NJDEP Proposes Bald Eagle Removal and Other Changes to New Jersey’s Threatened and Endangered Species Lists

On June 3, 2024, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection announced a rule proposal which would update the endangered species and the nongame species lists promulgated by the Fish & Wildlife Endangered and Nongame Species Program (“ENSP”). These proposed updates would reflect, among other changes, the recategorization of the conservation status of certain species from the ENSP lists along with other structural and organizational amendments.

Primarily, the proposal celebrates the prospective reduced conservation status of three species, including the Peregrine Falcon, Bobcat, and Cope’s Gray Treefrog which each will have their conservation status reduced from “Endangered” to “Threatened.”

More significantly, the Bald Eagle, Red-headed Woodpecker, and Osprey are proposed to have their status reduced to “Special Concern” or “Secure/Stable.” The Department has further proposed partial conservation status reductions for the non-breeding populations of certain bird species including the Yellow-crowned Night-Heron, and Red-headed Woodpecker which have both been reduced to “Special Concern” for non-breeding activities. In effect, these species are being delisted, which is significant for Land Resource permitting under the Coastal Rules and Freshwater Wetlands Protection Act. This also should impact permitting under Pinelands Commission regulations.

Inapposite to those species having their conservation status reduced, the Department has proposed increased conservation designations for thirty (30) species, including select species particularly impactful to development and redevelopment initiatives in New Jersey. Those include three species of bat, the Northern Myotis, Little Brown Bat, and Tricolored Bat, which will each move from an undetermined/unknown status to “Endangered.”

Lastly, the Department proposes moving currently threatened species listed on the nongame species list at N.J.A.C. 7:25-4.17 to the endangered species list at N.J.A.C. 7:25-4.13. This restructuring will leave the species’ conservation status unchanged and includes a number of special species for New Jersey development and redevelopment, such as the Bobolink and Grasshopper Sparrow.

In addition to these conservation status changes, the Department has proposed a new procedure which would allow the addition of species to the list of endangered species by notice of administrative change when that species has been added to the Federal list of endangered and threatened species of wildlife pursuant to the Endangered Species Act of 1973 at 16 U.S.C. § 1531 et seq. and is indigenous to New Jersey. The Department notes this procedure seeks to further the goal of creating a listing that is more consistent with the Federal standard but in doing so the State will obviate the typical Administrative Procedure Act public comment process.

Matthew L. Capone contributed to this article

EPA Will Hold Webinar in May 2022 on Reducing Vertebrate Animal Testing

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced on April 18, 2022, that it will hold a webinar on May 11, 2022, entitled “Data-Driven Solutions to Reducing Animal Use in Ecotoxicity.” Speakers will include:

  • Carlie LaLone, Ph.D., EPA Office of Research and Development (ORD), on “The Sequence Alignment to Predict Across Species Susceptibility (SeqAPASS) Tool: Extrapolating Knowledge Computationally.” EPA states that regulatory decision-making for chemical safety relies upon toxicity data generated from laboratory test species for the protection of wildlife in the environment. Typically, ecological risk assessments integrate safety factors to account for interspecies variability. According to EPA, the SeqAPASS tool is a more informed way to extrapolate knowledge from model species to other species that does not require the use of animals in toxicity testing and instead uses existing protein sequence knowledge. LaLone will describe EPA’s SeqAPASS tool and its applications for cross-species extrapolation relative to understanding conservation of biology and predicting chemical susceptibility.
  • Michael Lowit, Ph.D., EPA Office of Pesticide Programs (OPP), on “Exploring Potential Reductions in Fish Testing in a Regulatory Context.” According to EPA, as part of its commitment to reducing animal testing, OPP is conducting retrospective analyses of existing data to evaluate critically which EPA guideline studies form the basis of regulatory decisions. EPA states that the results from these analyses can inform if reductions can be made to the number of animals used without reducing the quality of ecological risk assessments. EPA is currently conducting a retrospective analysis for fish acute toxicity tests, which are used by OPP to assess potential risk to fish species from pesticides. For each pesticide, EPA typically requires in vivo testing of three different fish species. Lowit will focus on the relative sensitivity among species subjected to in vivo fish acute toxicity studies. The results of this analysis will inform whether there is a basis for reducing the number of species while providing sufficient information to support pesticide registration decisions.

The webinar is co-organized by the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) Science Consortium International, EPA, and the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM). EPA notes that it does not necessarily endorse the views of the speakers. Registration is now open.

©2022 Bergeson & Campbell, P.C.
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Massachusetts' Highest Court Upholds State's Endangered Species Regulations

 

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In a long-awaited ruling, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court affirmed the legality of the “priority habitat” regulations created by the Division of Fisheries and Wildlife (DFW) of the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection under the Massachusetts Endangered Species Act (MESA). In Pepin v. Division of Fisheries and Wildlife, SJC No. 11332 (February 18, 2014), the petitioners challenged the DFW’s establishment of “priority habitat” regulations “for which MESA makes make no express provision.”

MESA does expressly authorize DFW to designate certain areas as “significant habitats” of endangered or threatened species.  Land designated a “significant habitat,” entitles an owner to (i) advance written notice that the land is being considered for designation as a significant habitat, (ii) a public hearing before any decision on the proposed designation is made, and (iii) an opportunity to appeal and seek compensation under the “takings” clause of the U.S. Constitution. Arguably to avoid paying just compensation, the DFW has never designated land “significant habitat.”

Instead, the DFW promulgated regulations establishing a second type of protected habitat  denoted “priority habitat,” to protect species that are either endangered or threatened, or that fall into a third category of “species of special concern.” Delineations are “based on the best scientific evidence available.” A sixty-day public comment period follows the reevaluation of the priority habitat map every four years and a final map is posted on the DFW’s web site.  The DFW reviews projects in a “priority habitat” on a case-by-case basis to determine whether it would result in either (i) a “no” take, (ii) a “conditional” no take, or (iii) a take. Even if DFW finds the project would be a “conditional” no take or a “take,” the project may proceed under DFW-imposed conditions or a “conservation and management permit.”

Here, the petitioners’ property consists of two building lots, totaling approximately 36 acres. In 2006, the property was delineated a priority habitat for a species of special concern (eastern box turtle). Challenging the validity of the “priority habitat” regulations, the petitioners maintained that MESA’s creation of the “significant habitat” designation with critical procedural protections meant that all landowners were entitled to the same protections whenever property development is restricted under MESA.  Citing the broad authority granted by MESA, the Court rejected this view and instead found that that statute “extends to the formulation of the priority habitat concept as a means of implementing MESA’s prohibition on takes.”  The Court refused to “substitute [its] judgment as to the need for a regulation, or the propriety of the means chosen to implement the statutory goals, for that of the agency, …[where] the regulation … [was] rationally related to those goals.”  The petitioners could not overcome the presumption of validity accorded “duly promulgated regulations of an administrative agency….”

The Court also ruled that in deciding the petitioners’ challenge to the application of the priority habitat mapping guidelines to their property, a Division of Administrative Law Appeals (DALA) magistrate judge properly ruled in favor of the DFW even without a hearing because the petitioners failed to meet their burden of demonstrating that the DFW improperly delineated their property as priority habitat.

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