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Trump Opens Endangered Habitats to Development—50-Yr Law Axed

Trump Opens Endangered Habitats to Development—50-Yr Law Axed

Big Changes to Rules Protecting Endangered Animals: A Simple Guide

What Just Happened?

On Friday, the Trump administration made a huge change to environmental rules that have been around for decades. These rules were meant to protect animals and plants that are in danger of disappearing forever (we call them endangered species).

  • The change opens up the special homes (habitats) of these protected species to things like:
    • Drilling for oil
    • Mining for minerals
    • Farming
    • Building houses and other real estate (real estate development)

Understanding the Endangered Species Act (ELI5)

To understand why this is a big deal, let’s look at the Endangered Species Act (ESA). Think of it as a big rulebook created in 1973. Its job is to keep endangered animals safe.

  • Under the old rules, the word "harm" didn’t just mean directly hurting an animal.
  • It also meant "habitat modification or degradation"—which is a fancy way of saying "messing up their home."
  • Why? Because if you ruin where they live, they can’t find food, shelter, or have babies, which can hurt or kill them.
  • The US Supreme Court (the highest court in the country) said this definition was correct back in 1995.

The New Rule: What Changed?

Two big government groups—the Interior Department and the Commerce Department—officially changed the rulebook. They created a new, narrower meaning for the word "harm."

Important Point: The Trump administration says the old definition was "outdated." They argue this move returns the rule to its "actual text and original intent" and stops the federal government from having too much power (which they call "federal overreach"). The government insists that "core protections" will still exist to stop people from directly injuring or killing protected wildlife. But changing the meaning of "harm" means ruining an animal’s home is no longer seen as "harming" it under this specific law.

Why Does the Government Say This Is Good?

Government leaders explained their side using simple arguments:

  • Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said the old way turned normal activities into a "regulatory trap" (like a confusing rule maze). He said it raised costs for families and businesses and gave the federal government more power than Congress wanted. He added that agencies "abused" the law to block legal land use and burden people, calling the new change "common sense" that follows what Congress actually passed.
  • Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said the new rule helps fishermen who were hurt by rules that were "overly broad and burdensome" (too wide-reaching and annoying).
  • An Interior Department official said the new rule will be written into the official government record (the Federal Register) early next week.

Why Are Environmental Groups Upset?

Many groups that work to protect nature are very unhappy and plan to fight this in court right away.

  • Earthjustice attorney Kristen Boyles said this is the first time an administration claims endangered species shouldn’t be safe from having their homes destroyed—the places where they live, raise their young, or search for food. She said there is "no scientific support, no legal support, no public support" for the change.
  • Gib Brogan from Oceana (an ocean protection group) pointed out: "Habitat loss is the number one cause of extinction." He explained that removing home protections removes one of the law’s most important safeguards.

Callout: Environmental groups will point to the 1995 Supreme Court case to fight the change. However, if the case goes back to the Supreme Court today, the court is much more conservative (meaning it might rule differently than it did in 1995, likely favoring the new rule).

A Quick Timeline of Previous Attempts

The Trump administration has tried to change these protections during both the first and second administration, with mixed success. Here’s a simple numbered list of past tries:

  1. Earlier this year: Top officials, including Burgum, voted to gut protections in the Gulf of Mexico for the critically endangered Rice’s whale, letting oil and gas drilling ignore the federal law there.
  2. Last year: Interior and Commerce proposed bringing back rules from the first Trump term that took away safeguards for plants and animals hurt by human building and a warming planet. Some of those changes were recently blocked by a federal court.

A Note on Staying Informed

  • The original report mentioned that you can follow CNN’s Weather App and sign up for their newsletter to get more expert coverage and stories behind the weather and endangered species. (This is just a friendly tip from the source to learn more!)

Summary

In short, the Trump administration has changed a 50-year-old environmental law. By redefining the word "harm" in the Endangered Species Act, they no longer count destroying an animal’s habitat as "harm." This opens sensitive areas to drilling, mining, and building. The government says this fixes outdated overreach and helps businesses, but environmental groups say it removes the #1 protection against extinction and plan to sue immediately.

FAQ

1. What is the Endangered Species Act (ESA)?
The ESA is a law from 1973 designed to protect animals and plants that are at risk of going extinct. It stops people from harming these species or the places they live.

2. Why does changing the definition of "harm" matter so much?
In ELI5 terms: If "harm" only means poking the animal directly, but not knocking down its house, then anyone can knock down its house! Since losing their home is the main reason animals go extinct, this change is a very big deal.

3. Will the new rule start immediately?
The government says the rule will be officially published in the Federal Register (the daily journal of the US government) early next week. Environmental groups plan to challenge it in court as soon as they can.

4. Can the courts stop this change?
It is possible! Environmental groups are planning to sue, saying the change goes against science and old court rulings. However, if the case reaches the Supreme Court, the current judges might agree with the new rule.

5. Who supports the change?
Government officials like Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick support it. They say it helps businesses, farmers, and fishermen by removing confusing and costly rules.

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