81_FR_66648 81 FR 66461 - Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Revisions to the Regulations for Petitions

81 FR 66461 - Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Revisions to the Regulations for Petitions

DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 187 (September 27, 2016)

Page Range66461-66486
FR Document2016-23003

We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Marine Fisheries Service (Services), finalize changes to the regulations concerning petitions, to improve the content and specificity of petitions and to enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of the petition process to support species conservation. Our revisions to the regulations clarify and enhance the procedures by which the Services evaluate petitions under section 4(b)(3) of the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended. These revisions will also maximize the efficiency with which the Services process petitions, making the best use of available resources.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 187 (Tuesday, September 27, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 187 (Tuesday, September 27, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 66461-66486]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-23003]



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Vol. 81

Tuesday,

No. 187

September 27, 2016

Part IV





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Fish and Wildlife Service





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Department of Commerce





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National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration





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50 CFR Part 424





Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Revisions to the 
Regulations for Petitions; Final Rule

Federal Register / Vol. 81 , No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / 
Rules and Regulations

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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR

Fish and Wildlife Service

DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

50 CFR Part 424

[Docket Nos. FWS-HQ-ES-2015-0016 and DOC 150506429-6767-04; 4500030113]
RIN 1018-BA53; 0648-BF06


Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Revisions to the 
Regulations for Petitions

AGENCY: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), Interior; National Marine 
Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
Administration (NOAA), Commerce.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Marine 
Fisheries Service (Services), finalize changes to the regulations 
concerning petitions, to improve the content and specificity of 
petitions and to enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of the 
petition process to support species conservation. Our revisions to the 
regulations clarify and enhance the procedures by which the Services 
evaluate petitions under section 4(b)(3) of the Endangered Species Act 
of 1973, as amended. These revisions will also maximize the efficiency 
with which the Services process petitions, making the best use of 
available resources.

DATES: This rule is effective October 27, 2016.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Douglas Krofta, U.S. Fish and Wildlife 
Service, Division of Conservation and Classification, 5275 Leesburg 
Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041-3803; telephone 703/358-2171; facsimile 
703/358-1735; or Angela Somma, National Marine Fisheries Service, 
Office of Protected Resources, 1315 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, 
MD 20910; telephone 301/427-8403. If you use a telecommunications 
device for the deaf (TDD), call the Federal Information Relay Service 
(FIRS) at 800-877-8339.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Background

    The Administrative Procedure Act (APA; 5 U.S.C. 553(e)) gives 
interested persons the right to petition for the issuance, amendment, 
or repeal of an agency's rule. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and 
the National Marine Fisheries Service (Services) use the rulemaking 
process in our administration of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 
(Act; 16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.), as amended, in particular section 4. 
Section 4(b)(3) of the Act establishes deadlines and standards for 
making findings on petitions to conduct rulemakings under section 4. 
Thus, in this context, the primary purpose of the Act's petition 
process is to empower the public, in effect, to direct the attention of 
the Services to (1) species that may be imperiled and may warrant 
listing, but whose status the Services have not yet determined, (2) 
changes to a listed species' threats or other circumstances that may 
warrant reclassification of that species' status (i.e., ``downlisting'' 
the species from an endangered species to a threatened species, or 
``uplisting'' from a threatened species to an endangered species) or 
delisting of the species (i.e., removing the species from the Federal 
List of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife or List of Endangered and 
Threatened Plants), or (3) information that would support making 
revisions to critical habitat designations. The petition process is a 
central feature of the Act, and serves a beneficial public purpose.

Purpose of Revising the Regulations

    The Services are revising the regulations at 50 CFR 424.14 
concerning petitions to improve the content and specificity of 
petitions in order to enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of the 
petition process to support species conservation. Our revisions to 
Sec.  424.14 clarify and enhance the procedures by which the Services 
will evaluate petitions under section 4(b)(3) of the Act (16 U.S.C. 
1533(b)(3)). The revised regulations pertaining to the petition process 
will provide greater clarity to the public on the petition-submission 
process, which will assist petitioners in providing complete petitions. 
These revisions will also maximize the efficiency with which the 
Services process petitions, making the best use of available resources. 
These changes will improve the quality of petitions through clarified 
content requirements and guidelines, and, in so doing, better focus the 
Services' resources on petitions that merit further analysis. In the 
following discussion, we first summarize the comments received during 
the two public comment periods; we then summarize the changes and 
explain the benefits of making these changes.

Summary of Comments and Recommendations

    In the proposed rule published on May 21, 2015 (80 FR 29286), we 
requested that all interested parties submit written comments on the 
proposal by July 20, 2015. We did not receive any requests for a public 
hearing. We received several requests for an extension of the public 
comment period, and on July 17, 2015 (80 FR 42466), we extended the 
public comment period to October 18, 2015. In total, we received 347 
comments.
    After further consideration of the issues, we revised the proposed 
rule and reopened a comment period for an additional 30 days on April 
21, 2016 (81 FR 23448), to allow the public an opportunity to comment 
on proposed changes made in response to the comments we received on the 
original proposal. In that revised rule, we also requested comment on 
the information collection aspects of the proposed rule under the 
Paperwork Reduction Act. We received 27 comments on the revised 
proposed rule. All substantive information and relevant comments 
provided during the comment periods have been considered, and where 
appropriate, have either been incorporated directly into this final 
rule or addressed in the more specific responses to comments below. 
Comments are grouped into categories.

General Comments

    Comment (1): Several commenters expressed concern that the proposal 
would create a substantial burden and restriction of petitioners' 
rights under various authorities, including the First Amendment, APA, 
and Executive Order 13563.
    Our Response: These regulations do not restrict or limit a 
citizen's right to petition the Services, but rather clarify the 
petition process for the public by identifying what would make the 
process most efficient and effective for both citizens and agencies. 
Although the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guarantees 
members of the public the rights to, among other things, ``petition the 
Government for a redress of grievances'' and to express their views, it 
does not require a Federal agency to treat every such expression as a 
petition under the APA. The APA requires Federal agencies to give ``an 
interested person the right to petition for the issuance, amendment, or 
repeal of a rule,'' 5 U.S.C. 553(e), but does not speak to the 
particulars of the petition process. As a result, agencies have 
discretion to design a reasonable and efficient process for receiving 
and

[[Page 66463]]

