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Interior official's impact assailed 17 Years, 5 Months ago  
This story is taken from Sacbee / News / Environment.


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Interior official's impact assailed

By Michael Doyle - This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
Published 12:00 am PST Thursday, November 29, 2007

WASHINGTON – Julie A. MacDonald entered the Bush administration ready for war. She left it badly wounded, a case study in how political influence can backfire.


A civil engineer from California's Sacramento Valley, MacDonald served five tumultuous years as a top Interior Department official handling endangered species issues. She left in May, but her legacy still shades a department that's endured mounting controversy.

"I worked there for 34 years," former Fish and Wildlife Service chief spokeswoman Megan Durham said Wednesday, "and I never saw a political appointee who worked like she did."

Every administration pits civil service and expertise against political loyalty. White Houses want action, while bureaucracies lumber along. In the Bush administration, this traditional tension repeatedly has involved the environmental and public land regulations that conservatives loathe.

Sometimes, the cops get called and careers end badly.

The Interior Department's former deputy secretary, one-time coal industry lobbyist Steven Griles, pleaded guilty earlier this year to obstruction of justice charges in connection with the investigation of former GOP lobbyist Jack Abramoff. He was sentenced to 10 months in prison.

MacDonald was the subject of two Interior Department Office of Inspector General investigations. The first, completed earlier this year, found that she'd "interfered" with endangered species decision-making despite having "no formal background in natural sciences."

As deputy assistant secretary for fish, wildlife and parks, MacDonald had a heavy hand in how 607 animal species and 744 plant species were protected under federal law.

The second investigation, finished this week, concluded that MacDonald had a potential conflict of interest when she oversaw an endangered species decision that could affect her Yolo County property in California.

MacDonald's farm is in an area favored by the Sacramento splittail, a little silver fish formerly protected as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. In 2003, following a debate about the splittail population, the Fish and Wildlife Service made the rare decision to withdraw it from the protected list.

Investigators concluded that MacDonald didn't make the decision, but they noted that she made "over 500 changes" in one of the key documents used to justify the decision.

"She should have recused herself," the Office of Inspector General's 10-page report said, adding that the information was forwarded to federal prosecutors in August and that they "declined to open a case for prosecution." The latest investigation was first reported by the Contra Costa Times.

MacDonald, who along with her husband owns a farm near the town of Dixon, couldn't be reached for comment Wednesday. Her Interior Department actions, though, will continue drawing attention for months or years to come.

The House Natural Resources Committee "will carefully review" the latest investigation, according to Democratic Rep. George Miller of Martinez.

More immediately, the Fish and Wildlife Service disclosed this week that it will review seven endangered species decisions that the agency now agrees "may have been inappropriately influenced" by MacDonald.


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