96-12243. Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Restarting the Listing Program and Final Listing Priority Guidance  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 96 (Thursday, May 16, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 24722-24728]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-12243]
    
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
    
    Fish and Wildlife Service
    
    50 CFR Part 17
    
    
    Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Restarting the 
    Listing Program and Final Listing Priority Guidance
    
    AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
    
    ACTION: Notice of listing priority guidance.
    
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    SUMMARY: On March 11, 1996, the Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) 
    published a notice in the Federal Register describing interim guidance 
    for setting priorities in the listing program and solicited public 
    comments. The Service took this action in anticipation of receiving a 
    limited amount of funds to resume listing activities. Having received a 
    limited appropriation of listing funds for the remainder of fiscal year 
    1996, the Service announces final listing priorities that will govern 
    the expenditure of the available funds for the remainder of the fiscal 
    year.
    
    DATES: This guidance takes effect May 16, 1996 and will remain in 
    effect until September 30, 1996, unless extended by further notice.
    
    ADDRESSES: Questions about this guidance should be directed to the 
    Chief, Division of Endangered Species, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 
    1849 C Street, N.W., Mailstop ARLSQ-452, Washington, D.C. 20240.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: E. LaVerne Smith, Chief, Division of 
    Endangered Species, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 703-358-2171 (see 
    ADDRESSES section).
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
    Moratorium and Funding Constraints
    
        Over the past thirteen months, the Service's Endangered Species 
    listing program, which operates under the authority of section 4 of the 
    Endangered Species Act (Act) of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et 
    seq.), has been sharply curtailed by a variety of legislative and 
    funding restrictions. Public Law 104-6, which took effect April 10, 
    1995, rescinded $1.5 million from the Service's then-current listing 
    appropriation of $7.999 million and also stipulated that the remaining 
    listing funds could not be used to make final listing or critical 
    habitat designations. The net effect of Pub. L. 104-6 has been that no 
    new species have been added to the lists of endangered and threatened
    
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    wildlife and plants in more than a year and as a result, a backlog of 
    243 proposed listings has accrued.
        From October 1, 1995, until April 26, 1996, the Department of the 
    Interior operated without a regularly enacted, full-year appropriations 
    bill. Instead, funding for most of the Department's programs, including 
    the endangered species listing program, was governed by the terms of a 
    series of thirteen ``continuing resolutions'' (CRs). The details of 
    these are complex, and are summarized in what follows. Their net effect 
    was essentially to shut down the listing program.
        The CR for the period October 1, 1995, through November 13, 1995, 
    continued the moratorium on final listings and critical habitat 
    designations from the April 10, 1995, enactment. The listing program 
    was funded at a level equal to 95% of the average of the funding for 
    these activities provided in the appropriate appropriations bills then 
    pending before the House and Senate. For listing activities, the House 
    bill provided zero funds. The Senate bill provided only a token amount 
    ($750,000) for the entire fiscal year. Averaging these two, and 
    apportioning 95% of the average across the six weeks the CR was in 
    effect meant that only $43,000 was available during this time period.
        The Acting Director of the Service issued guidance on October 13, 
    1995, describing the activities on which these funds could be spent--
    (1) completion of any comment periods and public hearings for pending 
    proposals; (2) completion of pending petition findings; and (3) 
    processing of any delistings or reclassifications that were in the 
    Washington Office awaiting approval. In the same memorandum the 
    Director also ordered each Regional Director to begin the orderly 
    transfer of listing personnel into other activities that were likely to 
    be funded during fiscal year 1996. This step was necessary because all 
    indications were that Congress would further restrict the listing 
    budget, which could have resulted in reductions-in-force. The resulting 
    loss of institutional and scientific expertise would have crippled the 
    listing program.
        The listing program had to be shut down completely upon expiration 
    of the first continuing resolution. The CR in effect from mid-November 
    through December 15 provided no funds to the listing program and also 
    continued the moratorium provisions of Pub. L. 104-6. Therefore, on 
    November 22, 1995, the Director ordered the reassignment of all listing 
    staff to other duties until funds for these activities were restored. 
    Similar constraints applied during the governmental shutdown and the 
    CRs in effect from December 16, 1995, through January 26, 1996.
        The CR that governed the period January 27 through March 15, 1996, 
    provided that funds would be available for the listing program based on 
    the rate established in the House-Senate conference report the 
    Department of the Interior's fiscal year 1996 Appropriations Act 
    (Section 126 of Pub. L. 104-99). This report included an annual rate of 
    $750,000 for listing activities and continued the moratorium. At an 
    annual rate of $750,000, about $100,000 were available for listing 
    activities during the period of this CR.
        Short-term CRs covered the periods March 16-22, March 23-29, March 
    30-April 24, and April 24-26, 1996. These CRs continued the moratorium 
    on final listings and critical habitat designations, and altogether 
    provided the Service with very limited funding ($90,000) during this 
    period.
        These very limited funds were quickly expended in paying for 
    Federal Register publication charges for a variety of listing documents 
    that were in the Washington Office awaiting publication (e.g., 
    Vertebrate Population Policy, miscellaneous petition findings, and 
    delistings or reclassifications) and providing biological information 
    to the district courts.
        On April 26, 1996, the appropriation for the Department of the 
    Interior for the remainder of fiscal year 1996 was finally enacted into 
    law. It provides approximately $4 million for the Service's listing 
    program over the entire fiscal year. The Service had already expended 
    $233,000 of the appropriation, leaving $3,767,000 for the remainder of 
    fiscal year 1996. This act also extends the moratorium on expenditure 
    of funds for final decisions on listings and critical habitat 
    designations, but it also empowered the President to waive the 
    moratorium provisions. The President issued a waiver of these 
    provisions on April 26, 1996, shortly after signing the Omnibus Budget 
    Reconciliation law.
        Significant obstacles remain as the Service restarts its listing 
    program. The available funds fall far short of what is needed to clear 
    away the backlog that has built up. Currently the Service faces a 
    backlog of 243 proposed species, a far larger backlog than has existed 
    in recent times. This poses a particularly difficult problem for the 
    Service in light of the other Section 4 activities that require 
    attention such as resolving the conservation status of 182 candidate 
    species (see 61 FR 7596; February 28, 1996); addressing pending court 
    orders; and resolving petitions for 57 species. This highly irregular 
    situation demands that the Service establish biologically defensible 
    work priorities to guide expenditures of the limited listing 
    appropriations in a manner that best serves the purposes of the Act.
        The Service is aware that the Department of Commerce and the 
    National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) have also faced a highly 
    irregular funding situation in fiscal year 1996 and may have different 
    priorities with respect to restarting their section 4 listing program. 
    This guidance and its priorities are not intended in any way to affect 
    the interpretation of the Act, the Secretary of Commerce's and NMFS' 
    decisions regarding implementation of the Act, Commerce's and NMFS' 
    budget priorities or Commerce's and NMFS' administration of its section 
    4 listing program. This guidance is intended only to reflect the 
    implementation difficulties faced by the Department of the Interior and 
    the Service, and not those of other agencies or Departments.
    