considering petitions. Many Federal agencies have developed regulations 
to govern the petition process, including setting out requirements for 
the content and informational support of petitions similar to those 
included in this final rule. See Jason A. Schwartz and Richard L. 
Revesz, ``Petitions for Rulemaking: Final Report to the Administrative 
Conference of the United States'' (Nov. 5, 2014). In further response 
to the comment, we note that executive orders such as E.O. 13563 set 
out guidance for Federal agencies, but do not create substantive or 
procedural rights in any party.
    Comment (2): A commenter noted that general claims about efficiency 
do not justify restrictions on fundamental rights.
    Our Response: The revised regulations do not restrict the right of 
the public to petition the Services under the Act. Rather, they provide 
clarification to petitioners as to what they must include in a petition 
in order for the Services to be able to evaluate whether or not the 
petition contains substantial information indicating that the 
petitioned action may be warranted. As noted above, agencies have 
discretion to devise reasonable requirements as to the format, content 
and informational support of petitions to ensure that agency resources 
are used effectively.
    Comment (3): A commenter noted that the Services' proposed rule 
departs significantly from the case law that states the threshold for a 
substantial 90-day finding is low, and therefore should not necessitate 
a petitioner assembling all the information available on a species. The 
Services should make a preliminary finding on a petition without access 
to all of the scientific information that could be discovered; that 
approach is more appropriate in a status review.
    Our Response: The Act places the obligation squarely on the 
petitioner to present the requisite level of information to meet the 
``substantial information'' test to demonstrate that the petitioned 
action may be warranted. Therefore, in determining whether the petition 
presents substantial information, the Services are not required to seek 
out any supporting source materials beyond what is included with a 
given petition. As a result, the Services will not base their 90-day 
findings on any claims for which supporting source materials have not 
been provided in the petition. However, as discussed in more detail 
below in the section, Findings on a Petition to List, Delist, or 
Reclassify--Paragraph (h), the Services are confirming that they have 
the discretion to consider, as appropriate, readily available 
information that provides context necessary to evaluate whether the 
information that a petition presents is timely and up-to-date, and 
whether it is reliable or representative of the available information 
on that species, in making a determination as to whether the petition 
presents substantial information. If the Services were to consider 
petitions in a vacuum, this could lead to consequences that would be at 
odds with the purposes of the Act by diverting agency resources to 
matters that only appear superficially to meet the statutory and 
regulatory standards for further consideration. In these regulatory 
amendments, the Services have crafted a balanced approach that will 
ensure that the Services may evaluate the information readily available 
to us, without conducting a more wide-ranging collection of information 
and analysis more appropriate for a 12-month status review.
    Comment (4): Several commenters expressed concern that the 
initially proposed requirements could potentially be cost-prohibitive 
with respect to the provisions for State pre-coordination and gathering 
all relevant data. Thus, whether an interested person submits a 
petition to the Services may be influenced by the financial capacity of 
the petitioner, and not based on the best scientific evidence 
available.
    Our Response: Based on public feedback and reconsideration of the 
issues, the Services revised our original proposal, as discussed in our 
April 21, 2016 revised proposed rule (81 FR 23448). In the re-proposal, 
we modified the originally proposed requirement for pre-coordination 
with States and the proposed requirement to provide all relevant data. 
For further discussion of these changes, please see comments and 
responses below under Paragraph (b)--Requirement for State Coordination 
Prior to Petition Submission to FWS and Paragraph (c)--All Relevant 
Data Certification.
    Comment (5): A commenter stated that the Services should provide 
examples of good and bad petitions.
    Our Response: In the revised regulation, we provide greater clarity 
and detail as to what elements make up a thorough, complete, and robust 
petition. The facts of each petition may vary significantly, so it is 
difficult to extrapolate that across the board. However, each petition 
and subsequent finding is available on http://www.regulations.gov, so 
the public can evaluate the petitions and findings themselves.
    Comment (6): A commenter stated that there should be a nominal 
filing fee for each petition. This requirement could serve as a 
deterrent for filing hundreds of petitions at a time.
    Our Response: Petitioning the Services is a right the public has 
under the Act and the APA. Neither of those authorities provides for 
assessing fees. We conclude that the petition process is not like an 
application for a permit, where charging a fee may be appropriate; 
petitioners do not receive any tangible authorizations or rights 
through submission of a petition. Instead, the intent of the petition 
process is to allow the public to direct the Services' attention to a 
matter concerning the status of a species under their jurisdictions and 
authority.
    Comment (7): A commenter stated that the Services should publish in 
the Federal Register notices indicating that they received petitions to 
list, delist, or reclassify a species, or publish the petitions 
themselves. Further, the Services should post all information from a 
petition under review on a public Web site if a species status review 
is begun.
    Our Response: The Services are required, to the maximum extent 
practicable, to reach an initial finding on a petition within 90 days 
of receiving the petition and to promptly publish such finding in the 
Federal Register. The Act does not include a requirement to publish 
notices of the receipt of a petition. To publish separate Federal 
Register notices simply to announce our receipt of petitions would 
unnecessarily burden this process and take resources away from 
evaluating petitions and conducting higher-priority conservation work. 
The Services provide information on publicly accessible Web sites 
showing all currently active petitions (see https://ecos.fws.gov/ecp/report/table/petitions-received.html and http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/), 
and we make the petitions available as supporting information on http:/
/www/regulations.gov when we publish our 90-day findings.
    Comment (8): A commenter stated that the Services should set up a 
Web site for electronic submission of petitions to offset any potential 
increased cost of printing and mailing of multiple petitions.
    Our Response: We currently receive many petitions electronically by 
email, and encourage petitioners to submit petitions electronically as 
well. Current contact information for both Services may be found on 
their respective Web sites, at https://www.fws.gov/ecological-services/map/index.html and http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/contact.htm.

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However, given the file size of source information typically provided 
with petitions, it may not always be practicable to provide source 
material by email. In such cases, we recommend that petitioners mail 
appropriate digital-storage media (or hard copies, if preferable to the 
petitioner) to the appropriate office. This should help reduce printing 
costs for petitioners. Further, we are not requiring that copies of 
petitions be mailed to States.
    Comment (9): A commenter noted that a similar alteration in the 
citizen petition process in a 1996 policy was rejected by the Ninth 
Circuit Court of Appeals and the District of Columbia Court (Ctr. For 
Biological Diversity v. Norton, 254 F.3d 833 (9th Cir. 2001); Am. Lands 
Alliance v. Norton, 360 F. Supp. 2d 1, 6 (D.D.C. 2003)). The proposed 
rule change at issue here has the same effect.
    Our Response: We have revised the language of the rule to make 
clear that the cases the commenter references do not apply to this 
rule. Those cases involved a provision of the 1996 Petition Management 
Guidance (PMG) that stated, ``[A] petition to list a candidate species 
is redundant and will be treated as a second petition.'' The PMG also 
provided that a second petition would require only a prompt response 
informing the submitter of the prior petition, and would be treated as 
a comment on the previous petition. The courts held that this 
``redundancy'' provision in the PMG violated the Act, because it 
allowed the Secretary to avoid explaining why the petitioned action was 
precluded, did not create a sufficient record to allow for meaningful 
judicial review of any finding on a ``redundant'' petition, and 
circumvented the statutory requirement that the Service comply with 
deadlines for making petition findings. In contrast, this rule, as 
revised, does not provide for treating petitions to list a candidate 
species as second petitions. Rather, Sec.  424.14(h)(1)(iii) provides 
that any previous reviews or findings contributes to the context for 
making a petition finding:
    The ``substantial scientific or commercial information'' standard 
must be applied in light of any prior reviews or findings the Services 
have made on the listing status of the species that is the subject of 
the petition. Where the Services have already conducted a finding on, 
or review of, the listing status of that species (whether in response 
to a petition or on the Services' own initiative), the Services will 
evaluate any petition received thereafter seeking to list, delist, or 
reclassify that species to determine whether a reasonable person 
conducting an impartial scientific review would conclude that the 
action proposed in the petition may be warranted despite the previous 
review or finding. Where the prior review resulted in a final agency 
action, a petitioned action generally would not be considered to 
present substantial scientific and commercial information indicating 
that the action may be warranted unless the petition provides new 
information not previously considered.
    As explained in response to Comment (55), below, all requests which 
meet the requirements of Sec.  424.14(c) are considered petitions, will 
be evaluated, and a finding will be made. Therefore, Sec.  
424.14(h)(1)(iii) does not suffer from the deficiencies that the courts 
identified with respect to the ``redundancy'' provision in the PMG. The 
Services will still evaluate and make petition findings on all 
petitions they receive regardless of whether the species is already a 
candidate or a finding on a petition requesting the same action has 
already been made. In making such a petition finding, we would have 
created a record that would allow for meaningful review not only of any 
determination that listing is warranted, but also of any determination 
that listing is precluded by higher-priority listing actions and we are 
making expeditious progress towards adding qualified species to the 
lists. Finally, the findings on such a petition will still be subject 
to the Act's statutory deadlines.
    Comment (10): A commenter stated that petitioners should be advised 
if their request was screened out and provided with the reasons for the 
petition rejection. The Services could develop a form letter indicating 
which mandatory requirements the petition was missing. This way, a 
petitioner may easily understand which items of information should have 
been included in the petition but were not.
    Our Response: Section 424.14(e)(1) of the revised proposed rule (81 
FR 23448; April 21, 2016) (Sec.  424.14(f)(1) in this rule) does 
provide that, if the Services reject a petition for not meeting the 
requirements of proposed Sec.  424.14(b) (Sec.  424.14(c) in this 
rule), they will, within a reasonable timeframe, notify the sender and 
provide an explanation of the rejection. It further provides that the 
Services will generally reject the request without making a finding; 
therefore, the submitter could rectify the deficiencies in the petition 
and resubmit it. We appreciate the suggestion of form letters, and will 
identify which elements are missing in our responses.
    Comment (11): A commenter stated that the Services propose to 
replace the title ``the Secretary'' or ``the Secretaries'' with ``the 
Services'' throughout the regulation text because the Services are the 
designees of the Secretaries of Commerce and the Interior in 
implementing the Act. The commenter disagreed with the change. Although 
the Services are the agencies designated to implement the Act, the 
Secretaries are those designated and confirmed by Congress to serve on 
the Cabinet and responsible for carrying out those specific acts given 
to the Executive Branch by the Legislative Branch of the government.
    Our Response: While we agree that the authority for making 
decisions under the Act ultimately rest with the Secretaries of 
Commerce and the Interior, the Secretaries have formally delegated 
authority to make petition findings to the Services. As such, we have 
maintained the language as ``the Services.''

Paragraph (b)--Requirement for State Coordination Prior To Petition 
Submission to FWS

    Comment (12): We received many comments raising concerns with the 
requirement for State pre-coordination, as originally proposed on May 
21, 2015 (80 FR 29286). These included concerns that the provision 
would be too burdensome, potentially requiring a petitioner to mail 
thousands of pages of petition material; it is outside the 
responsibility of the petitioner to do this coordination; it is the 
responsibility of the Services to coordinate with the States; it could 
result in adversarial relationships between petitioners and States; and 
it would slow the petition process. Concerns were also expressed that 
the coordination requirement could create a significant amount of 
additional work for State agencies. In addition, most State commenters 
requested a longer coordination period, as long as 120 days.
    Our Response: We have removed the requirement for coordination from 
this final rule, and replaced it with the simpler requirement that a 
prospective petitioner send a notification letter to the State(s) 
within the current range of the species stating the intent to file a 
petition with either Service at least 30 days prior to filing the 
petition. This notification will allow States time and opportunity to 
send data directly to the Services, should they desire. This change 
acknowledges the special role of States as evidenced in section 6 of 
the Act while not overly burdening petitioners.

