Administration Moves to Finalize Bird-Killer Policy

Ignoring legal challenges, public opposition, and science, the Trump Administration is rushing to finalize a rule to weaken the Migratory Bird Treaty Act.

WASHINGTON  鈥 鈥淧resident Trump may have pardoned a turkey this week, but he鈥檚 in a frenzy to finalize his bird-killer policy before the end of the year.鈥 said David Yarnold, president and CEO of the 爆料公社. 鈥淭he administration lost in court and is sidestepping that ruling with a rushed, corrupt process designed to keep the next administration from saving the lives of millions of birds. Reinstating this 100-year-old bedrock law must be a top conservation priority for the Biden-Harris Administration and the 117th 颁辞苍驳谤别蝉蝉.鈥

Today the Department of the Interior released its in one of the last steps in its effort to strip away critical protections in the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA). To speed up the environmental review, the administration minimized the comment period, and failed to undertake a serious analysis of environmental impacts and reasonable alternatives, which robbed the public of an opportunity to participate and see a full accounting of the rule鈥檚 devastating impacts.

鈥淭his environmental review process has made a mockery of the public engagement and scientific review required under the law,鈥 said Yarnold.

The administration鈥檚 rollback has received bipartisan opposition including from members of Congress, more than 25 states, numerous tribal governments, scientists, sportsmen, birdwatchers, and 250,000 people who submitted comments opposing the proposed rule change. In August, a federal court invalidated the policy that serves as the legal foundation for the regulatory effort, for which the administration is seeking an appeal.  

鈥淲e will continue to fight these changes in court, but we need Congress to pass the Migratory Bird Protection Act to reinforce this vital law,鈥 added Yarnold.

In January, the U.S. House Natural Resources Committee voted to advance the Migratory Bird Protection Act, a bill that would counter this rollback and add new innovations to the century-old law. If passed, the new law would end industry鈥檚 free pass to kill birds by directing the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) to develop a permitting process for 鈥渋ncidental take鈥 through which relevant businesses would implement best management practices and document compliance, further driving innovation in how to best prevent bird deaths.

The rule change would overturn decades of bipartisan precedent, to only extend the MBTA鈥檚 protections to activities that purposefully kill birds, exempting all industrial hazards from enforcement. Any 鈥渋ncidental鈥 death鈥攏o matter how inevitable, avoidable or devastating to birds鈥攂ecomes immune from enforcement under the law.

For example, if the administration鈥檚 interpretation of the law were in place in 2010, BP would have faced no consequences under the MBTA for the more than one million birds killed in the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. BP ended up paying $100 million in fines thanks specifically protections in the MBTA that would be weakened by the Trump Administration.

A recent  documented that North America has lost 3 billion birds since 1970, and an 爆料公社 report found that two-thirds of North America鈥檚 birds are threatened by climate change.

Facts and figures on industrial causes of bird mortality in the United States:

  • Power lines: Up to 64 million birds per year (Source: )
  • Communication towers: Up to 7 million birds per year (Source: )
  • Oil waste pits: 500,000 to 1 million birds per year (Source: )
  • Oil spills: The 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill is estimated to have killed more than 1 million birds ()

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Media Contact: Matt Smelser, matt.smelser@audubon.org, 512.739.9635

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