    Principles for Restarting the Listing Program
    
        The primary purposes of the Endangered Species Act are ``to provide 
    a means whereby the ecosystems upon which endangered species and 
    threatened species depend may be conserved, to provide a program for 
    the conservation of such endangered species and threatened species, and 
    to take such steps as may be appropriate to achieve the purposes of the 
    treaties and conventions set forth in subsection (a) of this section.''
        16 U.S.C. 1531(b). It is long-standing Service policy that highest 
    priority be given to those species believed to face the greatest threat 
    of extinction. It is especially important to continue this policy with 
    the current financial constraints. In carrying out that policy, four 
    basic principles will govern the Service's implementation of the 
    listing process as the listing program is restarted:
        (1) Highest priority will be given to protecting species most in 
    need, based on the priorities established by the listing priority 
    guidance finalized in this notice and the 1983 Listing Priority 
    Guidelines (48 FR 43098-43103; September 21, 1983);
        (2) Biological need, not the preferences of litigants, should drive 
    the listing process. The Service will work closely with the Department 
    of Justice to defend its priority system in those cases where 
    plaintiffs, in pending or new cases, request actions that would cause 
    the Service to diverge from the principles discussed here, and 
    therefore,
    
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    in the judgment of the Service, would divert resources from providing 
    prompt protection to those species the Service believes to be in 
    greatest need of the protections of the Endangered Species Act;
        (3) Sound science, including peer review, will form the foundation 
    of each and every listing action; and
        (4) Public comment and participation in the petition and rulemaking 
    processes will be enhanced to ensure that the States, other Federal 
    agencies, and the affected public are provided with complete 
    explanations of the action and are provided every opportunity to 
    provide comments or information. All comments received will be 
    carefully evaluated and responded to.
    
