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FEDERAL AND STATE ENDANGERED AND THREATENED SPECIES EXPENDITURES
FEDERAL AND STATE ENDANGERED AND THREATENED SPECIES EXPENDITURES
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The Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) was reauthorized and amended on October 7, 1988, under Public Law 100-478. A new section 18 was added to the Act that requires the Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) on behalf of the Secretary of the Interior to report annually on certain expenditures on a species-by-species basis. The section reads:
SEC. 18. On or before January 15, 1990, and each January 15 thereafter, the Secretary of the Interior, acting through the Fish and Wildlife Service, shall submit to the Congress an annual report covering the preceding fiscal year which shall contain
(1) the accounting on a species-by-species basis of all reasonably identifiable Federal expenditures made primarily for the conservation of endangered or threatened species pursuant to this Act; and
(2) an accounting on a species-by-species basis of all reasonably identifiable expenditures made primarily for the conservation of endangered or threatened species pursuant to this Act by States receiving grants under section 6.
This document constitutes the 23rd report by the Service pursuant to the requirements of section 18 of the Act. The report covers fiscal year 2012 (October 1, 2011 - September 30, 2012), although some States may be reporting for a different fiscal year period (without duplicating a previous year's reported data). To assist Federal and State agencies with more accurate accounting of expenditures, the addition of a multi-species reporting category was
available for the FY12 report. This new option gives agencies another way to report expenditures when it is not possible to determine individual species costs for those species that are part of a multi-species conservation activity.The term "State" as used in this report is defined in section 3(17) of the Act to mean any of the several States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, American Samoa, the Virgin Islands, Guam, and the Trust
Territory of the Pacific Islands.The term "conservation," as defined in section 3(3) of the Act, means the use of all methods and procedures necessary to bring any endangered or threatened species to the point where the measures provided for by the Act are no longer necessary--including, but not limited to, research, census, law enforcement, habitat acquisition and maintenance, propagation, live trapping, and transplantation. For the purposes of this report, the definition of
conservation is further expanded to include any and all actions taken by Federal and State agencies on behalf of threatened or endangered species listed pursuant to the Act.
SEC. 18. On or before January 15, 1990, and each January 15 thereafter, the Secretary of the Interior, acting through the Fish and Wildlife Service, shall submit to the Congress an annual report covering the preceding fiscal year which shall contain
(1) the accounting on a species-by-species basis of all reasonably identifiable Federal expenditures made primarily for the conservation of endangered or threatened species pursuant to this Act; and
(2) an accounting on a species-by-species basis of all reasonably identifiable expenditures made primarily for the conservation of endangered or threatened species pursuant to this Act by States receiving grants under section 6.
This document constitutes the 23rd report by the Service pursuant to the requirements of section 18 of the Act. The report covers fiscal year 2012 (October 1, 2011 - September 30, 2012), although some States may be reporting for a different fiscal year period (without duplicating a previous year's reported data). To assist Federal and State agencies with more accurate accounting of expenditures, the addition of a multi-species reporting category was
available for the FY12 report. This new option gives agencies another way to report expenditures when it is not possible to determine individual species costs for those species that are part of a multi-species conservation activity.The term "State" as used in this report is defined in section 3(17) of the Act to mean any of the several States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, American Samoa, the Virgin Islands, Guam, and the Trust
Territory of the Pacific Islands.The term "conservation," as defined in section 3(3) of the Act, means the use of all methods and procedures necessary to bring any endangered or threatened species to the point where the measures provided for by the Act are no longer necessary--including, but not limited to, research, census, law enforcement, habitat acquisition and maintenance, propagation, live trapping, and transplantation. For the purposes of this report, the definition of
conservation is further expanded to include any and all actions taken by Federal and State agencies on behalf of threatened or endangered species listed pursuant to the Act.
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