Tuesday, August 1, 2017

Tribal conservation plans upended

Tom Oates
1 August 2017
Front Ecol Environ, 15 (6): 284
In the last year of the Obama administration, Native American tribes took on unprecedented new roles in developing and implementing management plans for resources and species on lands beyond their direct control. Beginning with the adoption of a proposed sage‐grouse management plan in September 2015, and continuing through the proclamation for the establishment of Bears Ears National Monument and the executive order on Northern Bering Sea Climate Resilience in December 2016, regional‐ and ecosystem‐level federal management plans were being shaped in consultation with tribal nations and communities.
(read the full article)

Thursday, June 1, 2017

New climate policy vs endangerment finding

Tom Oates
1 June 2017
Front Ecol Environ, 15 (5): 228
President Trump's executive order of March 28, “Promoting Energy Independence and Economic Growth”, was anticipated as a major statement of the administration's climate‐change policies. Indeed, it directly and immediately revoked Obama administration executive orders and memoranda on national security and climate‐change preparedness and spells out a sharply pro‐fossil‐fuel energy policy. Yet the order leaves aside the status of the “endangerment finding”.
(read the full article)

Tuesday, May 2, 2017

New House rule eases transfer of federal lands

Tom Oates
2 May 2017
Front Ecol Environ, 15 (4): 176
On the first day of the 115th Congress, the US House of Representatives adopted a package of rules that will help guide its actions for the coming 2‐year term. This is the normal order of business. The US Constitution directs that the House and Senate will each adopt its own rules independently, without review by the other.
(read the full article)