Migratory Bird Permits; Educational Use Permits, 59710-59713 [05-20593]
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59710
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 197 / Thursday, October 13, 2005 / Proposed Rules
in which the Commission could lesson
the burden on classes of carrier or
entities and will most likely benefit
small entities more, relative to large
entities.
6. Federal Rules That May Duplicate,
Overlap, or Conflict With the Proposed
Rules
36. None.
Ordering Clauses
37. It is ordered that that pursuant to
sections 1, 4(i), 7(a), 229, 301, 303, 332,
and 410 of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended, and section 102 of
the Communications Assistance for Law
Enforcement Act, 18 U.S.C. 1001, the
Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
in ET Docket No. 04–295 is adopted.
38. It is further ordered that the
Commission’s Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau, Reference
Information Center, shall send a copy of
this Further Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, including the Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration.
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 05–20607 Filed 10–12–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 21
RIN 1018–AI97
Migratory Bird Permits; Educational
Use Permits
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Advance notice of proposed
rulemaking.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: We are soliciting public
comments to help us develop permit
regulations governing possession of live
migratory birds and eagles for
educational use.
DATES: Written comments should be
submitted by December 12, 2005, to the
address below.
ADDRESSES: You may mail or deliver
comments to the Division of Migratory
Bird Management, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, 4401 North Fairfax
Drive, MBSP 4107, Arlington, Virginia
22203. You also may submit comments
via the Internet to:
MB_education@fws.gov. See
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION for file
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17:01 Oct 12, 2005
Jkt 208001
formats and other information about
electronic filing.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Brian Millsap, Chief, Division of
Migratory Bird Management, U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service; (703) 358–1714.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Please
submit Internet comments as an ASCII
file avoiding the use of special
characters and any form of encryption.
Please also include your name and
return address in your Internet message.
If you do not receive a confirmation that
we have received your message, contact
us directly at (703) 358–1714.
Background
This scoping notice is intended to
help the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
(the Service) gather information and
suggestions about current practices and
public views regarding educational use
of live migratory birds and eagles, in
anticipation of drafting new permit
regulations for possession of migratory
birds and eagles for educational
purposes. Feedback from this notice
will enable us to propose regulations
that will already have benefited from
input from the regulated community.
(The proposed regulations will then be
subject to the standard public notice
and comment for purposes of crafting
final regulations.)
The Migratory Bird Treaty Act
(MBTA) (16 U.S.C. 703 et seq.) prohibits
possession of any bird listed under
treaties between the United States and
Canada, Mexico, Japan, and Russia.
Birds protected by the MBTA are
referred to as ‘‘migratory birds.’’ In order
to possess migratory birds or their parts
or feathers for use in educational
programs, you must obtain a permit
from the Service (unless you are an
institution exempted from the permit
requirement under 50 CFR 21.12(b)).
The Service issues such permits to
authorize educational programs and
exhibits that use nonreleasable or
captive-bred migratory birds to teach
people about migratory bird
conservation and ecology. Permits are
also required to possess migratory bird
parts and feathers for educational use;
however, at this time, we seek input
only on issues pertaining to possession
of live migratory birds and eagles for
educational use.
Currently, because no regulations
pertain specifically to educational use
permits, educational activities that
involve migratory birds are authorized
by issuance of a special purpose permit
under 50 CFR 21.27. That miscellaneous
permit category is used to authorize
activities not specifically addressed in
existing migratory bird permit
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regulations. In the absence of specific
regulations addressing educational
activities using migratory birds, the
terms and requirements governing
educational activities using migratory
birds are currently promulgated via a
list of standard conditions that are
issued with each permit. Approximately
1200 permits for possession of live birds
(including eagles) for educational use
are currently active.
In a future rulemaking, we intend to
propose a new permit regulation that
will incorporate many of the
longstanding policies and practices that
are the basis of the current special
purpose—education permit conditions.
However, those conditions have never
been the subject of notice and comment
and may benefit from revision as a
result of public input. Also, the special
purpose—education permit conditions
are not specific enough to provide
sufficient guidance to the Service or to
permittees to address many of the issues
that arise in the regulation of possession
of migratory birds for educational
purposes. By creating a new permit
category specifically for this purpose,
the Service hopes to bring specificity
and clarity to this area of migratory bird
use.