    Actions Required To Restart the Listing Program
    
        The resumption of an effective listing program will require a 
    variety of actions. First, the budget interruptions described above 
    required the Service to reassign all personnel funded through the 
    listing program to other activities from mid-November 1995 through 
    April 26, 1996. Many of the listing biologists are in the process of 
    being returned to their regular duties. The tasks that these biologists 
    have been working on during the listing shutdown will require a period 
    of orderly shutdown or transfer. The Service estimates that it may 
    require as much as 45 days to fully reengage all listing personnel. 
    Where vacancies exist, steps are being taken to fill them.
        As staff come back to the program, all listing packages will be 
    reviewed as quickly as possible to determine their priority placement 
    according to the listing priority guidance reconfirmed here.
        Upon completion of this initial stage, the next step will be 
    determined by the facts involved in each package. The packages are in 
    various states of completeness, both as to substance and to process. 
    Some merely require a final review to ensure that they accurately 
    reflect the current situation, while others will require extensive 
    revision because the biological situation may have changed since the 
    proposal was issued. Still other proposals were issued shortly before 
    the funding interruption, so that requests for public hearings or to 
    extend the comment periods could not be acted upon. As a result of this 
    variety, final determinations on the pending proposed listings will 
    move through the system at very different rates. Those that still 
    require addressing public comments will take considerably more time to 
    bring to the stage of final decision.
        The $4 million currently appropriated is substantially less than 
    what is needed to eliminate the current backlog of 243 proposed 
    species. Because the facts involved in each final listing determination 
    can vary widely, it is impossible to generate meaningful ``average'' 
    costs for each listing activity. Processing a proposed final listing 
    may take only a few thousand dollars if basically all steps except 
    final approval and Federal Register publication are completed. But 
    processing may take many thousands of dollars if additional comment and 
    responses or public hearings are required. The economic analyses 
    required for critical habitat designations, for example, may require 
    substantial dollars as well as time.
        Following completion of work by the Field Office, draft 
    recommendations on each package will be sent to the Regional Office for 
    policy review and, if appropriate, concurrence. Depending on the 
    remaining steps that must be completed, the above described steps may 
    take from 30-120 days.
        Following approval by the Regional Office, the draft 
    recommendations will be sent to the Washington Office for technical and 
    policy review and approval by the Director. Including a brief review by 
    the Department's Office of Regulatory Affairs, review time in the 
    Washington Office may require 30 to 60 days, especially if changes are 
    necessary. Rules with critical habitat also require review by the 
    Office of Management and Budget and will take additional time to 
    complete.
    
    Pending Litigation
    
        The Service is presently involved in numerous cases in federal 
    court that involve proposed and final listings, petition findings, and 
    critical habitat designations. As of April 1, 1996, approximately 60 
    separate civil suits directed at the process of listing species under 
    the Act were pending against Federal officials or agencies. As of April 
    1, 1996, the Secretary of the Interior had received approximately 300 
    Notices of Intent to Sue (required under the Act before suit may be 
    filed (see 16 U.S.C. Sec. 1540(g))), on which litigation has not yet 
    been, but could be filed at any time. Many of these Notices of Intent 
    deal with the listing process.
        During the moratorium on final listings and critical habitat 
    designation that was in effect for nearly thirteen months, the courts 
    generally agreed with the Service that it could not legally act to meet 
    deadlines without a lawful source of funds. See, e.g., Environmental 
    Defense Center v. Babbitt, 73 F.3d 867 (9th Cir. 1995). Now that the 
    moratorium is no longer in effect, and funds, albeit limited, are 
    available for this task, the Service must decide how to best spend 
    these funds to carry out the purposes of the Act. The press of pending 
    and threatened new litigation could complicate this task immensely.
        This pending and threatened litigation presents many competing and 
    conflicting claims, and in the current budgetary situation translates 
    into expensive demands on inadequate resources. Actions requested by 
    plaintiffs cover the entire spectrum of listing activities, from 
    petitions to add species to the list to requests to overturn existing 
    listings. Taken collectively, these pending and potential cases seek 
    different and sometimes diametrically opposed results.
        Defending existing and any new lawsuits can divert considerable 
    resources away from the Service's efforts to conserve endangered 
    species. When the Service undertakes one listing activity, it 
    inevitably forgoes another. In some cases courts have ordered the 
    Service to complete activities that are simply not, in the Service's 
    expert judgment, among the highest biological priorities.
    
    Development and Publication of Interim Listing Priority Guidance 
    and Its Relationship to the 1983 Priority Guidance
    
        In 1983 the Service adopted guidelines to govern the assignment of 
    priorities to species under consideration for listing as endangered or 
    threatened under section 4 of the Endangered Species Act (48 FR 43098-
    43105; September 21, 1983) The purpose of those guidelines was to 
    establish a rational system for allocating available appropriations to 
    the highest priority species when adding species to the lists of 
    endangered or threatened wildlife and plants or reclassifying 
    threatened species to endangered status. The system places greatest 
    importance on the immediacy and magnitude of threats, but also factors 
    in the level of taxonomic distinctiveness by assigning priority in 
    descending order to monotypic genera, full species, and subspecies (or 
    equivalently, distinct population segments of vertebrates).
        The 1983 guidelines do not establish priorities among different 
    types of listing activities, which include processing pending proposed 
    listings, new proposed listings, delistings or reclassifications, 
    petition findings, and critical habitat determinations. The backlog of 
    proposed species created by the moratorium and the recent funding
    