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    While not required under this final rule, we encourage members of 
the public who are preparing a petition to coordinate with the 
appropriate State agencies when gathering information; this 
coordination will help in preparing a complete petition with adequate 
information. Additionally, we value the input and expertise of our 
State partners and wish to provide them the opportunity to be aware 
that species in their States are the subject of petitions and to 
provide pertinent information on those species to the Services, should 
they have such information and wish to share it.
    Comment (13): Several States and other commenters expressed 
concerns that the Services removed the originally proposed requirement 
for full State pre-coordination, which would have assured the States a 
role in the petition process.
    Our Response: Affected States will have the opportunity to submit 
data and information to the Services in the 30-day period before a 
petition is filed. Further, Sec.  424.14(h)(1)(ii) of this revised 
regulation allows us to consider data and information readily available 
at the time the finding is made. Because information received after the 
petition is filed would be readily available at the time the finding is 
made, the Services could consider any information received up until the 
time the Services make their findings (including any data and 
information States have voluntarily sent to the Services in response to 
the notification letters).
    The requirement of a petitioner to notify States at least 30 days 
prior to filing a petition is a minimum. We encourage petitioners to 
notify States earlier, even as soon as they contemplate petitioning a 
species for protection under the Act. Further, we encourage petitioners 
to contact State wildlife agencies and consult State Web sites as 
valuable sources of information on their subject species, and 
incorporate any such information in their petitioned requests.
    The use of such information, up until the time the Services make 
their findings, is a change from prior practice. However, we find that 
this change will expand the ability of the States and any interested 
parties to take the initiative of submitting input and information for 
the Services to consider in making 90-day findings, thereby making the 
petition process both more efficient and more thorough. In addition, 
this interpretation is consistent with the statutory purpose and with 
case law. It is consistent with the statutory purposes of the Act 
because providing for consideration of all information, regardless of 
when it was received, will put the Services in a better position to 
make the statutorily required finding--whether or not the petition 
presents substantial information indicating that the petitioned action 
may be warranted--by providing factual context in which to evaluate the 
information provided in the petition. Further, nothing in the Act 
precludes consideration of information up until the time a decision is 
made. It is consistent with case law because it stops short of allowing 
the Services to solicit new information for purposes of a 90-day 
finding, which courts have held to be beyond the scope of a 90-day 
finding. E.g., Colorado River Cutthroat Trout v. Kempthorne, 448 F. 
Supp. 2d 170 (D.D.C. 2006). Please see Findings on a Petition to List, 
Delist, or Reclassify--Paragraph (h) under Summary of Changes to 
Previous Regulations at 50 CFR 424.14, below, for further discussion.
    Comment (14): A commenter expressed concern that the changed 
requirement for State coordination undermines our expectation that 
petitioners present unbiased and balanced information. If petitioners 
are not required to seek State information, they may keep their 
awareness of the complete information intentionally low.
    Our Response: While we encourage prospective petitioners to contact 
State wildlife agencies for information on their subject species as 
part of creating a robust, well-balanced petition, we conclude that at 
the 90-day finding stage, it is not appropriate to expect petitioners 
to coordinate on the contents of a petition with another entity.
    Comment (15): A commenter requested that the Services increase the 
timeframe for States to respond to a petition to at least 60 days.
    Our Response: The Services think that a minimum of 30-day 
notification prior to filing a petition provides time for States to 
engage the Services during the petition process without substantially 
increasing the likelihood that the Services will be unable to meet the 
90-day timeframe. Further, while we encourage States to submit any 
information within this 30-day time period, the States (and any 
interested parties) are able to submit information up until the finding 
is made (please see our response to Comment (13), above).
    The requirement that a petitioner notify States at least 30 days 
prior to filing a petition is, as noted, a minimum. Also, we encourage 
petitioners to contact State wildlife agencies and consult State Web 
sites as valuable sources of information on their subject species, and 
incorporate any such information in their petitioned requests.
    Comment (16): Several commenters expressed concern that the revised 
requirement for State coordination would create a burden on State 
agencies, because it would shift the States' role from determining what 
information was missing from a petition to directing their limited 
resources towards providing potentially all of the relevant information 
on a petitioned species, even if this is redundant with what the 
petitioner eventually provides.
    Our Response: This final rule does not require the States to submit 
information to the Services; whether they do so will be their choice. 
If a relevant State would like to have a copy of the petition, they may 
ask petitioners or the Services for a copy, or obtain a copy from the 
respective Service's Web sites after the petition has been filed.
    Comment (17): Commenters noted that nothing in the Act requires 
consultation (with respect to petitions) with anyone. A requirement to 
notify a third party, specifically State agencies, prior to the 
submission of a petition under the Act or the APA is without legal 
support. The APA provides the right of each citizen to petition the 
government, and the Act provides the right to petition for the listing, 
delisting, or reclassifying of a species.
    Our Response: Section 4(b)(1)(A) and 6 of the Act require the 
Services to take into consideration those efforts by States to protect 
species and their habitats and coordinate with States on the 
conservation of listed species and species at risk. Our modified 
language requiring petitioners to notify State wildlife agencies of 
their intent to file a petition with respect to a species found in 
those States with the appropriate Service assists us in meeting the 
requirements of the Act regarding State coordination. Our revised 
requirement for State coordination does not infringe on the right of 
the public to submit petitions under section 4 of the Act. Rather, it 
allows States the opportunity, should they choose, to participate in 
the petition process by providing information to the Services, while at 
the same time removing any potentially onerous requirements on 
petitioners.
    Comment (18): Several commenters asked how they determine to which 
State agencies they must send letters of intent to file a petition. One 
commenter seemed to suggest that the Services provide each State the 
opportunity to designate all appropriate agencies to receive a copy of 
the petition, and maintain a master contact list for petitioners to 
access when contacting States.

