Reptile Industry Calls for Congressional Oversight on US Fish & Wildlife Service Rule Making

EricRoscoe2

Arachnopeon
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Mar 10, 2009
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Reptile Industry Calls for Congressional Oversight on US Fish & Wildlife Service Rule Making

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:



On 30 March 2011, US Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS) transmitted a Final Rule to the White House Office of Management & Budget (OMB) for review. If adopted, this rule would add nine constricting snakes to the Injurious Wildlife List of the Lacey Act, therefore preventing all movement in interstate commerce.

The United States Association of Reptile Keepers (USARK) believes the proposed rule fails on both the science and the cost-benefit analysis. USARK believes that the “science” that is being fielded to justify this action is highly controversial, and the action shows complete disregard for due process and economic impact. If enacted this rule would destroy thousands of businesses and place nearly one million US citizens in jeopardy of becoming felons under the Lacey Act.

OMB review is required of all major rules to ensure that the economic burden does not outweigh the stated benefits of the rule. However the Small Business Administration Office of Advocacy has reviewed the rule and stated unequivocally that the USFWS failed to conduct a comprehensive economic impact assessment, especially insofar as the rule would impact small businesses within the reptile industry. Furthermore, it is USARK’s belief that the purported benefits of the rule are based on controversial science and a failure to assess all available data.

We are, therefore, calling on the Office Of Management and Budget to do a thorough analysis of the proposed rule and, additionally, calling on the Congress to conduct adequate oversight to ensure due process to USARK and its members.

To summarize the history of this action: in 2007, the South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD) petitioned the FWS to add Burmese pythons to the Injurious Wildlife list. After the 2008 publication of a fundamentally flawed climate-matching study authored by invasion-biologists in the US Geological Survey (USGS), FWS published a Notice of Inquiry (NOI) to add snakes in the genera Python, Eunectes, and Boa to the Injurious Wildlife List. This was based, in large part, on sensational media coverage and unfounded claims that these animals are poised to expand across the southern third of the US. In 2009 the USGS produced another highly criticized and controversial internal report in the form of a Risk Assessment of nine constricting snakes (aka Constrictor Report). Based on this “unscientific” internal report, FWS issued a Proposed Rule to add these nine constrictors to the Lacey Act in 2010. In spite of an overwhelming number of critical comments from scientists, organizations and the public, as well as at least four contradicting scientific studies, FWS has now filed a Final Rule in 2011.

The data set on which the conclusions of the 2009 Constrictor Report are based has been demonstrated to be so mischaracterized as to suggest either incompetence or an intentional attempt at deception. Michael Cota, researcher at the Thailand National Natural History Museum, stated in his public comment to FWS, with specific reference to the USGS climate data set, “With a 60% error rate for just one country (Thailand), how many imaginary data sets were used for these reports?” The Constrictor Report is NOT a peer-reviewed scientific document. It is an internal report authored by strongly biased USGS biologists. In fact, a panel of 11 independent experts from the National Geographic Society, University of Florida, Texas A&M and others stated in a letter to the US Senate Environmental & Public Works Committee that this report was “not scientific”, and “not suitable as the basis for regulatory of legislative policy decisions”.

USARK detailed numerous mistakes, inaccuracies and exaggerations in the Constrictor Report in a 16 point Request for Correction with USGS under the Information Quality Act (IQA). This request was rejected out of hand. An appeal filed last summer is still pending.

USARK believes that FWS is attempting to make policy based on staff preference. It is clear that FWS decided on a policy direction and has worked to manufacture a case after the fact to support their decision. Tom Strickland, then Assistant Secretary of DOI, is quoted in a New York Times article indicating a bias in favor of the rule well in advance of the completion of the rule making process.

FWS has dramatically underestimated the impact this will have on thousands of small businesses and as many as one million American citizens. If enacted this rule making will create a new class of criminal out of law abiding citizens.