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    constraints prompted the Service to establish priorities among the 
    various listing activities.
        Accordingly, earlier this spring, in anticipation of facing a 
    possible lifting of the moratorium on final listings and critical 
    habitat designations but with only limited funds available to clear 
    away the large backlog of proposed species that had built up in the 
    interim, the Service published interim listing priority guidance in the 
    March 11, 1996 edition of the Federal Register (61 FR 9651-9653) and 
    solicited public comment on that guidance. Summaries of the interim 
    guidance and all comments received, and responses to the comments, are 
    included in the following sections.
        The 1983 guidelines properly set priorities for the Service, under 
    a fully-funded Section 4 program, for making expeditious progress in 
    adding species to the Lists of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and 
    Plants. They are not, however, sufficient to deal with the present 
    backlog of proposed species. The Service developed the Interim Listing 
    Priority Guidance, which in a slightly modified form is now republished 
    as final guidance, to provide a means to reconcile these competing and 
    conflicting demands in a biologically effective and efficient way to 
    best carry out the purposes of the Act. Specifically, after careful 
    deliberation, the Service has decided that, in order to focus 
    conservation benefits on those species in greatest need, processing 
    final determinations relative to the pending proposed listings should 
    receive higher priority than other actions required by section 4 (such 
    as petition findings, new proposed listings, reclassifications or 
    delistings, and critical habitat determinations). Publication of the 
    priority guidance is intended to explain to the public (including 
    litigants and reviewing courts) precisely how the Service believes it 
    should use its limited listing appropriations to maximum effect to 
    carry out the purposes of the Act.
        The Department of Justice and the Department of the Interior 
    Solicitor's Office will generally ask litigants and the courts to defer 
    to this listing priority system. Near the end of fiscal year 1996, the 
    Service will review the extent of the remaining listing backlog and the 
    fiscal year 1997 budget situation to determine if an extension of this 
    guidance is necessary. For the reasons set out in the preamble of the 
    notice, the Service finds that good cause exists under 5 U.S.C. 553(d) 
    to make this guidance effective upon the date of publication in the 
    Federal Register.
    
    Summary of Interim Listing Priority Guidance
    
        The main principle underlying the listing priority guidance is to 
    focus the limited listing resources on those actions that will result 
    in the greatest conservation benefit for the species in most urgent 
    need of the Act's protections. Because only listed species receive the 
    full conservation benefits and substantive protections of the Act, and 
    because the vast majority of the proposed species face high-magnitude 
    threats to their continued survival, the Service decided to give 
    highest priority to handling emergency situations and resolving the 
    listing status of the 243 outstanding proposed listings. Highest 
    priority actions were assigned to Tier 1, lowest priority to Tier 5.
        Tier 1--Emergency listings. Under section 4(b)(7) of the Act, the 
    Secretary may list a species on an emergency basis (without the usual 
    public notice and comment procedure) if an emergency exists that poses 
    ``a significant risk to the well-being of any species of fish or 
    wildlife or plants. * * *'' Generally, an emergency listing rule 
    remains in effect for 240 days, during which time the Service typically 
    issues a proposed listing and makes a final determination as to whether 
    final listing is appropriate.
        Tier 2--Preparation and processing of final decisions on 
    outstanding proposed listings. Within Tier 2, highest priority will be 
    given to species facing the highest magnitude and most imminent 
    threats. For species with equal listing priority assignments, the 
    following types of actions will receive subsequent priority--listing 
    packages that cover multiple species; listing packages that can be 
    quickly cleared (e.g., those with few public comments or factual 
    questions presented); and proposals that have been pending the longest.
        Tier 3--Preparing and processing new proposed listings for species 
    facing high-magnitude threats; and screening petitions for emergency 
    situations.
        Tier 4--Preparing and processing proposed listings for species 
    facing moderate- or low-magnitude threats; processing final decisions 
    on pending proposed reclassifications and delistings; preparing and 
    processing administrative findings for petitions.
        Tier 5--Preparing and processing critical habitat determinations 
    and preparing or processing new proposed delistings or 
    reclassifications.
    