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    Our Response: Petitioners must send letters to the State(s) that 
are in the known, current geographic range of the species. Section 
3(18) of the Act defines the term ``State agency'' to mean any State 
agency, department, board, commission, or other governmental entity 
which is responsible for the management and conservation of fish, 
plant, or wildlife resources within a State. The Association of Fish 
and Wildlife Agencies (AFWA), which is a professional association for 
State, provincial and territorial fish and wildlife agencies, is a 
helpful resource in determining contact information for State agencies. 
Further, in researching the information to support the petitioned 
request, the petitioner should look for range information, and thereby 
find the State(s) in which the species occurs. We note that when there 
are multiple range States and in cases where there is some ambiguity 
about the extent of range, we would not envision rejecting a petition 
because the petitioner did not notify every State in question, as long 
as it appears that the petitioner made an attempt to do so.
    Comment (19): A commenter recommended that, to further reduce the 
burden on petitioners, petitioners be allowed to send (email) 
notification letters to State wildlife agencies electronically instead 
of limiting the requirement to mailing hard copy letters.
    Our Response: We appreciate this suggestion, and clarify in this 
rule that petitioners are to include copies of notification letters or 
emails as a required part of their petition submission.
    Comment (20): One commenter stated that the minimum 30-day 
requirement for notifying States of intent to file a petition 
improperly extends the mandatory timelines that Congress established. 
Another commenter stated that a required 30-day coordination timeframe 
with States could be to the detriment of imperiled species, especially 
those petitioned for emergency listing.
    Our Response: The Act directs the Services to make a finding on 
whether a petition presents substantial scientific or commercial 
information indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted 
within 90 days of the receipt of the petition, to the maximum extent 
practicable. The 30 days' notice that will be given under the 
regulations prior to submitting a petition is by definition not part of 
the 90-day statutory timeframe that begins to run from receipt of the 
petition. Further, the State notification requirement need not delay 
petitioners from filing their petitions close to the time they would 
have done so in the absence of the notification requirement. In fact, 
we encourage prospective petitioners to contact States notifying them 
of their intent to file a petition on a subject species as soon as they 
contemplate doing so. Thus, some or all of the notification period 
could run concurrently with the time that the petitioner is researching 
and preparing the petition submission.
    Petitioners may request listing on an emergency basis; however, the 
Services are only required to treat such requests as a regular listing 
petition, and to follow the statutory timelines for responding to the 
petition as a regular listing petition. At any time, if one of the 
Services determines that there is an emergency posting a significant 
risk to the well-being of a species, it is within that Service's 
discretion under Section 4(b)(7) whether to consider promulgating a 
regulation that takes effect immediately.
    Comment (21): A commenter noted that petitions regarding species 
under NMFS jurisdiction should also be subjected to the provision of 
pre-coordination with States within the range of the petitioned 
species. They stated that the rationale of increased logistical 
difficulties for petitions on NMFS species is not a valid argument 
because many terrestrial and freshwater species under FWS jurisdiction 
are also wide-ranging and would theoretically present the same 
logistical problems.
    Our Response: In our revised proposed rule (81 FR 23448; April 21, 
2016), we revised the requirement for petitioners to simply notify 
States of their intent to file petitions at least 30 days prior to 
submission of petitions to the Services, and we applied this 
requirement to petitions sent to either Service. Therefore, this final 
rule applies to submissions to both NMFS and FWS.
    Comment (22): Several commenters were opposed to the provision in 
the original proposal requiring the petitioner to certify inclusion of 
data from State Web sites, as the information on those sites is 
superficial and not adequate for a species review.
    Our Response: After reviewing public comment on the May 21, 2015, 
proposed rule (80 FR 29286), we developed a revised proposal that 
removed this provision. This final regulation in no way limits 
petitioners to the sources of information they may consult and include 
in petitions. We encourage petitioners to use a broad range of source 
materials, in order to create a well-balanced presentation of facts, 
including information provided by researchers, species experts, State 
data, and Tribal information, as well as other sources.
    Comment (23): A commenter encouraged the Services to reject 
petitions that do not include data and information from the affected 
States because, in their view, these would not present a complete, 
balanced representation of the relevant facts.
    Our Response: As noted, we encourage petitioners to use a broad 
range of source materials, including information from State wildlife 
agencies, which often have considerable experience and information on 
the species within their boundaries. However, we would evaluate the 
petition and supporting evidence on a case-by-case basis to determine 
whether it presents substantial information to indicate that the action 
may be warranted. We note that, in this final rule, Sec.  424.14 (d)(5) 
and (e)(6) state that, in determining whether a petition presents 
substantial information indicating that the petitioned action may be 
warranted, one of the factors the Services will consider is whether the 
petition presents a complete and balanced representation of the 
relevant facts. Because it is not required in section (c), the 
inclusion of a complete and balanced representation of the relevant 
facts is not part of the essential information that is required for all 
petitions to be accepted as a petition. Rather, whether such a 
presentation is included is one of the factors the Services will 
consider in making our finding of whether a petition presents 
substantial information that the requested action may be warranted. We 
nevertheless encourage petitioners to check for availability of such 
information, to contact State wildlife agencies or consult State Web 
sites in researching species that are the subject of their requests, 
and to include in the petition any State information that would 
contribute to providing the detailed narrative and/or citations 
required under Sec.  424.14(c)(4) and (c)(5).
    Comment (24): A commenter noted that the discretion for the 
Services to choose whether or not to consider information provided by 
States is a disincentive to the States to undertake the considerable 
work necessary to provide information.
    Our Response: The Services appreciate all information and data 
provided by States, and generally intend to consider timely information 
provided by the States, along with other readily available information, 
to put the information in the petition in context. Further, following 
substantial 90-day findings, the Services will carefully evaluate all 
information provided in

[[Page 66467]]

conducting subsequent status reviews. For further discussion, please 
see Findings on a Petition to List, Delist, or Reclassify--Paragraph 
(h), in Summary of Changes to Previous Regulations at 50 CFR 424.14, 
below.
    Comment (25): A commenter suggested that the Services add a 
requirement that petitioners must inform the affected States of the 
actual date that they intend to submit their petitions to one of the 
Services. If, for example, a petitioner gives a State notice 12 months 
before submitting a petition and that State provides data to the 
Services within 30 days of receiving that notice, the State's data that 
the Services ultimately use to consider the petition could be outdated.
    Our Response: We encourage petitioners to give the States an 
estimate of when the petitioner will be submitting the petition to the 
Services, but we do not require it. While we appreciate the commenter's 
concern that the Services be provided the best, most current 
information, we do not think it will pose a problem if a petitioner 
chooses to notify States of their intent to file a petition more than 
30 days prior to submission to the Services. In fact, we encourage 
prospective petitioners to notify States earlier than 30 days before 
submission, to allow States more time to submit species information to 
the Services.
    Comment (26): A commenter noted that Congress chose to provide 
States the same procedural rights that every other stakeholder is 
provided--an opportunity to provide their perspectives on positive 90-
day findings and to submit any relevant information concerning the 
finding and species during the 12-month review process. They should not 
have an opportunity to comment on petitions before the Services have 
made their 90-day findings.
    Our Response: We have revised our original proposed rule (80 FR 
29286; May 21, 2015) such that we do not require petitioners to provide 
copies of their petitions to States before submission to the Services. 
However, we do note the special role envisioned for States under 
section 6 of the Act and find it is helpful for States to receive 
notifications of intent to file petitions on species found within their 
borders, to afford States the opportunity to provide information to the 
Services on those species, should they choose. If, in response to the 
required notification letter, any such State information is received 
before the 90-day finding is made, it may be useful in placing the 
information in the petition in context. Further, we encourage States to 
provide the Services with information they may have on species of 
concern at any time. Finally, during any subsequent status reviews, it 
is the practice of the Services to request additional information from 
all interested parties, including State wildlife agencies.
    Comment (27): A commenter suggested adding a new paragraph in Sec.  
424.14(h)(2): ``During the 12-month finding, the Service will fully 
include State biologists in evaluating the current status of the 
species proposed for listing. Status assessments will typically 
include: developing population and habitat models, identifying and 
evaluating threats, habitat requirements, and current species 
distributions. When possible, authorship of the Species Status 
Assessments will be shared between State and Service biologists to 
balance workload and promote data sharing.''
    Our Response: The scope of this regulation only includes how the 
Services will conduct 90-day petition findings, so it would not be 
appropriate to include the proposed language. However, to the extent 
practicable and appropriate, we will consult with and involve State 
agencies and other appropriate experts when conducting status reviews. 
The ability and need to do so will vary case-by-case, and depend on the 
expertise and resources available. However, the Act specifically 
charges the Services with the authority and obligation to implement the 
provisions of the Act; the Services are ultimately responsible for 
making determinations under the Act and cannot delegate that authority 
to other agencies.
    The Services recognize the expertise and in-depth knowledge many 
State wildlife agencies have concerning species under their 
jurisdictions, value greatly our partnerships with State wildlife 
agencies, and take seriously the provisions of section 4 and 6 of the 
Act in coordinating and cooperating with the States. It is the practice 
of the Services to contact State wildlife agencies during status 
reviews to seek information on the subject species, and we invite 
States at any time to provide information and data they may have on 
species within the State. Many States provide frequent, regular updates 
to the Services on information about species that occur in their 
States.
    Comment (28): Several commenters suggested adding Tribal entities 
to the originally proposed requirement for petitioners to send copies 
of petitions to State wildlife agencies, and incorporating any 
materials States send as part of the petition. They cited Secretarial 
Order 3206 and the Presidential Memorandum of 1994, which set forth the 
general conditions under which these consultative actions are to occur, 
and cited Executive Order 13175, which specifically provides guidance 
for coordination and collaboration on policies that have Tribal 
implications. Further, FWS' tribal policy supports early coordination 
with Tribes, and states that the ``Service will consult with Native 
American governments on fish and wildlife resource matters of mutual 
interest and concern,'' and that the ``goal is to keep Native American 
governments involved in such matters from initiation to completion of 
related Service activities'' [emphasis added].
    Our Response: The Services greatly value the conservation 
partnerships we have with Tribes, as reflected in the intra-
governmental guidance documents cited, and appreciate the conservation 
efforts and programs many Tribes have established. While there are no 
specific notification requirements for petitioners regarding Tribes, we 
encourage prospective petitioners, should they find that the range of a 
species includes Tribal lands, to contact the appropriate Tribes to 
coordinate with them and obtain information which they may have, and 
include this information in their petition documents. Further, during 
any subsequent status reviews, the Services are committed to 
proactively coordinating with Tribes on any species of interest on 
Tribal lands and to incorporating information and data Tribes provide 
into our reviews of those species.
    Comment (29): In response to our revised proposed rule (81 FR 
23448; April 21, 2016), a commenter noted that the Services should 
expand the requirements to send a letter to States of intent to file a 
petition to also include other government entities. Many county-level 
governments have dedicated wildlife departments that manage and monitor 
species and that could provide additional data on species status and 
habitat requirements.
    Our Response: It would be difficult for petitioners to determine 
all county-level or other level government agencies that may have 
information on a subject species, and contact all such entities. 
Therefore, it would be unrealistic to make this a requirement for a 
request to qualify as a petition. However, we do encourage petitioners 
to avail themselves of such potential information sources whenever they 
are aware of them.

