| on May 14, 2008, 01:00 AM E.S.T.
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Lakewood, CO - The government's decision to list the polar bear as
"threatened" under the Endangered Species Act will give environmental
trial lawyers "a powerful new legal sledgehammer" against virtually
every business and agricultural operation in the Western U.S. and will
deliver virtually no benefit to the polar bear species, according to
Jim Sims, President and CEO of the Western Business Roundtable.
"This
decision marks a sad day for the American West and for the polar bear.
The only beneficiaries of this decision will be a small handful of
environmental trial lawyers who make their living suing those Americans
who work the land and keep our nation strong," Sims said.
"Those
who made this decision did so with the best of intentions and under a
highly flawed and failed law," Sims said. "Nonetheless, this will
unleash a torrent of lawsuits by a small group of extremists who are
opposed to responsible development of any of the America's bountiful
resources. Those lawsuits are going to cost Americans jobs, expose
millions of farmers and ranchers and small businesses to citizen
lawsuits, slow economic growth and force our nation to become even more
dependent on foreign sources of energy."
"The bulk of the
economic damage from this decision will fall upon the American West and
on the State of Alaska, which together comprise our nation's energy and
natural resource breadbasket," Sims said. "This decision will make it
harder for America to supply our citizens with the goods and materials
necessary to maintain our standard of living."
"In its more than
30 years of operation, the Endangered Species Act has failed in more
than 99 percent of all listings to do that which is was created to do:
help a listed species recover to health," Sims noted. "This statistic
comes right from U.S. Fish & Wildlife data. If more than 30 years
of history is any guide, this listing will not help the polar bear. It
will substitute the judgment of Washington bureaucrats for that of
actual working biologists in the field. It will put conservation
efforts for the bear into a regulatory straightjacket. It's probably
the worst thing we could have done to the bear as a species."
"The
Department's decision to fully list the bear but then caution that this
listing doesn't provide any justification for environmental lawsuits is
a bit naive," he added. "This decision isn't going to stop any
lawsuits by extremist groups from going forward." Source
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