Updated: 12:54 p.m. MT May 22,
2007
WASHINGTON - Two leading House Democrats asked the Interior
Department on Monday to investigate whether a former agency official pushed to
remove a fish from the threatened species list even though she had a potential
financial stake in the outcome.
Julie
MacDonald, who resigned last month after a rebuke from the department's
inspector general over other endangered species issues, was heavily involved in
delisting the Sacramento splittail while owning an 80-acre farm in the
creature's California habitat, according to a report Sunday in the Contra Costa
Times.
The
fish was listed as threatened from 1999 to 2003 until it was taken off the list
after intervention by MacDonald, who was deputy assistant secretary for fish,
wildlife and parks when she resigned. Biologists in the Sacramento field office
had concluded the fish should remain on the list.
Mandates to protect the splittail could have required
flooding in the Yolo Bypass, the floodplain where MacDonald owns her farm. That
could have had an impact on crops or required farmers to pay to install fish
screens, the Contra Costa Times said.
"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," Democratic Reps. George Miller of California and Nick Rahall of
West Virginia wrote to Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne on Monday.
"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," they wrote.
Miller
and Rahall asked Kempthorne to direct the Fish and Wildlife Service to evaluate
whether its decision to delist the Sacramento splittail was made properly.
An
Interior spokesman did not immediately respond to voicemail messages left
after-hours Monday and a message for MacDonald left at her home in Dixon,
Calif., was not immediately returned.
In a
written statement for the Times story Sunday, the Interior Department said
senior department officials were apparently unaware of issues with MacDonald
and the splittail
"If it
turns out that former Deputy Assistant Secretary MacDonald acted
inappropriately regarding the Sacramento splittail, we will conduct an
appropriate review of the regulatory process that led to the final decision,"
according to the statement.
The
inspector general's March report said MacDonald released information that was
not supposed to be made public to organizations such as the California Farm
Bureau Federation, and described her exerting seemingly political pressure in a
series of endangered species decisions. The report didn't address the splittail
issue.
Copyright 2007 The
Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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