As part of that same rulemaking, we
intend to revise permit regulations
governing exhibition of bald and golden
eagles for educational purposes. Eagle
permits are addressed through separate
regulations from those governing
educational use of other migratory birds
because, in addition to the MBTA,
eagles are further protected by the Bald
and Golden Eagle Protection Act
(BGEPA) (16 U.S.C. 668), which
contains different, more restrictive
provisions than the MBTA. We
anticipate that the new proposed eagle
exhibition regulations will incorporate
by reference the regulations proposed
for non-eagle migratory bird educational
use, but with some variations that will
be necessary to comply with the
BGEPA.
Despite the differences between the
MBTA and the BGEPA, many of the
same issues arise in developing
educational use regulations for eagles as
for other migratory birds. Most of the
questions we pose in this scoping notice
are not addressed directly by either the
MBTA or the BGEPA. For this reason,
we are soliciting input regarding both
eagles and other migratory birds on each
question, except where specifically
noted.
Regarding what the educational use
permits will or will not authorize, some
longstanding Service positions are wellestablished, based on traditional and/or
existing precedents, while other issues
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 197 / Thursday, October 13, 2005 / Proposed Rules
are less settled. For example, the
Service’s current and historical policy is
that birds protected by the MBTA,
including eagles, may not be taken from
the wild for educational purposes. (We
distinguish between educational
purposes and scientific purposes. We
issue permits for take of migratory birds
for scientific purposes, under 50 CFR
21.23 (migratory birds) and 50 CFR
22.21 (eagles).) Migratory birds held
under educational use permits must be
either captive-bred or nonreleasable. In
this context, nonreleasable designates a
bird that was taken from the wild
because of injury, illness, or some other
factor that rendered the bird unlikely,
even after appropriate rehabilitative
treatment, to survive in the wild should
it be released. Because sufficient
numbers of nonreleasable and captivebred migratory birds are available to
meet the needs of educators, we do not
believe that allowing birds to be taken
from the wild for this purpose would be
consistent with the MBTA’s objective to
conserve wild populations of birds.
Another established Service policy
concerning educational use of migratory
birds is the requirement that any
program, exhibition, or display using
those birds must include a substantive
ecological, biological, and/or
conservation message. Migratory bird
possession must be consistent with the
mission to conserve and protect wild
populations of migratory birds. Thus,
exhibition of such birds must be
accompanied by a public message that
explains the wild nature of birds, their
ecological needs and/or conservation
status, and their status as a public trust
resource. Absent such messages, the
public may assume that birds can be
kept for personal use or entertainment.
Demand for such birds would likely
grow—with potentially negative
consequences for wild populations,
including black market trade, pressure
to change regulations to authorize take
from the wild, and a degraded status
through the public’s growing perception
of them as pets, rather than wildlife.
Commercial trade was a large factor in
the decline of the nation’s migratory
bird resource and the subsequent
enactment of the MBTA in 1918.
Subsequently, we have prohibited most
commercial use of birds. Today, we
authorize some commercial use,
including propagation and sale of
captive-bred raptors, waterfowl, and
game birds. And, we have permitted a
number of for-profit educational
migratory bird programs that include
ecological and or conservation
education as a meaningful component of
their programs. However, the use of
eagles in educational formats has been
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limited by law to nonprofit entities
because the BGEPA restricts eagle
exhibition permits to certain ‘‘public’’
(nonprofit) institutions (see #9 below).
Product endorsement is prohibited
under the current special purpose
permit. We believe that endorsement of
commercial products or services is not
an acceptable use of migratory birds
because such endorsement tends to
obscure or even negate any educational
component, compromising the Service’s
mission to protect migratory birds as
wildlife.
Within the framework discussed
above, the regulation of migratory bird
possession for educational use entails a
number of unresolved and/or novel
issues on which we seek input from the
public. Comments are particularly
sought concerning the following issues:
(1) Facilities. We seek suggestions
regarding criteria for housing birds
under an educational use permit. We
wish to adopt standards that ensure
humane treatment of the birds but
which are flexible enough to reasonably
accommodate different circumstances.
Should caging dimensions be based on
whether birds are flighted or nonflighted? Among flighted birds, should
the rule require different caging
dimensions based on whether the birds
are regularly trained or exercised
outside of their enclosures, or not?
Should the regulation stipulate that
certain materials be used or avoided in
constructing enclosures?
(2) Adequate experience. What level
of experience should an applicant be
required to have in order to qualify a
permit to hold live birds for educational
use? The Service is considering
establishing a minimal hourly
requirement for hands-on experience
with the type(s) of species that the
educator will be using in his or her
programs. What type(s) of hand-on
experience should count towards this
requirement (e.g., conducting
educational programs as a subpermittee
under another’s permit, working as a
migratory bird rehabilitator, working in
a zoo)? How many hours of hands-on
experience should be adequate to
qualify for a permit? Need the applicant
have worked with each specific species
that he or she intends to use for their
programs? What kind of certification
should be required to demonstrate that
the applicant has met this requirement?