    Summary of, and Responses to, Comments and Recommendations on the 
    Interim Listing Priority Guidance
    
        Comments on the interim listing priority guidance were received 
    from the following organizations--BMI Marketing and Marine Services 
    Corp.; Arizona Game & Fish Department; the Marine Industries 
    Association of Florida, Inc.; and Messrs. Eric Glitzenstein, Michael 
    Sherwood, and William Snape, counsel for the plaintiffs in the Fund for 
    Animals v. Lujan, Civ. No. 92-800, D.D.C.
        The comments from the Arizona Department of Game & Fish expressed 
    general support for the interim priority guidance, but recommended that 
    reclassifications and delistings should receive higher priority, 
    perhaps in Tier 2 of the interim guidance. The Service recognizes the 
    useful regulatory relief that delistings or reclassifications can 
    provide. The priority guidance provides that to the extent such actions 
    have been processed and approved through the Regional offices, these 
    actions will proceed while the subject guidance is in effect. However, 
    generation of new proposed delistings or reclassifications cannot be 
    justified in a time of extreme budget constraints and while there is an 
    extensive backlog of proposed species awaiting final determinations. 
    The Service regrets that the limited appropriations made available, 
    coupled with the backlog of new listings built up by the moratorium, 
    have delayed delistings and reclassifications. The Service has decided 
    to combine all activities that were assigned to Tiers 3, 4, and 5 and 
    place them collectively in a single Tier 3 for reasons explained below.
        The Marine Industries Association of Florida, Inc. (MIA) expressed 
    a similar concern about the lower priority of delisting or 
    reclassification actions, responded to above. The MIA also commented 
    that the proposed guidance should not be used to ``rush new listings 
    thru'' for species that are highly scientifically controversial. In the 
    interim listing priority guidance, the Service noted that additional 
    public comment periods might be necessary before rules can be finalized 
    if there are unresolved questions or new information that must be 
    evaluated. (See 61 Fed. Reg. at 9653, section entitled ``Setting 
    Priorities Within Tier 2''). The Service will ensure that sound 
    science, including peer review, forms the foundation for all listing 
    decisions.
        Comments submitted by BMI Marketing & Marine Services Corp., 
    cautioned that final decisions on proposed listings should not be 
    rushed, advising the Service to take the same care and procedure as if 
    no time had been lost. The Service agrees with this comment. Each 
    pending proposal will be reviewed to ensure it contains current and 
    accurate information.
    
