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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Michael Strauss
(202) 266-8252
mstrauss@nahb.com
www.nahb.org
BUILDERS SUPPORT SEVERAL PROVISIONS IN HABITAT REFORM BILL
WASHINGTON, April 28 - The nation's home builders today
expressed support for the majority of the reforms in H.R. 2933, the "Critical
Habitat Reform Act of 2003," a conservation measure designed to ensure species'
protection and accommodate the needs of the communities and states where they
reside.
"We believe that several provisions within H.R. 2933 offer a
real legislative solution to the current crisis regarding critical habitat.
However, we are concerned that the requirement in the bill linking critical
habitat designations to the recovery planning process may unintentionally
create a new litigation threat and place a higher regulatory burden on
landowners," Don Walters, Jr., a home builder and developer from Flagstaff,
Ariz., and president of the Northern Arizona Home Builders Association, told
the House Resources Committee.
Testifying on behalf of the National Association of Home
Builders (NAHB), Walters said that this designation would blur important
distinctions between the guidance of recovery plans and the regulation of
critical habitat. For example, he noted that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
has used recommendations from working drafts of the recovery plan for the
cactus ferruginous pygmy-owl as justification for density requirements.
Several other provisions in the bill designed to protect the
environment and allow local communities to expand and thrive were endorsed by
NAHB, including the exclusion of habitat conservation plans and other species
management and conservation plans from critical habitat designations.
"By codifying these important practices, the legislation
would provide powerful incentives to private landowners to continue entering
into such agreements to ensure species conservation and preservation," said
Walters.
The legislation would also require the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service to take into account the direct, indirect and cumulative
economic impacts when designating critical habitat and would establish
statutory definitions for two key terms relating to critical habitat under the
Endangered Species Act - "geographical area occupied by the species" and
"essential to the conservation of the species."
"Protecting our nation's wildlife in a way that is
cost-effective and clarifying the meaning of these terms will help to ensure
that common-sense conservation policies and programs - and not litigation -
will drive the critical habitat designation process. With the notable exception
of linking critical habitat and recovery planning, NAHB believes that H.R. 2933
makes great strides in this direction," said Walters.
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NS2004-086
ABOUT NAHB: The National Association of Home Builders is a
Washington-based trade association representing more than 215,000 members
involved in home building, remodeling, multifamily construction, property
management, subcontracting, design, housing finance, building product
manufacturing and other aspects of residential and light commercial
construction. Known as "the voice of the housing industry," NAHB is affiliated
with more than 800 state and local home builders associations around the
country. NAHB's builder members will construct about 80 percent of the more
than 1.77 million new housing units projected for 2004, making housing one of
the largest engines of economic growth in the country.
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