Should the regulation set forth
different qualifying criteria between
those who work with flighted and nonflighted birds? Or is it more important
to develop criteria based on whether
birds will be held on the glove during
programs versus displayed in
enclosures?
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What type and amount of experience
should a person be required to have to
qualify to hold a live eagle under an
eagle exhibition permit? Permits to
possess eagles for education/exhibition
are limited to certain types of public
institutions (see Item #9). As with other
migratory birds, however, additional
criteria must be met in order to obtain
a permit to possess eagles for education,
including the requirement that the
applicant have sufficient experience
handling and presenting programs with
the type of species that will be held
under the permit. Eagles are distinct
from other raptors because of their size,
strength, and temperament. Combined,
these characteristics would appear to
demand a greater degree of expertise
from their handlers in order to ensure
the safety of the handler, the public and
the birds themselves. How much and
what type(s) of additional experience
should be required before a person
qualifies to hold a live eagle under an
eagle exhibition permit?
(3) Audience Contact. How should the
regulations address audience contact
with migratory birds and eagles? In
November 2000, the Service published a
Request for Comments on a variety of
issues related to falconry education
facilities (65 FR 69726). Based on the
response to that notice, and on other
information, it is our current policy to
allow members of the public without
permits to hold trained, captive-bred
falconry birds on the glove in falconry
education programs that adhere to
certain conditions developed to ensure
that the birds are safely handled (i.e.,
the programs are conducted by a
permitted general or master class
falconer, the birds are held under
educational use (as opposed to falconry)
permits, sufficient instruction is
provided regarding safety, activities are
conducted at a designated locations,
among other conditions). How should
we treat audience contact with birds in
more typical educational settings where
fewer institutional safeguards are in
place? Outside of situations where the
facility meets qualifications to allow
individuals to hold falconry birds on the
glove (as noted above), should all
audience contact with live migratory
birds be prohibited by this regulation?
(4) Free-flying Birds. The current
special purpose—education permit is
silent as to whether birds may be freeflown at open-area venues. A number of
avian exhibitors now engage in this
practice, sometimes using bald and
golden eagles. We are soliciting public
opinion on whether this activity should
be permitted under the new regulations.
How significant are the safety issues
inherent in free-flying birds, both for the
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 197 / Thursday, October 13, 2005 / Proposed Rules
birds themselves, and for the audience?
Can such venues adequately convey the
required conservation or ecological
message? Is the educational component
lost, or is concern for conservation
enhanced by the experience of
observing free-flying birds? Are
alternative techniques available that
may be less risky which avian trainers
could employ to fly birds in open
settings?
(5) Commercial Venues. Educators
may charge money for programs, but
may not use migratory birds to endorse
any product. Should permittees be
prohibited from conducting programs at
businesses and other primarily
commercial venues, even if the message
is about conservation, wildlife biology,
and/or ecology and not about product
endorsement?
(6) What Constitutes Conservation
Education? Must the presentation be
strictly about conservation, wildlife
biology, and/or ecology? If not, how
much discussion of conservation
education is sufficient to justify
possession and exhibition? For example,
would a 2-minute trailer addressing the
decline of a species in the wild justify
authorizing the use of a bird in a 2-hour
film about the adventures of a clever
magpie that performs tricks for
children? What criteria should the
Service use to evaluate whether a
permittee’s presentation (or film or
other medium) incorporates sufficient
conservation education to legitimately
provide a conservation benefit? Should
migratory birds be permitted to be used
for entertainment or other purposes as
long as conservation education
requirements also are met?
(7) Effect on Nonprofit Conservation
Education. Will the opportunity to make
a profit using migratory birds result in
fewer educators taking their programs to
schools and other nonprofit venues,
with the result that fewer children and
other nonpaying audiences will be
exposed to migratory birds through
conservation education? Since
migratory birds are a public resource,
should all permittees be required to
conduct a minimum number of not-forprofit educational programs?
(8) Limit on Number of Birds. Should
the regulations establish a numerical
limit on the birds an educator may
hold? A fixed limit would prevent
permittees from collecting live birds
that they do not use in educational
programs. However, some larger
facilities may be able to accommodate
greater numbers of birds than others,
while continuing to use the birds in
public programs. For the Service to
select a single number of birds that
would be appropriate for all facilities
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and venues would be difficult. Any
maximum number we establish would
probably be inappropriately large for
individual educators with smaller
facilities. If the regulation does not
establish a fixed limit on educational
birds, then the number of birds a
permittee may possess will be set on an
individual case-by-case basis. What
criteria should the Service use to
determine whether an educator may
acquire additional birds? Whether we
establish an across-the-board limit on
how many birds a permittee may
possess, or we provide for the number
to be established on a case-by-case basis,
how should the permit regulation
address birds that were formerly used in
educational programs, but are no longer
suitable because of age or other
conditions?