[[Page 66468]]

Paragraph (c)--Single Species Petition Limitation

    Comment (30): We received several comments expressing concerns 
about the single species per petition requirement. These included 
concerns that limiting a petition to a single species will lead to an 
increase in the Services' processing time, a decrease in the efficiency 
of the listing process, and a reduction in listing species under the 
Act.
    Our Response: By having multiple well-organized and complete 
single-species petitions, we anticipate that in many cases we will be 
able to evaluate each petition much more efficiently and effectively 
compared to a multi-species petition. It has been our experience that 
the quality of the information varies from species to species in the 
multi-species petitions we have received. Multispecies petitions have 
often generalized or referenced information across species, which 
significantly complicates the evaluation process, because it is unclear 
which references apply to which species. Because the Act requires us to 
make a finding on each petitioned action and species individually, we 
have determined that the approach outlined in this final rule will 
greatly enhance efficiency and effectiveness for both the public and 
the Services. Further, we do not think it will take appreciably more 
time or effort for the petitioner to provide a series of well-organized 
and complete single-species petitions than it would to produce one 
well-organized and complete multi-species petition.
    Comment (31): One commenter asserted that requiring separate 
petitions to list species, or one or more subspecies or distinct 
population segment (DPS) of the same species will result in an increase 
to the Services' workload. Another commenter noted that if a petitioner 
seeks an action on a subspecies or DPS, the petition must present 
substantial scientific or commercial information indicating that the 
action may be warranted for each specified subspecies or DPS. The 
petitioner cannot rely upon general information regarding the species 
to support petitioned actions related to particular subspecies or DPS.
    Our Response: We agree with the comments regarding the petitioner's 
burden to provide specific information to support requested actions for 
all ``species'' included in the petition. We clarify in this final rule 
that a petition may address either a single species or any number and 
configuration of ``species'' as defined by the Act (including 
subspecies of fish or wildlife or subspecies or varieties of plants, 
and DPSs of vertebrate species) that consist of members of a single 
species. Please see a more detailed discussion of this issue in Summary 
of Changes to Previous Regulations at 50 CFR 424.14, Requirements for 
Petitions--Paragraph (c), below.
    We encourage members of the public to write their petition so that 
it addresses the appropriate rank (species, subspecies, variety, or 
population segment), but we also recognize that it is sometimes 
difficult to clearly determine the appropriate rank with the available 
information. We do not expect members of the public who may not have 
the expertise in taxonomy or genetics to make independent 
determinations on conflicting taxonomic assessments that may be 
available in the scientific literature. Along a similar line, if there 
is information to suggest that a vertebrate species occurs in 
population segments that may be discrete and significant (per the DPS 
Policy), then the petitioner may request that we consider one or more 
of these population segments as DPSs. Such a petitioner should include 
information to allow the Services to determine whether a given 
population segment of a vertebrate species may qualify as a DPS (i.e., 
whether it may be both discrete and significant to the taxon to which 
it belongs). Thus, when the appropriate rank for listing is not clear 
to a petitioner, it is reasonable for a petition to address multiple 
entities, potentially at various ranks, as long as they all refer to 
the same species. In any case, as noted above, the petitioner has the 
burden to demonstrate that any entity not already recognized as a 
``species'' under the Act may qualify as such, and to provide specific 
information to demonstrate that listing may be warranted.
    Comment (32): Commenters expressed the opinion that species sharing 
the same habitat types or facing the same threats, or having other 
commonalities in data should be allowed to be included in one petition 
for the sake of efficiency as to the preparation of petitions and 
review of petitions. Other commenters noted that, if the Services find 
the petition does not provide sufficient information for one species, 
the Services have the right to make a negative finding for that 
species.
    Our Response: The Act requires us to make findings for each 
petitioned species individually. Therefore, multi-species petitions do 
not save the Services time, even for species within similar habitat or 
facing similar threats. Even if species are found within similar 
habitats or face similar threats, we must be able to demonstrate the 
relevance of general information to each individual species in order to 
support our finding. The petition needs to clearly link the information 
provided to particular species and claims made. The petition needs to 
make the case for each individual species. However, nothing would 
prevent petitioners from submitting a batch of separate but related 
petitions for species occurring in the same habitats or experiencing 
similar threats. While petitioners might prefer to prepare a request 
that addresses species in groups for their own convenience, we find 
that the purposes of the statute are directly furthered by requiring 
petitions to present information species-by-species, because this will 
promote clarity and facilitate making the determinations required under 
the Act.
    Comment (33): Several commenters cited the 1994 Services' 
Interagency Policy for the Ecosystem Approach to the Endangered Species 
Act. In that document, the first stated policy of the Services is to 
``[g]roup listing decisions on a geographic, taxonomic, or ecosystem 
basis where possible.'' The commenters stated that the proposed rule 
does not acknowledge that these other ecosystem-based policies exist, 
or that there may be practical consequences stemming from these 
proposed changes.
    Our Response: While in some instances it has proven to be efficient 
for the Services to adopt an ecosystem-based approach to listing 
several species in the same ecosystem facing the same threats, we have 
found through experience that applying this approach to petitions has 
proven impractical. As noted above, we must make individual findings on 
each species for which we receive a petition. Species-specific 
petitions facilitate the Services' ability to make the determinations 
for each species efficiently. However, if the Services find that 
multiple species warrant listing in a specific ecosystem, then we can 
propose a listing rule setting out determinations for each of several 
species in that common ecosystem. The Services have found great 
efficiencies in resources and time in grouping determinations into a 
single rule, and that approach comports with our 1994 policy.

Paragraph (c)--All Relevant Data Certification

    Comment (34): We received many comments expressing concerns about 
the requirement for including all relevant data in petitions and 
certifying to that effect, as we originally proposed. The commenters 
raised various

[[Page 66469]]

concerns regarding the practicality and legality of this provision.
    Our Response: The Services appreciate the difficulty of determining 
whether all relevant information on a subject species has been 
gathered. Therefore, in our April 21, 2016 (81 FR 23448), revised 
proposed rule, we removed this requirement, and instead require 
petitioners to include a ``detailed narrative justification for the 
recommended administrative action that contains an analysis of the 
information presented,'' and recommend that petitioners provide a 
``complete, balanced representation of the relevant facts, including 
information that may contradict claims in the petition.'' In availing 
themselves of the petition process, petitioners seek to direct the 
Services' focus and resources to particular species. They should be 
forthcoming as to the known, relevant facts so that the Services have 
an accurate basis from which to evaluate the merits of the petition 
while making efficient use of its focus and resources.
    Comment (35): Several commenters expressed support for the 
provision requiring submitters to include all relevant data in 
petitions and to certify that they have done so, because it would 
provide supporting and refuting information and avoid limiting the 
Services to consideration of only biased information. Other commenters 
support the provision authorizing the Services to reject petitions if 
they do not meet the ``all relevant data'' requirement.
    Our Response: We realize that it would be difficult to provide all 
relevant data, and difficult to assess (and certify) that all 
information concerning a species has been discovered; for example, not 
all species information is publicly available, and research for many 
species is ongoing. Therefore, we have revised this final rule so that 
we encourage petitioners to provide a complete, balanced presentation 
of facts, including those which may tend to refute or contradict claims 
in the petition. However, that is not part of the essential information 
that is required in all petitions. Rather, it is one of the factors 
that the Services will consider when making the 90-day finding on the 
petition. This change is to encourage prospective petitioners to 
include in the petition a complete, balanced presentation of facts for 
the Services to evaluate in the 90-day finding and, if the finding is 
substantial, to consider in a species status assessment, without 
establishing it as an essential requirement that could unduly burden 
petitioners.
    We are revising the regulations to clearly communicate the 
essential information that is required in all petitions (Sec.  
424.14(c)), and identified the specific information which will help the 
Services in reaching their finding (Sec.  424.14(d) and (Sec.  
424.14(e)). The Services retain discretion to consider a request to be 
a petition and process a petition where the Services determine there 
has been substantial, but not full technical, compliance with the 
relevant requirements (see discussion under Responses to Requests--
Paragraph (f), in Summary of Changes to Previous Regulations at 50 CFR 
424.14, below).
    Comment (36): A commenter noted that petitioners need to let the 
Services know what sources were consulted. If an obvious source is 
missing or used incorrectly, then the Services should be able to 
quickly and efficiently reject the petition.
    Our Response: Under the revised regulations, requests for agency 
action must contain electronic or hard copies of supporting materials, 
or appropriate excerpts or quotations from those materials, to qualify 
as petitions. Therefore, the Services are not required to consider 
claims for which cited source materials are not included with the 
petition. The Services will review this information to ensure 
compliance with the provisions set forth in this rule, and will take 
into consideration the extent to which the source materials included 
with the petition support a complete, balanced presentation of the 
facts, in any 90-day findings on petitions.
    Comment (37): A commenter stated that there is a lack of peer-
reviewed science in petitions. Further, data in petitions should be 
reviewed by the affected States' wildlife agencies using local 
information, science, and observations to corroborate the findings 
before the data could be used in a petition.
    Our Response: We encourage petitioners to conduct a review of the 
peer-reviewed literature on the species at issue as thoroughly as 
possible in order to ensure the petition is well-supported. While State 
review of petitions and their supporting information would be helpful, 
it would be impractical to require this during the time frame 
associated with our making 90-day findings. However, should the 
Services make a substantial 90-day finding, States and members of the 
public will have an opportunity to review and provide comments on 
source materials used in the petition at that time, as well as provide 
additional information.
    Comment (38): A commenter stated that the removal of the proposed 
requirement that petitioners coordinate with States before submitting a 
petition also removes the element of cooperation that was being 
fostered through the original proposal. Anything the Services can do to 
foster increased dialogue between petitioners, other interest groups 
and State agencies engaged in wildlife conservation will ultimately be 
for the benefit of the species.
    Our Response: By requiring the notification of States at least 30 
days prior to submission of a petition, it is the Services' intention 
both to inform, and to foster the cooperation of, State partners while 
balancing the desire for State coordination with the required 
timeframes associated with petition findings and the rights of 
petitioners. This change provides a role for State agencies that the 
current regulations do not have. We agree that communication and 
collaboration between State agencies or other interested parties and 
the Services generally helps further the conservation of species. State 
agencies may send the Services any information relevant to a petition 
after they have been notified of a petition's pending submission. In 
order for the information to be available to be considered as context 
for the petition, it should be submitted in a timely fashion.