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    Where necessary, public comment periods will be reopened.
        The attorneys representing the Fund For Animals (FFA) expressed 
    concern that they were not consulted prior to release of the interim 
    guidance, since it will substantially affect the Service's 
    implementation of a court-ordered settlement agreement with FFA dealing 
    with the processing of species regarded as candidates for listing under 
    the Act. The FFA attorneys also expressed concern that the Service 
    violated section 4(h) of the Act by failing to provide opportunity for 
    public comment prior to enactment of the priority guidance. The FFA 
    attorneys asserted that requiring completion of all final listings 
    before beginning new proposals is contrary to the settlement agreement 
    and inconsistent with sound administration of the Act. The FFA also 
    expressed concern that the Service has erected a series of 
    administrative hurdles that unnecessarily slow the speed at which 
    species can be added to the list.
        On the objection to making the interim guidance effective 
    immediately, the Service believes it acted reasonably and responsibly 
    in so doing. More importantly, although the Service found, as stated in 
    the interim guidance (see 61 FR 9651), that good cause existed to make 
    the guidance effective immediately, it nonetheless solicited and 
    received comments from the public, and has taken them into account and 
    responded to them now in confirming the guidance. There was no 
    opportunity to implement the interim guidance anyway, because the 
    listing program was essentially unfunded and the moratorium was not 
    lifted until President Clinton approved a waiver of the moratorium on 
    April 26, 1996.
        As discussed above, the limited appropriated funds for listing 
    activities now available are simply not sufficient to allow the Service 
    to meet all of its immediate responsibilities under Section 4 of the 
    Act. Thus the Service must make difficult decisions about how best to 
    allocate the limited funds. In anticipation of this situation, the 
    Service made the interim listing priority guidance effective 
    immediately upon publication on March 11, 1996 since it had no idea 
    when a full year appropriation might be enacted (Congress having 
    enacted several short-term Crs during this period) and the Service 
    wanted to have a plan for dealing with the situation it knew it would 
    face when the moratorium was lifted. Comments received in response to 
    the interim guidance were considered and are addressed in this notice.
        Unless extended, the guidance is effective until the end of this 
    fiscal year on September 30, 1996. Given the magnitude of the backlog 
    and the limited funds available, however, it is highly unlikely that 
    the Service will complete processing of all of the pending proposed 
    listings within that time. Most of the outstanding proposed listings 
    are for species determined to face high-magnitude threats (priority 1-6 
    under the 1983 listing priority guidelines). Once the backlog of 
    proposed species that face high-magnitude threats has been brought 
    under control, the Service will rescind this guidance and return to a 
    more typical implementation of section 4 that also includes preparation 
    of proposed listings, delistings, and processing of petitions.
        The court-approved Settlement Agreement in Fund for Animals v. 
    Lujan, Civ. No. 92-800 (GAG) (D.D.C., Dec. 15, 1992) discussed by 
    Glitzenstein et al. in their comments illustrates the problem posed by 
    competing resource demands. That agreement requires the Service to 
    resolve the conservation status of 443 candidate species (either by the 
    publication of a proposed listing rule or the publication of a notice 
    stating reasons why listing is not warranted) by September 30, 1996. 
    Resolution of their status would require, for each species, publication 
    of either a proposed listing rule or a notice stating reasons why 
    listing is not warranted. The agreement does not, of its own terms, 
    require final decisions on listings. Therefore, while it in a sense 
    advances the process of formally protecting species, full compliance 
    with the agreement will not bring the full protections of the Act to 
    any species.
        Up to the time the funding for the listing program became severely 
    constrained, the Service was on track to achieve full compliance with 
    this agreement. The Service has published, during the period covered by 
    the agreement, proposed listing rules for 359 candidate species.
        Despite this progress, the Service is now left with the following 
    dilemma. If it were to continue to expend money on moving candidate 
    species forward to the proposed listing state in order to comply with 
    the settlement agreement, it would deplete the entire $4 million 
    listing appropriation for fiscal year 1996. Processing of proposed 
    listing rules requires the investment of considerable time and 
    resources. It involves substantial research, status review, 
    coordination with State and local governments and other interested 
    parties, and conducting public hearings and peer review.
        If the Service were to devote its entire budget for the remainder 
    of fiscal year 1996 to complying with the Fund for Animals Settlement 
    Agreement, the available funds would be insufficient. More important, 
    if the Service were to follow this course, it would be devoting no 
    resources to final listing decisions on the 243 species that have 
    already been proposed for listing. Being so close to receiving the full 
    protection of the Act, these species would remain unprotected under 
    this course of action, while all the Service's efforts in the listing 
    process would be bent toward deciding whether to move candidate species 
    closer to proposed listing, where they receive some limited procedural 
    protection (the section 7 conference requirement, see 16 U.S.C. 
    1536(a)(4)), but not the full substantive and procedural protections 
    offered by final listing. This course of action would also result in a 
    still larger backlog of proposed species awaiting final action.
        Put a little differently, this one court-approved settlement 
    agreement, absent modification, would defeat a primary purpose of 
    lifting the listing moratorium. The Service is recommending, therefore, 
    that the Department of Justice seek appropriate relief from the courts 
    to allow the highest priority proposed species to be processed and, if 
    appropriate, added to the lists of endangered and threatened wildlife 
    and plants, consistent with the provisions of this listing priority 
    guidance.
        The FFA also expressed concern that the Service has erected a 
    series of administrative hurdles that unnecessarily slow the speed at 
    which species can be added to the list. This comment does not pertain 
    to the subject matter of this notice, which deals with the relative 
    priority of various listing activities undertaken by the Service, 
    rather than the procedures used to accomplish those activities. 
    Nevertheless, the Service reaffirms it will process decisions on 
    proposed species as expeditiously as possible, consistent with the 
    substantive and procedural requirements of Section 4 of the Act.
        The administrative ``hurdles'' noted by the FFA consist of joint 
    policy statements issued by the National Marine Fisheries Service and 
    the Fish and Wildlife Service on July 1, 1994 (59 FR 34270-34275). 
    Those joint policies are aimed at ensuring that the Act's requirement 
    to use the ``best available scientific and commercial data'' in the 
    decision-making process on petitions and proposed listing rules, see 16 
    U.S.C. 1533(b), is met and that appropriate coordination occurs with 
    State conservation agencies and the public.
    
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    Final Listing Priority Guidance
    