(9) Who should qualify as ‘‘public’’
under the Bald and Golden Eagle
Protection Act? This question pertains
solely to the regulation of eagles. The
BGEPA provides that—other than
Native Americans, who may possess
bald and golden eagles for religious use,
and falconers—the only entities who
may be granted permits for eagle
possession are: ‘‘public museums,
scientific societies, and zoological
parks.’’ The Service has never
established regulatory definitions of
those terms. Instead, we have relied on
the regulatory definition of ‘‘public’’
found in 50 CFR part 10, which applies
to all the Service’s permit programs, not
just to migratory bird and/or eagle
permit regulations. That definition reads
as follows:
Public as used in referring to museums,
zoological parks, and scientific or
educational institutions, refers to such as are
open to the general public, and are either
established, maintained, and operated as a
governmental service or are privately
endowed and organized but not operated for
profit.
We have the opportunity to establish
regulatory definitions for ‘‘public
museum,’’ ‘‘public scientific society,’’
and ‘‘public zoological park.’’ We are
not seeking to redefine the definition of
public found at 50 CFR part 10 because
that undertaking would require a joint
rulemaking process involving all the
Service programs to which part 10
applies. Rather, we seek to define the
three terms ‘‘public museum,’’ ‘‘public
scientific society,’’ and ‘‘public
zoological park’’ as part of the eagle
permit regulations in 50 CFR part 22.
The new definitions would apply only
to eagle permitting regulations. Because
an executive agency may never establish
regulations that conflict with the statute
or statutes that provide the authority for
the agency’s actions, the new definitions
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must be in accordance with the
BGEPA’s intent to protect wild
populations of eagles. At the same time,
to the extent possible, we would like to
make the definitions as broad as
possible within that intent so that the
maximum number of otherwise
qualified individuals are able to use
nonreleasable bald and golden eagles for
conservation education.
We need to consider that the
lawmakers who enacted the BGEPA and
limited eagle permits to public
museums, public scientific societies,
and public zoological parks likely
envisioned that the eagles in question
would be taken from the wild, as
opposed to being nonreleasable birds
that are already removed from wild
populations. While the Service cannot
revise the BGEPA, we can attempt to
define the terms ‘‘public museum,’’
‘‘public scientific society,’’ and ‘‘public
zoological park’’ in a manner that
reasonably accommodates today’s
circumstances without conflicting with
the BGEPA’s spirit and intent.
The requirement in the 50 CFR part
10 definition of ‘‘public’’ that an
institution must be privately endowed
serves as a form of insurance. If an
institution were suddenly to suffer from
a loss of financial support, the
endowment would help to insulate the
museum’s collection—including its live
birds—from neglect, disposal, or
abandonment. However well meaning
this concept may be, we question
whether it should remain a requirement
for obtaining permits to keep eagles for
purposes of education, in light of the
fact that the eagles in question cannot
humanely be released to the wild and
may not otherwise be placed.
To help us define ‘‘public museum,’’
‘‘public scientific society,’’ and ‘‘public
zoological park,’’ we seek public input
on the following issues:
9a. Should endowment be a required
condition for qualifying as a public
museum, public scientific society, or
public zoological park under the
BGEPA?
9b. Should museums, scientific
societies, and zoological parks be
nonprofit in order to be considered
‘‘public’’ for purposes of obtaining an
eagle exhibition permit?
9c. How many hours should an
institution be open to the public in
order to be considered ‘‘public’’ for
purposes of obtaining an eagle
exhibition permit?
9d. Should accreditation by a
respected accrediting body be a
requirement for public museums,
scientific societies, and zoological
parks, for purposes of obtaining an eagle
exhibition permit?
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 197 / Thursday, October 13, 2005 / Proposed Rules
We welcome comments on the issues
described above and encourage the
submission of new ideas and
suggestions.
Public Comments Solicited
Interested persons are invited to
submit comments on issues related to
permitting possession and use of
migratory birds for educational
purposes. We request suggestions,
materials, recommendations, and
arguments from the public; permitted
educators; avian trainers, ornithological
organizations; environmental
organizations; corporations; local, State,
Tribal, and Federal agencies; and any
other interested party. Please ensure
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17:01 Oct 12, 2005
Jkt 208001
that any comments submitted in
response to this request for comments
pertain to issues presented in this
notice.
