FEMA Making Orcas and Salmon Extinct v5
FEMA making Orcas and Salmon extinct
This week marks the tenth anniversary of this conclusion made by the U.S. government against the government’s National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). Let me say this again:
one branch of the federal government found, a decade ago, that another branch of the federal government was jeopardizing 16 species of endangered or threatened salmon in Oregon and the Southern Resident Killer Whales (orcas).
This is not an environmental group or group of activists accusing FEMA. The determination was made in April 2016 by the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) which is part of the U.S. Department of Commerce. NMFS is charged (by Congress) with recovering marine-related endangered species under the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA). The US Fish and Wildlife Service manages terrestrial, freshwater, and avian endangered species.
What does jeopardizing mean?
Jeopardizing does not mean that the NFIP (an insurance program) is actively wiping out the species. Rather, it means that the program in Oregon is preventing the species from recovering. A jeopardy finding for a program means that the program, if unchanged, would push a species past its "tipping point," making its continued existence unlikely. In other words, make its extinction likely. So it’s an indirect effect.
What is the NFIP?
It is a federally subsidized (taxpayer-subsidized) insurance program for properties in high-risk flood areas. See my earlier post explaining the NFIP. https://witawops.blogspot.com/2026/03/fema-floods-fine-print-and-fiction-of.html
When and How did the Government come to this conclusion
Disclaimer: the views expressed in this post are solely my own, published under my first amendment rights, and do not necessarily reflect the views of the United States Government or any of its current or former federal agencies.
The NFIP and the ESA have had a very long and sordid history. Environmental groups first accused the NFIP of hurting endangered species in Florida in 1990. FEMA fought this all the way to the court of appeals, and lost. Florida Key Deer v. Stickney, 864 F. Supp. 1222 https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/FSupp/864/1222/1459160/
Lawsuits then sprouted up in other parts of Florida, New Mexico, Arizona, Washington (Puget Sound), Oregon, and California. They focused on a range of endangered species: deer, turtles, salmon, orcas, and even desert species. (Ask your favorite AI for details). But the bottom line was the same.
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