        The Service has considered all comments and believes that some 
    revision of the interim guidance is appropriate. The Service has 
    decided to assign all activities other than emergency listings and 
    final review of pending proposals to Tier 3. This decision is based on 
    the reality that the fiscal year 1996 appropriation is insufficient to 
    fully dispense with the entire backlog of proposed species, such that 
    the Service is unlikely to undertake any actions below Tier 2 prior to 
    September 30, 1996. The Service adopts the revised listing priority 
    guidance as final guidance for assigning relative priorities to listing 
    actions conducted under section 4 of the Endangered Species Act, to 
    remain in effect until September 30, 1996, unless extended. This 
    guidance supplements, but does not replace, the current listing 
    priority guidelines (48 FR 43098; September 21, 1983), which are silent 
    on the matter of prioritizing among different types of listing 
    activities. The terms of this guidance are effective only on the 
    listing priorities of the Service. Listing actions under the 
    jurisdiction of the Department of Commerce, National Marine Fisheries 
    Service will be processed according to priorities established by that 
    agency.
        Section 4(b)(1) of the Act requires the Service to use the ``best 
    available scientific and commercial information'' to determine those 
    species in need of the Act's protections. It has been long-standing 
    Service policy that the order in which species should be processed for 
    listing is based primarily on the immediacy and magnitude of the 
    threats they face. Given the large backlog of proposed species, the 
    backlog of pending petitions, and the list of candidate species 
    awaiting proposal, it will be extremely important for the Service to 
    focus its efforts on actions that will provide the greatest 
    conservation benefits to imperiled species in the most expeditious 
    manner.
        The Service will base decisions regarding the order in which 
    species will be proposed or listed on the 1983 listing priority 
    guidelines and the priority guidance in this notice. These decisions 
    will be implemented by the Regional Office designated with lead 
    responsibility for the particular species. The Service allocates its 
    listing appropriation among the Regional Offices based primarily on the 
    number of proposed and candidate species for which the Region has lead 
    responsibility. This ensures that those areas of the country with the 
    largest percentage of known imperiled biota will receive a 
    correspondingly high level of listing resources. The 1983 listing 
    priority guidelines and this guidance will be applied at the National, 
    Regional, and local levels. Given the workload-based allocation, and 
    the fact that the $4 million is not sufficient to complete final 
    determinations on all pending proposed listings, the Service does not 
    anticipate undertaking any actions in Tier 3 prior to September 30, 
    1996.
        To address the biological, budgetary, and administrative issues 
    noted above, the Service therefore adopts the following listing 
    priority guidance.
        The following sections describe a multi-tiered approach that 
    assigns relative priorities, on a descending basis, to actions to be 
    carried out under section 4 of the Act. The various types of actions 
    within each tier (such as new proposed listings, administrative 
    petition findings, etc.) will be accorded roughly equal priority, but 
    the 1983 listing priority guidelines will be used as applicable. The 
    Service emphasizes that this guidance is effective until September 30, 
    1996 (unless extended by future notice) and the agency looks forward to 
    returning to a more typical implementation of the Act's listing 
    responsibilities, to concurrently process petition findings; proposed 
    and final listings, reclassifications, or delistings; and critical 
    habitat determinations, after the backlogs have been reduced.
    
    Tier 1--Emergency Listing Actions
    
        The Service will immediately process emergency listings for species 
    that face an imminent risk of extinction under the emergency listing 
    provisions of section 4(b)(7) of the Act and will prepare a proposed 
    listing immediately upon learning of the need to emergency list. The 
    Service will screen all petitions and other status information it 
    receives to determine if an emergency situation exists.
    
    Tier 2--Processing Final Decisions on Proposed Listings
    
        In issuing the pending proposed listings, the Service found that 
    the vast majority of the proposed species faced high-magnitude threats. 
    The Service believes that focusing efforts on making final decisions 
    relative to these proposed species will provide maximum conservation 
    benefits to those species that are in greatest need of the Act's 
    protections. Since only emergency or final listings provide substantive 
    protection, the Service is of the strong belief that this activity 
    should take precedence over new proposed listings, reclassifications or 
    delistings, petition findings, and critical habitat designations, which 
    in comparison to listing, provide limited conservation benefits.
    
    Setting Priorities Within Tier 2
    
        Most of the pending proposed listings deal with species that face 
    high-magnitude threats, such that additional guidance is needed to 
    clarify the relative priorities within Tier 2. Proposed rules dealing 
    with taxa deemed to face imminent, high-magnitude threats will have the 
    highest priority within Tier 2. The Service will promptly review the 
    backlog of 243 proposed species and each Region will reevaluate the 
    immediacy and magnitude of threats facing all species that have been 
    proposed for listing and revise the species' listing priority 
    assignments accordingly. Those with the highest listing priority will 
    be processed first.
        To further prioritize among the Tier 2 actions, proposed listings 
    that cover multiple species will be processed based on the most urgent 
    listing priority of the component species and multi-species packages 
    will have priority over single-species proposed rules with equal 
    priority unless the Service has reason to believe that the single-
    species proposal should be processed to avoid possible extinction. 
    Furthermore, in those cases where a proposed listing for a high-
    priority species also includes other species with lower listing 
    priorities, the listing package will not be disassembled to deal only 
    with the high priority species.
        Due to unresolved questions or to the length of time since 
    proposal, the Service may determine that additional public comment or 
    hearings are necessary before issuing a final decision for some Tier 2 
    actions. If the listing priorities are equal, proposed listings that 
    can be quickly completed (based on factors such as few public comments 
    to address or final decisions that were almost complete prior to the 
    moratorium) will have higher priority than proposed rules for species 
    with equivalent listing priorities that still require extensive work to 
    complete.
        Given species with equivalent listing priorities and the factors 
    previously discussed being equal, proposed listings with the oldest 
    dates of issue should be processed first.
    