Our practice is to make comments,
including names and home addresses of
respondents, available for public review
by appointment during regular business
hours. Individual respondents may
request that we withhold their home
address from the rulemaking record,
which we will honor to the extent
allowable by law. If you wish us to
withhold your name and/or address,
you must state this prominently at the
beginning of your comment. However,
we will not consider anonymous
comments. We will make all
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59713
submissions from organizations or
businesses, and from individuals
identifying themselves as
representatives or officials of
organizations or businesses, available
for public inspection in their entirety.
Authority: The authorities for this notice
are the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918, as
amended (16 U.S.C. 703–712), and the Bald
and Golden Eagle Protection Act (16 U.S.C.
668a).
Dated: October 3, 2005.
Craig Manson,
Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and
Parks.
[FR Doc. 05–20593 Filed 10–11–05; 12:36
pm]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 197 (Thursday, October 13, 2005)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 59710-59713]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-20593]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 21
RIN 1018-AI97
Migratory Bird Permits; Educational Use Permits
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Advance notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We are soliciting public comments to help us develop permit
regulations governing possession of live migratory birds and eagles for
educational use.
DATES: Written comments should be submitted by December 12, 2005, to
the address below.
ADDRESSES: You may mail or deliver comments to the Division of
Migratory Bird Management, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 4401 North
Fairfax Drive, MBSP 4107, Arlington, Virginia 22203. You also may
submit comments via the Internet to: MB_education@fws.gov. See
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION for file formats and other information about
electronic filing.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brian Millsap, Chief, Division of
Migratory Bird Management, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; (703) 358-
1714.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Please submit Internet comments as an ASCII
file avoiding the use of special characters and any form of encryption.
Please also include your name and return address in your Internet
message. If you do not receive a confirmation that we have received
your message, contact us directly at (703) 358-1714.
Background
This scoping notice is intended to help the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service (the Service) gather information and suggestions about current
practices and public views regarding educational use of live migratory
birds and eagles, in anticipation of drafting new permit regulations
for possession of migratory birds and eagles for educational purposes.
Feedback from this notice will enable us to propose regulations that
will already have benefited from input from the regulated community.
(The proposed regulations will then be subject to the standard public
notice and comment for purposes of crafting final regulations.)
The Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA) (16 U.S.C. 703 et seq.)
prohibits possession of any bird listed under treaties between the
United States and Canada, Mexico, Japan, and Russia. Birds protected by
the MBTA are referred to as ``migratory birds.'' In order to possess
migratory birds or their parts or feathers for use in educational
programs, you must obtain a permit from the Service (unless you are an
institution exempted from the permit requirement under 50 CFR
21.12(b)). The Service issues such permits to authorize educational
programs and exhibits that use nonreleasable or captive-bred migratory
birds to teach people about migratory bird conservation and ecology.
Permits are also required to possess migratory bird parts and feathers
for educational use; however, at this time, we seek input only on
issues pertaining to possession of live migratory birds and eagles for
educational use.
Currently, because no regulations pertain specifically to
educational use permits, educational activities that involve migratory
birds are authorized by issuance of a special purpose permit under 50
CFR 21.27. That miscellaneous permit category is used to authorize
activities not specifically addressed in existing migratory bird permit
regulations. In the absence of specific regulations addressing
educational activities using migratory birds, the terms and
requirements governing educational activities using migratory birds are
currently promulgated via a list of standard conditions that are issued
with each permit. Approximately 1200 permits for possession of live
birds (including eagles) for educational use are currently active.
In a future rulemaking, we intend to propose a new permit
regulation that will incorporate many of the longstanding policies and
practices that are the basis of the current special purpose--education
permit conditions. However, those conditions have never been the
subject of notice and comment and may benefit from revision as a result
of public input. Also, the special purpose--education permit conditions
are not specific enough to provide sufficient guidance to the Service
or to permittees to address many of the issues that arise in the
regulation of possession of migratory birds for educational purposes.
By creating a new permit category specifically for this purpose, the
Service hopes to bring specificity and clarity to this area of
migratory bird use.
As part of that same rulemaking, we intend to revise permit
regulations governing exhibition of bald and golden eagles for
educational purposes. Eagle permits are addressed through separate
regulations from those governing educational use of other migratory
birds because, in addition to the MBTA, eagles are further protected by
the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act (BGEPA) (16 U.S.C. 668), which
contains different, more restrictive provisions than the MBTA. We
anticipate that the new proposed eagle exhibition regulations will
incorporate by reference the regulations proposed for non-eagle
migratory bird educational use, but with some variations that will be
necessary to comply with the BGEPA.
