For Immediate Release – April 21, 2023
Media contacts:
Lindsay Larris, llarris@wildearthguardians.org, 720-334-7636
Michael Saul, michael@westernwatersheds.org, 303-915-8308
Even amended version could set back āpaws-on-the-groundā date by upending federal process
DENVER ā As Senate Bill 23-256 (SB 256) heads to the state House, wolf advocates raise concerns that the legislation will delay wolf restoration in Colorado, even in its amended form. Prior to the billās scheduled hearing in the House Agriculture, Water & Natural Resources Committee on Monday,environmental attorneys analyzed the amended bill and found that a number of problematic components remain, including at least one which could significantly delay wolf-reintroduction and cost Colorado more money.
Currently, in collaboration with Colorado Parks and Wildlife, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is working to write an Endangered Species Act Section 10(j) ānonessential experimental populationā rule for gray wolves in Colorado which would allow significant flexibility in management of the federally listed species by the state agency. The federal 10(j) rule is scheduled to be finalized prior to legally mandated wolf releases by the end of the year.
However, if signed into law in its current form, SB 256 would throw a wrench into the multiple interlocking federal and state processes necessary for a smooth and timely release of wolves. The text of SB 256 threatens to undermine the legally required federal National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) process thatās currently underway and accompanying the Fish and Wildlife Serviceās rulemaking. By changing the legal underpinnings of wolf reintroduction, SB 256 could compel the Fish and Wildlife Service to redo its environmental review process, in turn causing delay in its issuance of a 10(j) rule for Colorado to co-manage reintroduced wolves. NEPA requires federal agencies to analyze their decisions in the context of existing law, so by changing state law at the last minute, SB 256 has the potential to disrupt that analysis.
āThe bill sponsors are concerned about releasing wolves without a 10(j) rule in place. But as written, the bill could restart or delay the 10(j) process,ā said Lindsay Larris, wildlife program director for WildEarth Guardians and an attorney. āThe unintended consequence of SB-256, absent any timeframe for reintroduction, is that it creates new uncertainty about when a 10(j) rule will be completed. This is unacceptable.ā
āMake no mistake: despite amendments to the text of this wolf-delaying bill, its text still contains legal poison pills that threaten to disrupt and delay federal-state cooperation around the voter-mandated return of wolves to Colorado,ā said Michael Saul, Colorado Director for Western Watersheds Project and longtime environmental attorney. āWe expect nothing less of our legislators than to respect the will of the voters in passing proposition 114, and work to make Coloradoās wolf reintroduction the historic conservation success it should be.ā
āWhile the billās sponsors seem to have good intentions, the reality is that SB 256 will simply impede wolf reintroduction on the timeline approved by Colorado voters,ā said Tom Delehanty, senior associate attorney with Earthjusticeās Rocky Mountain Office. āThereās broad agreement that the 10(j) rule is an important piece of reintroduction, but this bill would simply throw sand in the gears by changing the legal landscape at the 11th hour. It would disrupt a federal process thatās nearing completion and cause the very problem itās designed to solve. Legislators who want to respect all the work thatās gone into the cooperative state-federal processāand respect the reintroduction timeline voters supportāshould reject this bill.ā
Last week, SB 256 passed the Senate with several amendments. It is slated to be heard by the House Agriculture, Water & Natural Resources Committee on Monday.
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Western Watersheds Project is a nonprofit environmental conservation group dedicated to protecting and restoring native wildlife and watersheds throughout the American West.





