After 50 years of struggles to save Spotted Owl, FWS plan is to kill 500k Barred Owls

After 50 years of struggles to save Spotted Owl, FWS plan is to kill 500k Barred Owls

Spread the love

The Spotted Owl is again in the headlines again.

U.S. Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., filed a resolution to reverse a Biden administration plan to kill nearly half a million North American Barred Owls in the Pacific Northwest.

The two-page resolution provides for congressional disapproval of a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service rule that proposes killing roughly 453,000 Barred Owls in Washington, Oregon and California. The resolution, if passed, states the rule “shall have no force or effect.”

On Wednesday, the Senate rejected a motion to proceed to hear the resolution.

Estimates show the FWS rule will cost taxpayers $1.35 billion, Kennedy said. A $4.5 million contract was awarded in 2024 to kill roughly 1,500 Barred Owls over four years; roughly $3,000 per owl, including babies.

At issue is a Biden administration FWS “Barred Owl Management Strategy” to “address the threat of the non-native and invasive barred owl to native northern and California spotted owls.” The Barred Owl’s habitat is located in the eastern half of the United States, Pacific Northwest and parts of Canada.

Barred Owls are larger and more aggressive and produce more chicks than the Spotted Owl. Over the last century, they have been displacing the endangered Spotted Owl in the Pacific Northwest, disrupting their nesting, competing with them for food and interbreeding.

In order to save the Spotted Owl, the FWS has proposed “a large scale” annihilation of the Barred Owl. Under its Migratory Bird Treaty Act permit, the FWS “may designate interested Tribes, federal and state agencies, companies, or specific landowners” to kill the owls, it says. Public hunting of the owl is prohibited.

The FWS plan is not new, but a continuation of previous policy. From 2013 to 2016, 378 Barred Owls were killed in California, Oregon and Washington, according to Audubon.

The Spotted Owl was added to the Endangered Species List in 1973. For more than 50 years, federal agencies have attempted to implement measures to preserve its habitat in old growth forests. Over time, tensions escalated between the federal government over land preservation and residents reliant on timber jobs.

By 1992, landowners and timber companies sued the federal government. Three years later, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Spotted Owl preservation laws could be applied to private land. Prior to the ruling, in 1993, then President Bill Clinton proposed the Northwest Forest Plan to save the Spotted Owl by reducing logging by roughly 25%. In response, timber workers held a mock funeral procession in downtown Portland, Oregon, and sent 70 funeral wreaths to the White House, the Seattle Times reported.

Thirty-two years later, the federal government continues to excel in failure, Kennedy argues.

The FWS’s plan to kill the Barred Owl was another example of “the federal government’s repeated proclivity to do the dumbest thing possible that won’t work,” he said.

Unless Congress stops the plan, hunters hired by the FWS will kill nearly half a million Barred Owls, Kennedy said.

“Who appointed them God?” Kennedy asked.

“Barred owls are expanding their habitat because the forests in the east have been cut down. That’s called adaptive range expansion. And do you know what? Whether you believe in God or nature or whatever, that happens every single day in our ecosystem. It’s a naturally occurring ecological phenomenon. It’s a core behavioral characteristic of animals,” Kennedy said.

“The barred owls are not hurting anybody. They’re just doing what nature teaches them to do. We’re going to change nature? We’re going to control our environment to this extent? We’re going to pass DEI for owls? We’re going to pass quotas for owls? Spotted owls, good. Barred owls, bad. But the barred owls won’t lose their constitutional rights. They will kill them. They will kill 453,000 of them, dead as Jimmy Hoffa. Give me a break.”

Kennedy also cited a FWS biologist who said trying “to control Barred Owls across a large region would be incredibly expensive, and you’d have to keep doing it forever because if you ever stopped, they would begin to come back into these areas.”

A similar sentiment was expressed by Audubon California’s director in 2016 who said killing the owls wouldn’t work over the long term. “Barred Owls are native species, too, and you’re never going to stem that tide,” she told Audubon California nearly 10 years ago. “You have to just make the habitat for the spotted owls the best you can. If you kill Barred Owls, another one is just going to come along. You cannot stop the Barred Owl.”