    Tier 3--All Other Listing Actions, Including Processing 
    Reclassifications and Delistings, New Proposed Listings, Petition 
    Findings, and Critical Habitat Designations
    
        While the backlog of candidate species has been reduced 
    substantially since 1992, the Service has determined that 182 species 
    warrant issuance of proposed listings. The Act directs the
    
    [[Page 24728]]
    
    Service to make ``expeditious progress'' in adding new species to the 
    lists and thereby necessitates steady work in reducing the number of 
    outstanding candidate species. Issuance of new proposed listings is the 
    first formal step in the regulatory process for listing a species. 
    However, this step provides only limited conservation benefits and the 
    Service believes that issuance of new proposed listings, even for 
    species facing imminent, high-magnitude threats, should therefore be 
    afforded lower priority so long as a large backlog exists of proposed 
    listings for species facing high-magnitude threats.
        The Service will conduct a preliminary review of any petition to 
    list a species or change a threatened species to endangered status to 
    determine if an emergency situation exists or if the species would 
    probably be assigned a high listing priority upon completion of a 
    status review. If the initial screening indicates an emergency 
    situation the action will be elevated to Tier 1. The historical record 
    on listing petitions reveals that fewer than 25 percent of all 
    petitions are found to warrant listing.
        Processing reclassifications and delistings can provide welcome 
    regulatory relief. The Service regrets that such activities must be 
    accorded Tier 3 priority due to the limited appropriations provided by 
    Congress and the need to devote scarce funds to carry out the overall 
    protective purposes of the Act.
        Designation of critical habitat consumes large amounts of the 
    Service's listing appropriation and generally provides only limited 
    conservation benefits beyond those achieved when a species is listed as 
    endangered or threatened. Because critical habitat protections apply 
    only to Federal actions, situations where designating critical habitat 
    provides additional protection beyond that provided by the jeopardy 
    prohibition of section 7 are rare. It is critical during this period to 
    maximize the conservation benefit of every dollar spent in the listing 
    activity. The relatively small amount of additional protection that is 
    gained by designating critical habitat for species that are already 
    listed is greatly outweighed by providing the protections included in 
    sections 7 and 9 to newly-listed species. Therefore, the Service will 
    place higher priority on addressing species that presently have no 
    protection under the Act rather than devoting limited resources to the 
    expensive process of designating critical habitat for species already 
    protected by the Act.
    
    Rules and Findings Currently Near Completion
    
        The Headquarters Office will promptly process any draft final rules 
    to add species to or remove species from the lists, draft proposed 
    listings or delistings, draft petition findings, draft proposed or 
    final critical habitat determinations, and draft withdrawal notices 
    that were in the Washington Office prior to the date of this notice but 
    could not be processed because of the funding constraints or the 
    moratorium. These actions will require little additional work to 
    complete and the Service believes it to be cost-effective to finish up 
    these actions that were inadvertently delayed by the funding 
    constraints. The anticipated number of such actions is fewer than ten.
    
    Notifying the Courts on Matters in Litigation
    
        The Service will assess the relative priority of all section 4 
    petition and rule-making activities that are the subject of active 
    litigation using this guidance and the 1983 listing priority 
    guidelines. In many cases, simply identifying the tier in which an 
    activity falls will suffice to determine whether the Service will 
    undertake that action during the time this priority guidance is in 
    effect. The Service, through the Office of the Solicitor, will then 
    notify the Justice Department of its priority determination and request 
    that appropriate relief be requested from each district court to allow 
    those species with the highest biological priority to be addressed 
    first. To the extent that the courts do not defer to the Service's 
    priority guidance and the 1983 listing priority guidelines, the Service 
    will of course comply with court orders despite any conservation 
    disruption that may result.
        The Service will not elevate the priority of proposed listings for 
    species simply because they are subjects of active litigation. To do so 
    would let litigants, rather than expert biological judgments, control 
    the setting of listing priorities. The Regional Office with 
    responsibility for processing such packages will need to determine the 
    relative priority of such cases based upon this guidance and the 1983 
    listing priority guidelines and furnish supporting documentation that 
    can be submitted to the relevant Court to indicate where such species 
    fall in the overall priority scheme.
    
    Authority
    
        The authority for this notice is the Endangered Species Act of 
    1973, as amended, 16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.
    
        Dated: May 10, 1996.
    Mollie Beattie,
    Director, Fish and Wildlife Service.
    [FR Doc. 96-12243 Filed 5-15-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4310-55-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
5/16/1996
Published:
05/16/1996
Department:
Fish and Wildlife Service
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Notice of listing priority guidance.
Document Number:
96-12243
Dates:
This guidance takes effect May 16, 1996 and will remain in effect until September 30, 1996, unless extended by further notice.
Pages:
24722-24728 (7 pages)
PDF File:
96-12243.pdf
CFR: (1)
50 CFR 17