With two weeks left in office, on National Bird Day, the Trump administration鈥攄efying opposition from the general public, scientists, tribal governments, international treaty partners, and a federal judge who last summer all but laughed its legal arguments out of court鈥攖oday announced it has finalized a rule allowing companies and individuals to kill migratory birds as long as they didn鈥檛 mean to.
Conservation groups blasted the decision as a desperate attempt by the administration to give industry a free pass to kill birds on its way out the door. 鈥淪ecretary Bernhardt鈥檚 former oil industry clients have explicitly asked for this policy change, and now he is delivering, just days before returning to the private sector,鈥 said Jennifer Rokala, executive director of the Center for Western Priorities, in a statement referring to Secretary of the Interior David Bernhardt, a former lobbyist for the energy industry. 鈥淏y finalizing this proposal, the Trump administration is signing the death warrants of millions of birds across the country.鈥
Opponents also say the rule stands little chance of survival under the incoming Biden administration. 鈥淓ven though a federal court already ruled that the Trump administration cannot eliminate protections for migratory birds, the administration continues its relentless campaign to undermine environmental protections and harm wildlife,鈥 said Jamie Rappaport Clark, president and CEO of Defenders of Wildlife, in a statement. 鈥淭he new regulation, issued as the Trump administration is leaving office, is illegal and will not stand.鈥
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), the branch of the Interior Department that oversees bird management, stood by the rule and the steps taken to finalize it. 鈥淭he Trump administration is committed to using science and the law as the foundation of our decisions at the Service,鈥 said Aurelia Skipwith, the agency鈥檚 director, . 鈥淓mploying an open and transparent public process to finalize today鈥檚 action emphasizes our dedication to conservation of migratory birds and to providing regulatory certainty.鈥
Not long after taking office the Trump administration began working to dismantle the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, passed in 1918, which makes it illegal to pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap, capture, or collect migratory birds or their eggs or nests鈥攐r attempt to do so鈥攚ithout a permit. For decades the FWS, under both Republican and Democratic presidents, interpreted the rule to prohibit 鈥渋ncidental take鈥濃攖he unintentional but predictable killing of birds, often at industrial sites. The FWS typically enforced only egregious cases of incidental take, such as when it levied a $100 million fine against BP for the deaths of an estimated one million birds in its 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill. But the threat of prosecution gave the government leverage to urge companies to adopt often simple and inexpensive practices to prevent avian deaths, such as covering oil pits and spacing power lines far enough apart to avoid electrocuting raptors.
But in 2017, Daniel Jorjani, the Interior Department鈥檚 top lawyer, issued a legal opinion stating that the MBTA prohibits only intentional killing of the nearly 1,100 bird species it covers, not incidental take. In response, 17 former interior secretaries sent Ryan Zinke, then in charge of the department, a letter urging him to abandon the interpretation. Conservation groups and states sued the department, arguing that its policy clearly violated the MBTA鈥檚 purpose. But as the administration has worked to cement its position with a formal rule鈥攚hich will be harder than Jorjani鈥檚 opinion for the Biden administration to sweep away鈥攖he FWS has .
Interior has pushed through substantial public opposition on the road to finalizing the new rule. More than 99 percent of the comments submitted in response to a draft version of the rule were opposed. Several tribes have spoken out against the rule. 鈥淢any species of migratory birds hold deep cultural and sacred meaning to the Tribe,鈥 representatives of the Snoqualmie Indian Tribe wrote in public comments in June. 鈥淚t is incomprehensible that the industry responsible for killing birds will be able to avoid any criminal accountability merely because they did not purposely set out to kill migratory birds.鈥 Three of the four Flyway Councils鈥攁dministrative bodies that facilitate coordination among wildlife agencies鈥攔epresenting the majority of states and Canadian provinces submitted formal comments opposing the rollback.
Worry over the rule鈥檚 impacts extend beyond this country鈥檚 borders. A 1916 agreement between the United States and Canada preceded and is implemented through the MBTA, and that country has expressed serious concerns about the Trump administration鈥檚 shift away from protecting birds, including the lack of data-based evidence to inform its position. 鈥淎lmost 80 percent of Canada鈥檚 migratory birds migrate through or reside in the United States during parts of their life cycle, which means ongoing collaboration between the two countries is critical to protect these important populations,鈥 said Jonathan Wilkinson, Canada鈥檚 minister of environment and climate change, last month. 鈥淥ur countries share a long history of partnership, and we must continue to work together to protect migratory birds for future generations.鈥
Even Interior鈥檚 own analysis found that implementing the rule could push some bird species onto the endangered species list at a time when scientists say North America has lost more than 3 billion birds over the past half-century.
The biggest roadblock for the administration came last August, when U.S. District Judge Valerie Caproni took its lawyers to task, striking down Jorjani鈥檚 鈥渦npersuasive鈥 reading of the law, which she said unmistakably makes it illegal to kill birds, on purpose or otherwise. Interior鈥檚 interpretation of the MBTA was not only obviously wrong, she wrote, but would create an unacceptable situation in which 鈥渕igratory birds that delight people and support ecosystems throughout the country will be killed without legal consequence.鈥
Nonetheless, the administration continued working to enshrine its discredited position as official policy, and has said it will appeal the ruling. 鈥淚t's completely insane. Instead of stepping back, taking this major court decision in, and changing course, they only doubled down,鈥 says Erik Schneider, policy manager for the 爆料公社, among the groups whose lawsuit prompted Caproni鈥檚 decision. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a very well-reasoned takedown of this policy, but they are just flouting it. I think that鈥檚 part of the reason why I鈥檓 optimistic that ultimately this new attack on the MBTA won鈥檛 succeed in the end.鈥
A waiting period before the rule takes effect means it won鈥檛 officially be in place before the Biden administration takes office. The president-elect hasn鈥檛 made public pronouncements about the MBTA, but his administration could opt to overturn the new rule. In addition, the new Congress could take back up the Migratory Bird Protection Act, a bill that federal lawmakers considered last year but didn鈥檛 pass. That bill would affirm that the MBTA prohibits incidental take, and would set up a permitting program that would protect companies from legal action for incidental take, so long as they adopt recommended practices and technologies that have been shown to significantly reduce bird injuries and deaths.
Such a permitting program represents a measured approach that would protect birds and give businesses certainty that they鈥檙e on safe ground, Schneider says. The Trump administration could have pursued a permit program of its own but instead chose to gut the century-old law's protections鈥攁 decision Schneider says it鈥s essential to reverse. 鈥淲别鈥re not going to succeed in addressing the crisis facing birds and other wildlife if we let this and other historic rollbacks stand.鈥