Paragraph (c)--Other Requirements

    Comment (39): A commenter stated the requirement of proposed Sec.  
424.14(b)(6) (Sec.  424.14(c)(6) in this rule), concerning providing 
electronic or hard copies of supporting material) could become 
burdensome and quite expensive for petitioners. Additionally, the 
Services should clarify that the provisions of proposed Sec.  
424.14(b)(6) would cover only sources that the petitioners choose to 
rely on for their petitions. The commenter further suggested revising 
proposed Sec.  424.14(b)(8) to: ``For a petition to list a species, 
delist a species, or change the status of a listed species, information 
on the current geographic range of the species, including range States 
or countries, to the extent that petitioners have this information.''
    Our Response: Copies of source material cited in support of a 
petitioned action are key information needed by the Services to 
evaluate a petition efficiently and effectively. The Services are not 
required to search out source materials not provided in the petition to 
find justification for claims in the petition. Therefore, it is the 
petitioner's responsibility to provide justification for the claims in 
the detailed narrative; this responsibility includes providing the 
source material on which they base their claims. These sources may be 
provided in hard copy or in electronic form. Most

[[Page 66470]]

petitioners opt to provide source materials electronically, which saves 
mailing and printing costs and provides an efficient way to include 
this essential part of a petition to the Services.
    Further, a robust petition should provide a balanced presentation 
of facts, including those which may be contradictory. Including such 
information and source material demonstrates that the petitioner has 
diligently investigated the important issues addressed in their 
petition and not merely compiled an unrepresentative sample of 
information. Including contradictory information also gives the 
petitioner the opportunity to offer their analysis or explanation as to 
why that contradictory information is not conclusive.
    Finally, the suggested language regarding requiring geographic 
range and range State information is already covered in this rule at 
Sec.  424.14(c)(8), and would be redundant. This is important 
information to include in a petition, and we do not think it 
unreasonable to make this a requirement under Sec.  424.14(c)(8).
    Comment (40): A commenter stated that the Services should carefully 
consider the implications of requiring petitioners to include 
``electronic or hard copies of supporting materials (e.g., 
publications, maps, reports, letters from authorities) cited in the 
petition.'' Petitioners often cite publications that are available only 
through paid databases that restrict the distribution and use of those 
publications through copyright law. Because publications appended to 
listing petitions are presumably accessible to the public (e.g., 
through Freedom of Information Act (FOIA; 5 U.S.C. 552) requests), 
there may be conflicts between the supporting materials requirement and 
the legal restrictions under which petitioners obtain certain 
publications.
    Our Response: We have clarified in section (c)(6) of the final 
regulations that petitioners may provide either full copies of 
supporting materials or appropriate excerpts or quotations that support 
the assertions in the petition. Where a petitioner believes a source 
material to be protected by copyright laws, they should consider 
including limited excerpts or quotations from such material that they 
believe support their statements. This will fulfill the petitioners' 
obligation to present information to support the statements in the 
petition, without creating potential conflicts with copyright 
protections. Where materials are subject to copyright protection, the 
Services may not be able to obtain such materials.
    Comment (41): A commenter stated forcing petitioners to append 
information from the States interferes with a petitioner's rights under 
the APA because it no longer allows for a balanced presentation of 
information to the Federal Government.
    Our Response: Based on public comments on our May 21, 2015, 
proposed rule (80 FR 29286), we published a revised proposed rule (81 
FR 23448; April 21, 2016) removing the requirement that petitioners 
must include information from States in their petitions. As a result, 
in this final rule, we clarify that petitioners should include 
information from various sources in support of their requests, and we 
require that copies of the cited source information be included with 
submitted requests, in order for the Services to be able to evaluate 
the claims in the petition. In determining whether the petition 
presents substantial information, the Services are not required to 
consider claims for which supporting materials are not included with 
the petition. In the past, we have found that that information in 
petitions can be incomplete, misrepresented, or one-sided. As a result, 
we have revised these regulations to encourage petitioners to provide a 
complete, balanced presentation of facts, including any information the 
petitioner is aware of that contradicts claims in the petition.
    Comment (42): A commenter noted that petitioners occasionally 
reference unpublished data. The proposed rules contain no criteria for 
use of and access to these data. We recommend the Services specify that 
such material is subject to the same requirements.
    Our Response: We agree that copies of all information used to 
support a petitioned action should be provided with the petition for 
the Services to consider and evaluate.

Paragraph (d)--Types of Information To Be Included in Petitions To 
List, Delist, or Change the Status of a Listed Species

    Comment (43): Some comments related to our definitions and usage of 
the terms ``substantial information'' and ``substantial scientific and 
commercial information.'' These comments included a suggestion to 
define the relevant terms in the first paragraph in which they appear 
and to be consistent in the use of the terminology throughout the rule.
    Our Response: We appreciate the comments. We have revised the text 
of this rule to reflect the specific language of the Act setting out 
the standard that applies to each type of petition. The standard that 
applies to petitions to list, delist, or reclassify a species is that 
the petition must present ``substantial scientific or commercial 
information'' indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted 
(Sec.  4(b)(3)(A)), whereas a petition to revise a critical habitat 
designation must present ``substantial scientific information'' (Sec.  
4(b)(3)(D)(i)). Note that the statute does use the term ``substantial 
information'' in Sec.  4(b)(3)(B) and and 4(b)(3)(D)(ii). In the final 
rule, we continue to define the relevant terms directly in the 
respective subsections setting out how we make findings on each type of 
petition. For example, our explanation of what we consider to be 
substantial scientific or commercial information appears in final Sec.  
424.14(h)(1)(i), because paragraph (h) explains the standards we use in 
making findings on petitions to list species, delist listed species, or 
reclassify listed species, and is therefore the most logical place for 
that explanation, even though the term is first used in Sec.  424.14(d) 
(which alludes to the standard that the Secretary must apply but 
primarily is setting out recommended content items).
    Comment (44): A commenter suggested changing proposed Sec.  
424.14(c)(3) (Sec.  424.14(d)(3) in this rule), concerning inclusion of 
magnitude and imminence of threats in the petition) by omitting the 
final clause and replacing it with: ``. . . including, where available, 
a description of the magnitude and imminence of the threats.''
    Our Response: The change the commenter is requesting is the 
addition of the condition ``where available'' with respect to including 
a description of the magnitude and imminence of threats to a species. 
Please note that the elements of Sec.  424.14(d) in this rule are not 
absolute requirements to qualify as a petition, but the Services' 
findings will depend, in part, on the degree to which the petition 
includes this type of information. The magnitude and imminence of 
threats are generally key determinants of whether a species may or may 
not warrant protection under the Act. Thus, although we would not 
reject a petition for not including information on magnitude and 
imminence of threats, our evaluation of whether the petition presents 
substantial information indicating that the petitioned action may be 
warranted would need to take into consideration the presence, the 
imminence, and the severity of threats. Therefore, we think it 
advisable to include in petitions information regarding the threat 
severity (magnitude) and the timing of those threats (currently 
occurring, imminent, in the foreseeable future, etc.).