Despite the differences between the MBTA and the BGEPA, many of the
same issues arise in developing educational use regulations for eagles
as for other migratory birds. Most of the questions we pose in this
scoping notice are not addressed directly by either the MBTA or the
BGEPA. For this reason, we are soliciting input regarding both eagles
and other migratory birds on each question, except where specifically
noted.
Regarding what the educational use permits will or will not
authorize, some longstanding Service positions are well-established,
based on traditional and/or existing precedents, while other issues
[[Page 59711]]
are less settled. For example, the Service's current and historical
policy is that birds protected by the MBTA, including eagles, may not
be taken from the wild for educational purposes. (We distinguish
between educational purposes and scientific purposes. We issue permits
for take of migratory birds for scientific purposes, under 50 CFR 21.23
(migratory birds) and 50 CFR 22.21 (eagles).) Migratory birds held
under educational use permits must be either captive-bred or
nonreleasable. In this context, nonreleasable designates a bird that
was taken from the wild because of injury, illness, or some other
factor that rendered the bird unlikely, even after appropriate
rehabilitative treatment, to survive in the wild should it be released.
Because sufficient numbers of nonreleasable and captive-bred migratory
birds are available to meet the needs of educators, we do not believe
that allowing birds to be taken from the wild for this purpose would be
consistent with the MBTA's objective to conserve wild populations of
birds.
Another established Service policy concerning educational use of
migratory birds is the requirement that any program, exhibition, or
display using those birds must include a substantive ecological,
biological, and/or conservation message. Migratory bird possession must
be consistent with the mission to conserve and protect wild populations
of migratory birds. Thus, exhibition of such birds must be accompanied
by a public message that explains the wild nature of birds, their
ecological needs and/or conservation status, and their status as a
public trust resource. Absent such messages, the public may assume that
birds can be kept for personal use or entertainment. Demand for such
birds would likely grow--with potentially negative consequences for
wild populations, including black market trade, pressure to change
regulations to authorize take from the wild, and a degraded status
through the public's growing perception of them as pets, rather than
wildlife.
Commercial trade was a large factor in the decline of the nation's
migratory bird resource and the subsequent enactment of the MBTA in
1918. Subsequently, we have prohibited most commercial use of birds.
Today, we authorize some commercial use, including propagation and sale
of captive-bred raptors, waterfowl, and game birds. And, we have
permitted a number of for-profit educational migratory bird programs
that include ecological and or conservation education as a meaningful
component of their programs. However, the use of eagles in educational
formats has been limited by law to nonprofit entities because the BGEPA
restricts eagle exhibition permits to certain ``public'' (nonprofit)
institutions (see 9 below).
Product endorsement is prohibited under the current special purpose
permit. We believe that endorsement of commercial products or services
is not an acceptable use of migratory birds because such endorsement
tends to obscure or even negate any educational component, compromising
the Service's mission to protect migratory birds as wildlife.
Within the framework discussed above, the regulation of migratory
bird possession for educational use entails a number of unresolved and/
or novel issues on which we seek input from the public. Comments are
particularly sought concerning the following issues:
(1) Facilities. We seek suggestions regarding criteria for housing
birds under an educational use permit. We wish to adopt standards that
ensure humane treatment of the birds but which are flexible enough to
reasonably accommodate different circumstances. Should caging
dimensions be based on whether birds are flighted or non-flighted?
Among flighted birds, should the rule require different caging
dimensions based on whether the birds are regularly trained or
exercised outside of their enclosures, or not? Should the regulation
stipulate that certain materials be used or avoided in constructing
enclosures?
(2) Adequate experience. What level of experience should an
applicant be required to have in order to qualify a permit to hold live
birds for educational use? The Service is considering establishing a
minimal hourly requirement for hands-on experience with the type(s) of
species that the educator will be using in his or her programs. What
type(s) of hand-on experience should count towards this requirement
(e.g., conducting educational programs as a subpermittee under
another's permit, working as a migratory bird rehabilitator, working in
a zoo)? How many hours of hands-on experience should be adequate to
qualify for a permit? Need the applicant have worked with each specific
species that he or she intends to use for their programs? What kind of
certification should be required to demonstrate that the applicant has
met this requirement?
Should the regulation set forth different qualifying criteria
between those who work with flighted and non-flighted birds? Or is it
more important to develop criteria based on whether birds will be held
on the glove during programs versus displayed in enclosures?