USARK believes the actions of FWS to be unwarranted and unjustified based on science and cost-benefit analysis. USARK President, Andrew Wyatt said, “I call on the US House Natural Resources Committee and White House OMB to give close scrutiny to what has been going on here. I believe FWS and USGS are in direct violation of the standards and due process required under the Administrative Procedures Act and Information Quality Act. An entire $1.4 billion cottage industry is at risk. This is about jobs and the economy, not the preference of bureaucrats at FWS.”
 

MOBugGuy

Arachnoknight
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Nov 27, 2009
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183
I dont think they should ban those constrictors, but I do think they should make it so they have to get permit but not make the permits outrages price, make it like 10 or 20 bucks a year. Like in my state I have to pay a 250 dollar permit for a venomous snake thats just plain dumb. I dont know if I have to pay for permit cuz I dont keep any snakes that get this size but we have to register any snake thats over 8 feet.
 

LeilaNami

Arachnoking
Old Timer
Joined
Jun 8, 2006
Messages
2,164
I dont think they should ban those constrictors, but I do think they should make it so they have to get permit but not make the permits outrages price, make it like 10 or 20 bucks a year. Like in my state I have to pay a 250 dollar permit for a venomous snake thats just plain dumb. I dont know if I have to pay for permit cuz I dont keep any snakes that get this size but we have to register any snake thats over 8 feet.
Florida already has a permit system. They're just fudging a bunch of reasons to ban the constrictors to further the animal rights agenda.
 

pitbulllady

Arachnoking
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Joined
May 1, 2004
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2,290
Florida already has a permit system. They're just fudging a bunch of reasons to ban the constrictors to further the animal rights agenda.
Exactly! Given that HSUS and PETA both contribute millions to the collective campaigns of various Federal and state lawmakers, our legislators are very eager to implement laws that favor those AR groups. The issue of free-ranging, breeding populaces of large constrictor snakes in the US is one that is strictly limited to southern Florida, and that state has already take measures to address their problem. It's disgusting that they felt the political need to push that agenda nationwide and have resorted to fake "sciene" and outright lies to do so. It's just part of a much larger picture, a piece in an AR agenda puzzle that is growing more and more complete each day with the passages of laws that seem decent to most people, that appear to just be genuinely geared towards stopping animal abuse and protecting people, but are really designed to gradually phase out animal use and ownership by humans completely.

pitbulllady
 

pitbulllady

Arachnoking
Old Timer
Joined
May 1, 2004
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2,290
What started this all....irresponsible owners ;(
NO, it was NOT! THAT, too, is propoganda that was started and spread by the AR movement in order to utilize fear as their means of eliminating a large part of the pet population and pet industry, which is their goal. Hurricane Andrew, an act of nature beyond any human control, is actually the primary source of the Burmese Python population in south Florida, NOT "irresponsible owners". Sure, there are going to be the occasional abandoned large snake, but keep in mind that the AR freaks are not above obtaining and deliberately dumping such animals where they are sure the animals will be found, in order to generate more negative publicity, too. There are many in the AR movement who will literally do anything to further their cause.
Read this article on DNA studies done on Florida pythons, which really shows that IF they were the result of many different and unrelated animals being dumped over time by irresponsible owners, the results would have been very different: http://sunshinestateexotics.com/proof-florida-burmese-fault-lazy-pet-owners/ .

pitbulllady
 

OrdoMallus

Arachnosquire
Old Timer
Joined
Sep 27, 2009
Messages
133
Exactly! Given that HSUS and PETA both contribute millions to the collective campaigns of various Federal and state lawmakers, our legislators are very eager to implement laws that favor those AR groups. The issue of free-ranging, breeding populaces of large constrictor snakes in the US is one that is strictly limited to southern Florida, and that state has already take measures to address their problem. It's disgusting that they felt the political need to push that agenda nationwide and have resorted to fake "sciene" and outright lies to do so. It's just part of a much larger picture, a piece in an AR agenda puzzle that is growing more and more complete each day with the passages of laws that seem decent to most people, that appear to just be genuinely geared towards stopping animal abuse and protecting people, but are really designed to gradually phase out animal use and ownership by humans completely.

pitbulllady
Don't get me started on PETA, http://www.petakillsanimals.com/ --> enough said.. PETA is just a plain old bad joke.

Layne
 
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