[[Page 66471]]

Paragraph (e)--Information to Be Included in Petitions to Revise 
Critical Habitat

    Comment (45): Several commenters noted that the requirement of 
proposed Sec.  424.14(d)(6) for ``a complete presentation of the 
relevant facts, including an explanation of what sources of information 
the petitioner consulted in drafting the petition, as well as any 
relevant information known to the petitioner not included in the 
petition,'' would be duplicative and indiscernible from the 
requirements of proposed Sec.  424.14(b) (Sec.  424.14(c) in this 
rule), and recommended proposed Sec.  424.14 (d)(6) not be adopted. 
Another commenter asked how ``a complete presentation of the relevant 
facts'' differs from a ``detailed justification for the recommended 
administrative action that contains an analysis of the information 
presented.''
    Our Response: Based on comments received on the original proposal, 
we revised our proposal to address these issues. Recognizing that it 
could be an undue burden to require petitioners to include all relevant 
information that is reasonably available, and certify to that effect, 
in this rule we have removed the certification requirement from the 
Sec.  424.14(c) list of essential requirements for all petitions. 
Section 424.14(c) retains the more-general essential requirement that 
all petitions include a detailed narrative justification for the 
recommended administrative action that contains an analysis of the 
information presented. The Services will reject petitions that do not 
meet this detailed-narrative requirement, but petitioners could still 
resubmit their petition after adding a detailed narrative in accordance 
with Sec.  424.14(c). In this rule, paragraphs (d) and (e) of Sec.  
424.14(d) and (e), on the other hand, do not prescribe essential 
requirements for all petitions, and instead identify factors that the 
Services will consider in making 90-day findings. One of these factors, 
set forth at Sec.  424.14(d)(5) and Sec.  424.14(e)(6), is the degree 
to which the petition includes ``[a] complete, balanced representation 
of the relevant facts, including information that may contradict claims 
in the petition.'' A request will not be rejected as a petition for 
failing to meet Sec.  424.14(d)(5) or Sec.  424.14(e)(6). It may be 
difficult for a non-scientist to locate and present all of the relevant 
facts completely, and, although the Services encourage petitioners to 
provide a balanced presentation of facts, there may not always be 
information contradicting claims made in the petition. As a result, the 
Services will consider this information, along with readily available 
information we may consult for context on the species and the requested 
action, when determining if the petition presents substantial 
information indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted.
    Comment (46): Many commenters noted the language of proposed Sec.  
424.14(d)(5) (Sec.  424.14(e)(5) in this rule) was inconsistent with 
the previous regulations at 50 CFR 424.12 in that the proposed petition 
regulations do not reference a ``determination'' that occupied areas 
are not enough for conservation of a species before moving on to 
consideration of unoccupied areas (e.g., limiting the designation of 
critical habitat to the species' current range would be inadequate to 
conserve the species).
    Our Response: This rule is consistent with the revised 50 CFR 
424.12 regulations that became effective on March 14, 2016 (81 FR 7414; 
February 11, 2016). The current 50 CFR 424.12(b) states ``Where 
designation of critical habitat is prudent and determinable, the 
Secretary will identify specific areas within the geographical area 
occupied by the species at the time of listing and any specific areas 
outside the geographical area occupied by the species to be considered 
for designation as critical habitat.'' The Services are no longer 
required to consider whether a designation limited to the occupied 
areas would be sufficient before considering unoccupied areas. 
Therefore, no additional language is needed in the provision of Sec.  
424.14(e)(5) of this rule.
    Comment (47): A commenter stated that the requirement to describe 
the physical or biological features (PBFs) provides little value 
because the Services have already described them in the final critical 
habitat rule for the species.
    Our Response: In requests to revise critical habitat in occupied 
areas, it is essential to provide information on whether the PBFs are 
present or absent in those areas (see Sec.  424.14(e)(4): ``For any 
areas petitioned for removal from currently designated critical habitat 
within the geographical area occupied by the species at the time it was 
listed, information indicating that the specific areas do not contain 
the physical or biological features. . . .''). In some cases, 
petitioners may believe that we have misidentified or not included all 
PBFs, and that recognizing a different set of PBFs would lead to 
additional areas of occupied habitat qualifying for inclusion in a 
designation, or certain areas of the existing designation no longer 
qualifying. Similarly, PBFs may have moved (no longer present in one 
area, but more recently developed in others), or there may be newer 
information on a species' needs and, consequently, PBFs may change, 
PBFs previously identified may no longer be essential to the 
conservation of the species, or new PBFs may be identified. Therefore, 
the Services will consider petitions seeking to modify the description 
of PBFs in an original designation where recognizing a different set of 
PBFs would result in changes to the areas of occupied habitat that 
would qualify for inclusion. PBFs are analyzed in the course of 
developing designations, but it is the specific areas as shown on a map 
that are designated. Quite often scientific understanding of essential 
features advances after a designation is made, and the Services must 
consider the best available information when conducting section 7 
consultations, not just what was described at the time of designation. 
Thus, even without a rule revising a critical habitat designation, the 
Services will always consider the best available, current information 
about the essential PBFs and what makes them essential in the course of 
section 7 consultations. Petitions seeking to ``revise'' a list of 
features, with no consequential changes to areas of occupied habitat 
that are included in a designation, are thus both unnecessary and 
ineffective.
    Comment (48): A commenter suggested specific wording revisions to 
proposed Sec.  424.14(d)(5) (Sec.  424.14(e)(5) in this rule): ``For 
any areas petitioned to be added to critical habitat that were outside 
the geographical area occupied by the species at the time it was 
listed, information explaining: (1) Why the species' present range is 
inadequate to ensure its conservation; (2) why the petitioned area 
presently contains features essential to the conservation of the 
species; and (3) how the designation will impact, economically and 
otherwise, the use of the petitioned area for other purposes. For any 
areas petitioned to be removed from critical habitat that were outside 
the geographical area occupied by the species at the time it was 
listed, information indicating why the petitioned areas are no longer 
essential to the conservation of the species.''
    Our Response: We appreciate the commenter's concern that unoccupied 
habitat not be added to an existing critical habitat designation 
without good reason, but choose to retain the proposed language at 
Sec.  424.14(e)(5): ``For areas petitioned to be added to or removed 
from critical habitat that were outside the geographical area occupied 
by the species at the time it was listed,

[[Page 66472]]

information indicating why the petitioned areas are or are not 
essential for the conservation of the species.'' There are several 
reasons for this:
     In light of recent revisions to 50 CFR 424.12, the 
Services are not required to first consider whether a designation 
limited to present range is adequate to ensure conservation.
     This provision needs to address requests to add as well as 
remove unoccupied areas from a critical habitat designation.
     The language is consistent with the definition of critical 
habitat in the Act (16 U.S.C. 1532(5)(A)(ii)), which includes 
unoccupied areas, that is, ``specific areas outside the geographical 
area occupied by the species at the time it is listed in accordance 
with the provisions of section 4 of this Act, upon a determination by 
the Secretary that such areas are essential for the conservation of the 
species.'' Unlike the geographical areas occupied by the species at the 
time it is listed, unoccupied areas need not include the essential PBFs 
(see 16 U.S.C. 1532(5)(A) (i) of the Act). Therefore, it would be 
inconsistent with the Act to require such information in requests to 
revise unoccupied critical habitat.
     A determination as to whether unoccupied areas are 
essential for the conservation of the species is made by the Services, 
not the petitioner. However, it may be helpful if the petitioners 
include information indicating why the petitioned areas are or are not 
essential for the conservation of the species.

Paragraph (f)--Response to Requests

    Comment (49): A commenter stated the Services should accept 
petitions that make a good faith effort to comply with provisions of 
the regulations and not reject for minor procedural flaws. The Services 
should include a ``cure'' provision in which the Services alert the 
petitioner to flaws in the petition and the steps that must be taken to 
remedy them and allow a specified amount of time for the petitioner to 
fix the flaws. Unless petitioners are supplied with constructive 
feedback, this will greatly hamper the petition process.
    Our Response: In this rule at Sec.  424.14(f), the Services retain 
discretion to treat as a petition a request that the Services determine 
substantially complies with the relevant requirements. Therefore, it is 
unlikely that a request will be rejected for minor omissions. However, 
if the Services determine that the request does not meet the 
requirements set forth at Sec.  424.14(c), they will, as noted at 
paragraph Sec.  424.14(f)(1), within a reasonable timeframe, notify the 
sender and provide an explanation of the rejection. The petitioner will 
then be able to correct the request and resubmit to the Services at 
their convenience.
    Comment (50): Some commenters asked whether petitioners would be 
notified when a request is determined not to constitute a petition and 
given the reasons for such determination. As drafted, the proposed rule 
does not indicate the Services will notify petitioners of a compliant 
petition.
    Our Response: As noted above, submissions that do not qualify as 
petitions will be returned to the sender, along with a form letter or 
checklist describing what components are missing. However, for 
expediency, we will generally not notify petitioners of acceptance of 
petitions in a separate communication; in most cases, publication of 
the Services' 90-day findings will serve as such notifications.
    Comment (51): A commenter supported the deletion of the phrase ``in 
the agency's possession'' as it relates to information the Services may 
consider when analyzing a petition. In the past, the ``in the agency's 
possession'' requirement has been interpreted as the inability of the 
Services to even do a simple Internet search for helpful information 
after a petition has been received. The Services should not be limited 
to the use of information they have in their possession at the time 
they receive a petition. Such a limitation could lead to a 
``substantial'' 90-day finding, not because a species may be at risk, 
but simply because the petition presents a skewed or impartial view of 
the facts.
    Our Response: We agree. The phrase ``in the agency's possession'' 
was interpreted by some as meaning hard (paper) copies of information 
materials stored in agency office files at a physical location. Most 
information and data are now accessed and stored electronically. 
Therefore, it is appropriate for the Services to place petitions in 
context by consulting readily available information, such as 
information that is stored electronically in databases routinely 
consulted by the Services in the ordinary course of their work. For 
example, it would be appropriate to consult online databases such as 
the Integrated Taxonomic Information System (http://www.itis.gov), a 
database of scientifically credible taxonomic nomenclature information 
maintained in part by the Services. This rule allows the Services to 
use readily available information to provide context for the claims in 
the petition, even should it be received after the time the petition is 
filed, up to the time we make the finding. Please see Findings on a 
Petition to List, Delist, or Reclassify--Paragraph (h) under Summary of 
Changes to Previous Regulations at 50 CFR 424.14, below, for further 
discussion.

