| Utility Giant to Pay Millions for Eagle
Protection
Jul 15, 2009 -- Interior Department Documents and Publications/ContentWorks
PacifiCorp - one of the largest electric utilities in the West - pleaded
guilty today in Federal court in Casper, Wyoming, to unlawfully killing
golden eagles and other migratory birds in the State. The company, which
does business in Wyoming as Rocky Mountain Power, was ordered to pay over
$10.5 million for killing eagles and other protected birds.
The plea agreement responded to an information charging PacifiCorp with 34
counts of unlawfully taking golden eagles, hawks, and ravens in violation of
the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. PacifiCorp has killed 232 eagles in Wyoming
from January 2007 to the present. The company, which pleaded guilty to all
34 counts, has been sentenced to pay a $510,000 criminal fine and an
additional $900,000 in restitution and will spend the next five years on
probation. During this period, PacifiCorps has been ordered to spend $9.1
million to repair or replace its equipment to protect migratory birds from
electrocution in Wyoming. A U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service investigation,
which began in 2007, linked excessive eagle mortalities to PacifiCorp's
electrical distribution and transmission facilities in six Wyoming counties
(Sweetwater, Washakie, Hot Springs, Park, Converse, and Natrona). The United
States Attorney's Office for the District of Wyoming filed Federal charges
against the company based on this probe. The Migratory Bird Treaty Act makes
it illegal for anyone to kill a protected bird (including eagles and other
raptors) by any means without first obtaining a permit.
Until this past year, PacifiCorp had failed to use readily available
measures to address avian electrocutions in Wyoming - measures that could
have saved numerous eagles and other birds. Under the terms of its plea
agreement, the company must implement an Avian Protection Plan for the State
that will include retrofitting and modernizing its electrical distribution
and transmission system to reduce eagle mortalities.
Restitution paid by the company will support research and projects to
conserve golden eagles and other birds of prey in Wyoming, Utah, Idaho, and
Montana. Conservation organizations slated to receive funding include the
National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, Hawk Watch International, the
Wildlife Heritage Foundation of Wyoming, the Native American Fish and
Wildlife Society, and the Murie Audubon Society of Casper, Wyoming.
This recent Wyoming investigation represents a continuation of the Service's
longstanding efforts to reduce avian electrocutions caused by electric power
infrastructure. For decades, the agency has worked cooperatively with
industry, conservation groups, and tribes to eliminate or minimize
electrocution risks to eagles and other birds throughout their range. While
these efforts have emphasized partnership and problem solving, the Service
has also taken enforcement action to protect these birds.
"When companies refuse to be proactive, and don't undertake readily
available measures to prevent the deaths of eagles and other migratory
birds, we'll seek criminal charges," said Resident Agent in Charge Dominic
Domenici, who oversees the Service's enforcement operations in Wyoming and
Montana. "With mounting pressures on these species and their habitat, we
simply cannot allow industry to kill birds when proven measures exist that
can greatly reduce powerline electrocutions."
Electrocution of eagles or other large birds can occur when a bird perches
on the cross arm of a power pole and completes an electrical circuit by
touching two energized wires or an energized wire and a ground. Eagles
collected by Federal and State officials are sent to the Service's National
Eagle Repository, where they are distributed to Native Americans for
religious and cultural use.
Avian electrocution and collision problems are not new: the first documented
collision of a bird with a telegraph line occurred in 1876, and the first
reported eagle electrocution on a transmission line was in 1922. Problems
persist in many parts of the United States, including Wyoming, where Service
special agents documented at least 1,031 eagles killed by electrocution
since 1991.
The Service and the electric power industry have worked together for years
on a national level to reduce the impact of powerlines on eagles and other
birds. This partnership, which was formalized in 1989 when the Service and
the National Audubon Society teamed with investor-owned utilities and
universities to establish the Avian Power Line Interaction Committee (APLIC),
resulted in the 1996 publication and 2006 update of state-of-the-art
technical guidelines for the industry titled Suggested Practices for Raptor
Protection on Power Lines.
The Service and APLIC have also taught numerous "short courses" to train
utility employees, resource agencies, and others on how to prevent bird
electrocutions. Both actively encourage utility companies to develop and
implement voluntary avian protection plans that include commitments to
building bird-friendly power lines, conducting surveys to identify dangerous
lines already in use, and making the changes needed to protect eagles,
hawks, and owls. "Measures taken under Avian Protection Plans can make a
tremendous difference for raptor populations," said Emily Jo Williams, who
oversees management of the Migratory Bird Program for the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service's Mountain-Prairie Region. "Electrocutions drop when
companies step up and meet their responsibilities for protecting eagles and
other birds."
PacifiCorp's Avian Protection Plan promises significant new safeguards for
raptors in Wyoming. "While the criminal prosecution is significant, the
company's commitment to preventing further electrocutions is what makes this
case so important," explained Service Special Agent Tim Eicher, who
conducted the investigation. "The standards in the plan for new construction
and retrofitting of existing power lines and substations meet or exceed
current suggested practices, plus the financial commitments to conducting
risk assessment surveys and retrofitting dangerous lines are substantial,"
said Eicher. "This plan is the yardstick by which the efforts of other
companies will be judged."
The mission of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is working with others to
conserve, protect and enhance fish, wildlife, plants and their habitats for
the continuing benefit of the American people. We are both a leader and
trusted partner in fish and wildlife conservation, known for our scientific
excellence, stewardship of lands and natural resources, dedicated
professionals and commitment to public service. For more information on our
work and the people who make it happen, visit www.fws.gov.
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