecting
her own bottom line instead of protecting the public interest," said
Miller, a senior member and former chairman of the Natural Resources
Committee and a long-time proponent of the Endangered Species Act and
Bay-Delta fish and wildlife issues. "We are going to fully
investigate this matter and determine whether public policy was
improperly altered because of personal conflicts of interest.
"This news raises serious questions about the integrity of the
Interior Department and its policy decisions," Miller added. "The
Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta has enough problems without political
appointees at scientific agencies cooking the books. Who thought it
was acceptable for a Deputy Assistant Secretary to change a major
policy decision to exempt her own million-dollar enterprise from the
Endangered Species Act even though federal law prohibits such
conflicts?"
Rahall, who has served on the Natural Resources Committee since 1976
and became its chairman in January, called on the Department to fully
explain what happened.
"Time and again, this Administration has demonstrated a complete
disregard for scientists and their work," Rahall said. "Political
appointees at the Interior Department have been allowed to overrule
biologists and to work more closely with special interests than with
their own staff. The Interior Department must explain its deputy
assistant secretary's actions in this very troubling case, which is
apparently the latest in a long line of efforts to undercut species
recovery."
The letter from Miller and Rahall comes just two weeks after a May 9
Committee hearing at which Deputy Interior Secretary Lynn Scarlett
was questioned about recent controversies in the implementation of
the Endangered Species Act. Her prepared testimony did not mention a
report by the Department's Inspector General on an investigation into
MacDonald, nor did her testimony indicate awareness of the serious
consequences of MacDonald's actions. In the course of the hearing,
Scarlett affirmed that "where there is scientific manipulation, we
want to correct that," but no specifics were provided.
MacDonald resigned from the Interior Department just one week before
Scarlett testified.
The Endangered Species Act established a policy of protecting and
recovering species in decline and their habitats. Fish, wildlife, and
plants listed as "endangered" are in danger of extinction and the
federal government is required to take action to recover them.
Species are listed as "threatened" if it is determined that they may
soon become endangered. Other threatened species in the Bay-Delta
region include the green sturgeon and the delta smelt.
The full text of the letter to The Hon. Dirk Kempthorne, Secretary of
the Interior, is below.
May 21, 2007
The Honorable Dirk Kempthorne
Secretary
Department of the Interior
1849 C Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20240
Dear Secretary Kempthorne:
We are writing to reiterate the request we made at the House Natural
Resources Committee's hearing on May 9, 2007, and subsequently in
writing by Chairman Nick J. Rahall, II, for a complete accounting of
how the Department of the Interior is responding to the Inspector
General's investigation of Julie MacDonald. Yesterday's newspaper
report in the Contra Costa Times on Julie MacDonald and her role in
the decision to remove the Sacramento Splittail from the list of
threatened species demands an immediate response from the Department.
This new information adds very serious charges to her record.
The Contra Costa Times reports ("Decision on splittail raises
suspicions") that the Fish and Wildlife Service, at MacDonald's
direction, may have improperly ignored scientific evidence when
deciding to eliminate the Sacramento Splittail's threatened species
designation, and that MacDonald, a non-scientist, was heavily
involved in the decision. By statute, as you know, listing and de-
listing decisions can only be made on the basis of the best
scientific and commercial data available.
More egregious still, the article demonstrates that MacDonald was
profiting significantly from agricultural property in Sacramento
Splittail habitat. It is our understanding that this is the first and
only time that a fish species has been removed from the list of
threatened species for reasons other than extinction. It is
unacceptable that such an unprecedented policy decision may have been
made because a Deputy Assistant Secretary had a direct and
substantial personal financial interest.
In light of this highly troubling new report, please provide us with
a full accounting of former Deputy Assistant Secretary MacDonald's
role from 2002-2004 in the Sacramento Splittail decision, including
but not limited to:
Details of her contacts with staff in the California and Nevada
Operations Office and elsewhere within the Department regarding the
Sacramento Splittail;
A complete accounting of the changes made by Julie MacDonald, and
others, to the Sacramento Splittail listing documents after they were
sent to Washington; and
Communications regarding the Sacramento Splittail, if any, between
MacDonald and interests outside the Department, including the San
Luis & Delta-Mendota Water Authority, the State Water Contractors, or
the California Farm Bureau.
In addition, please provide us with a full account of former Deputy
Assistant Secretary MacDonald's apparent conflict of interest,
including but not limited to:
Details of her participation in decisions affecting the management of
fish and wildlife species in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta region,
especially those on or near her property;
A description of Interior Department decisions, if any, from which
she recused herself based on a conflict of interest, or the
appearance of a conflict;
A list of officials at the Department who were aware that she
continued to own and profit from agricultural property in California
while serving as Deputy Assistant Secretary; and
All advice or ethics opinions provided to her by the Department
regarding these matters.
In order to determine the Interior Department's role in overseeing
MacDonald's activities, please provide a description of all formal or
informal action taken by the Department in response to her 2004
decision to leak documents to the California Farm Bureau's lobbyist
in an apparent attempt to undermine a scientific decision regarding
the threatened Delta smelt.
Finally, in order to address the significant policy implications of
MacDonald's actions, we request that you direct the Fish and Wildlife
Service to re-evaluate whether its decision to de-list the Sacramento
Splittail was based solely upon the best available scientific and
commercial data, as required by law, and to report these findings to
the Congress. In addition, please provide us with the results of each
of the three statistical methods employed by the Fish and Wildlife
Service to determine the health of the Sacramento Splittail's
population. Endangered species decisions must be based on accurate
and reliable scientific analysis, not the conflict of interest of a
senior departmental official. This is especially true for significant
and sensitive decisions such as this one, which could affect the
management of California's Bay-Delta and water operations.
We appreciate your prompt attention to our request. Please contact
Ben Miller with Rep. George Miller's staff at (202) 225-2095, or Lori
Sonken with the Natural Resources Committee staff at (202) 225-6065,
with any questions.
Sincerely,
_______________________ _______________________
GEORGE MILLER NICK J. RAHALL, II
Member of Congress Chairman, Committee on Natural Resources
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