Events

No events

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Trump deploys California National Guard to Portland

Trump deploys California National Guard to Portland

By Dan McCalebThe Center Square President Donald Trump on Sunday deployed California National Guard troops to Portland after a federal judge in Oregon on Saturday temporarily blocked the president from...
Peace on the line two years after Oct. 7 attacks

Peace on the line two years after Oct. 7 attacks

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Tuesday marks the second anniversary of the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas terror attack; the impact of that day continues to be felt worldwide. Israel has...
U.S. Supreme Court looks to start consequential new term

U.S. Supreme Court looks to start consequential new term

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court will hear the first oral arguments of its new term on Monday, with several high-profile cases already on the docket. The...
U of I scrutinized over perceived preference for international students

U of I scrutinized over perceived preference for international students

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The University of Illinois faces scrutiny over its Spring 2026 Master’s in Accounting program, with the...
Youngkin, Johnsion calll for AG candidate to withdraw after violent texts emerge

Youngkin, Johnsion calll for AG candidate to withdraw after violent texts emerge

By Dan McCalebThe Center Square Gov. Glenn Youngkin and U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson are calling on Virginia attorney general candidate Jay Jones to exit the race after it was...
ICE agents shoot armed woman in suburban Chicago during attack

ICE agents shoot armed woman in suburban Chicago during attack

By Dan McCalebThe Center Square Border Patrol agents near Chicago shot an armed woman Saturday who was part of a group of motorists who attacked the agents with their cars,...
Pritzker: Trump to federalize Illinois National Guard

Pritzker: Trump to federalize Illinois National Guard

By Dan McCalebThe Center Square President Donald Trump will federalize 300 Illinois National Guard troops, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said in a statement Saturday. “This morning, the Trump Administration’s Department of...

Trump says U.S. in ‘armed conflict’ with drug cartels in Caribbean

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump told Congress that the U.S. is engaged in "armed conflict" with drug cartels in the Caribbean shortly after ordering four military strikes...
Policy experts unimpressed with SBA’s ‘record’ capital delivered to small businesses

Policy experts unimpressed with SBA’s ‘record’ capital delivered to small businesses

By Tate MillerThe Center Square The Small Business Administration announced it will close Fiscal Year 2025 with record-breaking capital delivered to small businesses, but policy experts are unimpressed by the...
City taxpayer burden swells, as Chicago pension debt rises

City taxpayer burden swells, as Chicago pension debt rises

By Glenn Minnis | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Chicago taxpayers now face unfunded debt from its municipal, laborers, police, fire and teachers’ pensions that...
Poll: Voters like candidates supporting war on Alzheimer's

Poll: Voters like candidates supporting war on Alzheimer’s

By Dave MasonThe Center Square Republican congressional candidates are more likely to win competitive districts if they support the war on Alzheimer’s, according to a new poll in California, Arizona,...
U.S. LNG exports at new record in September on strong Louisiana shipments

U.S. LNG exports at new record in September on strong Louisiana shipments

By Alton WallaceThe Center Square U.S. LNG exports hit a record high in September at 9.4 million metric tons, up from a previous record 9.3 million metric tons in August,...
Conservatives push Union Pacific–Norfolk Southern merger

Conservatives push Union Pacific–Norfolk Southern merger

By Tom JoyceThe Center Square A coalition of conservative and free-market groups is urging federal regulators to approve the proposed merger between Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern, saying the deal...
Hamas agrees to release hostages; demands further negotiations

Hamas agrees to release hostages; demands further negotiations

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square After an ominous warning from President Donald Trump, Hamas has reportedly agreed to release the remaining Israeli hostages; however, they have yet to agree to...
Report: Bipartisan support for K-12 open enrollment policy

Report: Bipartisan support for K-12 open enrollment policy

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square A new study reveals strong bipartisan support for K-12 open enrollment, yet only 16 states have strong laws enabling it. The report by Reason Foundation,...