What type and amount of experience should a person be required to
have to qualify to hold a live eagle under an eagle exhibition permit?
Permits to possess eagles for education/exhibition are limited to
certain types of public institutions (see Item 9). As with
other migratory birds, however, additional criteria must be met in
order to obtain a permit to possess eagles for education, including the
requirement that the applicant have sufficient experience handling and
presenting programs with the type of species that will be held under
the permit. Eagles are distinct from other raptors because of their
size, strength, and temperament. Combined, these characteristics would
appear to demand a greater degree of expertise from their handlers in
order to ensure the safety of the handler, the public and the birds
themselves. How much and what type(s) of additional experience should
be required before a person qualifies to hold a live eagle under an
eagle exhibition permit?
(3) Audience Contact. How should the regulations address audience
contact with migratory birds and eagles? In November 2000, the Service
published a Request for Comments on a variety of issues related to
falconry education facilities (65 FR 69726). Based on the response to
that notice, and on other information, it is our current policy to
allow members of the public without permits to hold trained, captive-
bred falconry birds on the glove in falconry education programs that
adhere to certain conditions developed to ensure that the birds are
safely handled (i.e., the programs are conducted by a permitted general
or master class falconer, the birds are held under educational use (as
opposed to falconry) permits, sufficient instruction is provided
regarding safety, activities are conducted at a designated locations,
among other conditions). How should we treat audience contact with
birds in more typical educational settings where fewer institutional
safeguards are in place? Outside of situations where the facility meets
qualifications to allow individuals to hold falconry birds on the glove
(as noted above), should all audience contact with live migratory birds
be prohibited by this regulation?
(4) Free-flying Birds. The current special purpose--education
permit is silent as to whether birds may be free-flown at open-area
venues. A number of avian exhibitors now engage in this practice,
sometimes using bald and golden eagles. We are soliciting public
opinion on whether this activity should be permitted under the new
regulations. How significant are the safety issues inherent in free-
flying birds, both for the
[[Page 59712]]
birds themselves, and for the audience? Can such venues adequately
convey the required conservation or ecological message? Is the
educational component lost, or is concern for conservation enhanced by
the experience of observing free-flying birds? Are alternative
techniques available that may be less risky which avian trainers could
employ to fly birds in open settings?
(5) Commercial Venues. Educators may charge money for programs, but
may not use migratory birds to endorse any product. Should permittees
be prohibited from conducting programs at businesses and other
primarily commercial venues, even if the message is about conservation,
wildlife biology, and/or ecology and not about product endorsement?
(6) What Constitutes Conservation Education? Must the presentation
be strictly about conservation, wildlife biology, and/or ecology? If
not, how much discussion of conservation education is sufficient to
justify possession and exhibition? For example, would a 2-minute
trailer addressing the decline of a species in the wild justify
authorizing the use of a bird in a 2-hour film about the adventures of
a clever magpie that performs tricks for children? What criteria should
the Service use to evaluate whether a permittee's presentation (or film
or other medium) incorporates sufficient conservation education to
legitimately provide a conservation benefit? Should migratory birds be
permitted to be used for entertainment or other purposes as long as
conservation education requirements also are met?
(7) Effect on Nonprofit Conservation Education. Will the
opportunity to make a profit using migratory birds result in fewer
educators taking their programs to schools and other nonprofit venues,
with the result that fewer children and other nonpaying audiences will
be exposed to migratory birds through conservation education? Since
migratory birds are a public resource, should all permittees be
required to conduct a minimum number of not-for-profit educational
programs?
(8) Limit on Number of Birds. Should the regulations establish a
numerical limit on the birds an educator may hold? A fixed limit would
prevent permittees from collecting live birds that they do not use in
educational programs. However, some larger facilities may be able to
accommodate greater numbers of birds than others, while continuing to
use the birds in public programs. For the Service to select a single
number of birds that would be appropriate for all facilities and venues
would be difficult. Any maximum number we establish would probably be
inappropriately large for individual educators with smaller facilities.
If the regulation does not establish a fixed limit on educational
birds, then the number of birds a permittee may possess will be set on
an individual case-by-case basis. What criteria should the Service use
to determine whether an educator may acquire additional birds? Whether
we establish an across-the-board limit on how many birds a permittee
may possess, or we provide for the number to be established on a case-
by-case basis, how should the permit regulation address birds that were
formerly used in educational programs, but are no longer suitable
because of age or other conditions?
