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1 bill on this topic
“A separate Tribal wildlife conservation account could provide $20 million a year from 2025 through 2029, if Congress provides the money. Tribes and Tribal organizations could receive noncompetitive grants, with amounts based partly on their wildlife management responsibilities.”
1 bill on this topic
“Federal wildlife agencies should post the main data behind ESA listing decisions online, give affected States the underlying data before final decisions, and include relevant State, Tribal, and county data when judging species status.”
1 bill on this topic
“States should keep their existing fish and wildlife management authority when they receive federal conservation money, and Alaska land and Native settlement laws should control when they conflict with the funding system.”
1 bill on this topic
“States should keep ordinary wildlife authority, manage some threatened species after recovery goals are met in that State, and have more say over State recovery plans and certain local species protections.”
1 bill on this topic
“States could submit recovery strategies for threatened or candidate species, federal officials would have 120 days to review them, protections for threatened species would ease as recovery goals are met, and willing states would manage threatened species after all state recovery goals are met.”
1 bill on this topic
“Federal endangered species decisions should include useful information from affected states, tribes, and counties.”
1 bill on this topic
“Tribes should be able to receive wildlife grants without competing against each other or providing matching money, while using the funds for Tribal wildlife, habitat, staffing, enforcement, education, recreation, and required shares for listed or candidate species recovery.”
1 bill on this topic
“Tribal wildlife grants could fund habitat restoration, invasive species control, and culturally important species work; the grants could not require public or non-Tribal land access, and grants over $100,000 would require a 10 percent non-federal match and summary reporting.”
1 bill on this topic
“State wildlife agencies should send three-year plans, budgets, and progress reports for the funding, and the Government Accountability Office should review how the state program is working within seven years.”
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