(9) Who should qualify as ``public'' under the Bald and Golden
Eagle Protection Act? This question pertains solely to the regulation
of eagles. The BGEPA provides that--other than Native Americans, who
may possess bald and golden eagles for religious use, and falconers--
the only entities who may be granted permits for eagle possession are:
``public museums, scientific societies, and zoological parks.'' The
Service has never established regulatory definitions of those terms.
Instead, we have relied on the regulatory definition of ``public''
found in 50 CFR part 10, which applies to all the Service's permit
programs, not just to migratory bird and/or eagle permit regulations.
That definition reads as follows:
Public as used in referring to museums, zoological parks, and
scientific or educational institutions, refers to such as are open
to the general public, and are either established, maintained, and
operated as a governmental service or are privately endowed and
organized but not operated for profit.
We have the opportunity to establish regulatory definitions for
``public museum,'' ``public scientific society,'' and ``public
zoological park.'' We are not seeking to redefine the definition of
public found at 50 CFR part 10 because that undertaking would require a
joint rulemaking process involving all the Service programs to which
part 10 applies. Rather, we seek to define the three terms ``public
museum,'' ``public scientific society,'' and ``public zoological park''
as part of the eagle permit regulations in 50 CFR part 22. The new
definitions would apply only to eagle permitting regulations. Because
an executive agency may never establish regulations that conflict with
the statute or statutes that provide the authority for the agency's
actions, the new definitions must be in accordance with the BGEPA's
intent to protect wild populations of eagles. At the same time, to the
extent possible, we would like to make the definitions as broad as
possible within that intent so that the maximum number of otherwise
qualified individuals are able to use nonreleasable bald and golden
eagles for conservation education.
We need to consider that the lawmakers who enacted the BGEPA and
limited eagle permits to public museums, public scientific societies,
and public zoological parks likely envisioned that the eagles in
question would be taken from the wild, as opposed to being
nonreleasable birds that are already removed from wild populations.
While the Service cannot revise the BGEPA, we can attempt to define the
terms ``public museum,'' ``public scientific society,'' and ``public
zoological park'' in a manner that reasonably accommodates today's
circumstances without conflicting with the BGEPA's spirit and intent.
The requirement in the 50 CFR part 10 definition of ``public'' that
an institution must be privately endowed serves as a form of insurance.
If an institution were suddenly to suffer from a loss of financial
support, the endowment would help to insulate the museum's collection--
including its live birds--from neglect, disposal, or abandonment.
However well meaning this concept may be, we question whether it should
remain a requirement for obtaining permits to keep eagles for purposes
of education, in light of the fact that the eagles in question cannot
humanely be released to the wild and may not otherwise be placed.
To help us define ``public museum,'' ``public scientific society,''
and ``public zoological park,'' we seek public input on the following
issues:
9a. Should endowment be a required condition for qualifying as a
public museum, public scientific society, or public zoological park
under the BGEPA?
9b. Should museums, scientific societies, and zoological parks be
nonprofit in order to be considered ``public'' for purposes of
obtaining an eagle exhibition permit?
9c. How many hours should an institution be open to the public in
order to be considered ``public'' for purposes of obtaining an eagle
exhibition permit?
9d. Should accreditation by a respected accrediting body be a
requirement for public museums, scientific societies, and zoological
parks, for purposes of obtaining an eagle exhibition permit?
[[Page 59713]]
We welcome comments on the issues described above and encourage the
submission of new ideas and suggestions.
Public Comments Solicited
Interested persons are invited to submit comments on issues related
to permitting possession and use of migratory birds for educational
purposes. We request suggestions, materials, recommendations, and
arguments from the public; permitted educators; avian trainers,
ornithological organizations; environmental organizations;
corporations; local, State, Tribal, and Federal agencies; and any other
interested party. Please ensure that any comments submitted in response
to this request for comments pertain to issues presented in this
notice.
Our practice is to make comments, including names and home
addresses of respondents, available for public review by appointment
during regular business hours. Individual respondents may request that
we withhold their home address from the rulemaking record, which we
will honor to the extent allowable by law. If you wish us to withhold
your name and/or address, you must state this prominently at the
beginning of your comment. However, we will not consider anonymous
comments. We will make all submissions from organizations or
businesses, and from individuals identifying themselves as
representatives or officials of organizations or businesses, available
for public inspection in their entirety.
Authority: The authorities for this notice are the Migratory
Bird Treaty Act of 1918, as amended (16 U.S.C. 703-712), and the
Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act (16 U.S.C. 668a).
Dated: October 3, 2005.
Craig Manson,
Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks.
[FR Doc. 05-20593 Filed 10-11-05; 12:36 pm]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P