Paragraph (h)--Findings on Petitions To List, Delist, or Reclassify

    Comment (52): Several commenters expressed concerns about the 
information standard we use in evaluating petitioned requests. Some 
specifically noted the addition of the term ``credible'' in definition 
of the substantial scientific or commercial information standard in 
proposed Sec.  424.14(g) (Sec.  424.14(h) in this rule). One commenter 
expressed concern that the Services would define credible as precluding 
certain categories of information or data, such as traditional 
ecological knowledge or gray literature that may not be published or 
available in traditional scientific journals. Conversely, another 
commenter noted that the Services should only consider peer-reviewed 
literature provided in a petition to be credible, sound science.
    Our Response: Section 4(b)(3)(A) of the Act directs the Services to 
make a finding as to whether a petition presents ``substantial 
scientific or commercial information indicating that the petitioned 
action may be warranted.'' This is the threshold required of the 
information provided in a petition, and is the standard we use at Sec.  
424.14(h) in this rule. The Act notably does not require that the 
Services make 90-day findings on the basis of the ``best scientific and 
commercial data available.'' Nevertheless, we are cognizant that 
positive ``substantial information'' findings require that the Services 
devote additional time and resources towards completing status 
assessments for those species, as well as 12-month findings. Therefore, 
we have concluded that it would be more efficient and would better 
advance the purposes of the Act to clarify for petitioners that--for a 
petition to indicate that the petitioned action may be warranted, and 
thereby merit this additional expenditure of the Services' resources--
the information provided in the petition must, at a minimum, be 
credible. ``Credible scientific or commercial information'' may include 
all types of data, such as peer-reviewed literature, gray literature, 
traditional ecological knowledge, etc.
    Comment (53): A commenter stated that the Secretaries still appear 
to have broad discretion in establishing the definition of ``reasonable 
person.'' The commenter asserts that the definition leaves open the 
very type of arbitrary or

[[Page 66473]]

capricious litigation the Service is attempting to resolve by citing 
the reasoning in the Congressional Conference Report. The courts 
typically defer to the agencies' interpretation of scientific 
information. Therefore, petitioners are left without remedy when placed 
in disagreement with the Secretary's conclusion.
    Our Response: The Act requires the Services to consider whether a 
petition presents substantial information to demonstrate that the 
requested action may be warranted, but does not define ``substantial 
information.'' The Services therefore have discretion to adopt a 
reasonable interpretation of this foundational standard that furthers 
the statutory purposes and reflects the scientific context in which the 
Service makes decisions.
    In the interest of providing greater clarity and transparency to 
the public, we have promulgated this rule to clarify and more 
thoroughly explain what is required in a petition and how the Services 
make their findings. We thus explain that the ``substantial scientific 
or commercial information'' standard (which applies to listing, 
delisting, and reclassification petitions) refers to credible 
scientific or commercial information in support of the petition's 
claims such that a reasonable person conducting an impartial scientific 
review would conclude that the action proposed in the petition may be 
warranted. (We similarly interpret the ``substantial scientific 
information'' standard that applies to petitions seeking critical 
habitat revisions.) This interpretation clarifies that the Services 
must evaluate petitions in their capacity as biologists with the 
scientific expertise to investigate whether a species may be imperiled. 
As such, the Services analyze and decide whether petitions present 
``substantial information'' consistent with the analyses and decisions 
that a hypothetical reasonable biologist would make. In addition, this 
hypothetical reasonable scientist would need to be impartial and 
approach the question as he or she would any scientific inquiry. 
Finally, the hypothetical person evaluating the information in the 
petition would need to perceive that the information is credible; 
conclusions drawn in the petition without the support of credible 
scientific or commercial information will not be considered 
``substantial information.'' These concepts are in no way new to the 
Services' practice; this is how we have and must evaluate petitions. 
Further, we believe this clarification aligns with the House Conference 
report, which states that, when courts review such a decision, the 
``object of [the judicial] review is to determine whether the 
Secretary's action was arbitrary or capricious in light of the 
scientific and commercial information available concerning the 
petitioned action.'' (H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 97-835, at 20 (1982), 
reprinted in 1982 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2860, 2862) [emphasis added]. Finally, a 
``reasonable person'' standard is commonly used in legal contexts.
    If a person disagrees with a Service's finding, in the case of 90-
day petition findings in which the Service finds there is substantial 
information indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted (in 
other words, not a final agency action), that person could provide 
additional information regarding the species to help inform future 
agency actions such as the subsequent 12-month finding. In the case of 
not-substantial 90-day findings (which are final agency actions), one 
remedy would be to submit a new petition with further justification and 
rationale for the requested action. Also, final agency actions are 
judicially reviewable.
    Comment (54): Proposed Sec.  424.14(g)(1)(i) (Sec.  424.14(h)(1)(i) 
in this rule) expands on the ``substantial scientific or commercial 
information'' standard of the Act. Under the existing petitions 
regulation, ``substantial scientific or commercial information'' means 
``that amount of information that would lead a reasonable person to 
believe that the measure proposed in the petition may be warranted.'' 
Now, the Services add to this ``a reasonable person conducting an 
impartial scientific review would conclude that the action proposed in 
the petition may be warranted.'' Normally, reasonable people do not, in 
the course of their daily lives, conduct impartial scientific reviews.
    Our Response: Section 424.14(h)(1)(i) clarifies and expands on the 
substantial-information standard by defining it as credible scientific 
and commercial information that would lead a reasonable person 
conducting an impartial scientific review to conclude that the action 
proposed in the petition may be warranted. (We similarly define the 
``substantial scientific information'' standard that applies to 
petitions seeking revisions to critical habitat at 424.12(i)(1)(i).) As 
discussed in response to Comment 53, the Services have the discretion 
and a need to adopt a reasonable interpretation of this key standard, 
which is not defined in the statute. We have included the term 
``credible,'' because--for a petition to indicate that the standard for 
the petitioned action may have been met, and thereby merit the 
additional expenditure of the Services' resources--the information 
provided in the petition must, at a minimum, be credible. In other 
words, the Services must evaluate whether the information in the 
petition is substantiated and not mere speculation or opinion. Only 
those claims or conclusions drawn in the petition with the support of 
credible scientific or commercial information should be considered 
``substantial information.''
    The addition of ``conducting an impartial scientific review'' to 
the reasonable person standard for what constitutes ``substantial 
scientific and commercial information'' similarly clarifies to 
petitioners the context against which the Services will necessarily 
evaluate petitions. The Services must evaluate petitions on the basis 
of the scientific validity of the request; that is, impartially 
evaluate whether there is a scientific basis for the requested action, 
and not just unsubstantiated claims. Because the context for this 
action involves evaluating scientific information, it is appropriate 
and necessary to take as our reference a person conducting an impartial 
scientific review. There is nothing in the Act to suggest that 90-day 
findings should be evaluated based on what persons lacking scientific 
background would conclude, and to adopt a generic standard would not 
further the purposes of the Act or reflect how the Services must and do 
actually go about evaluating petitions.
    Comment (55): Several commenters raised questions regarding the 
Services' treatment of a subsequent petition, including the definitions 
and interpretations of the terms ``considered'' and ``sufficient''; how 
our determination would relate to other reviews, such as 5-year 
reviews; and how new information or new analyses, such as models, would 
be evaluated.
    Our Response: In this rule, Sec.  424.14(h)(1)(iii) addresses 
situations in which the Services have already made a finding on or 
conducted a review of the listing status of a species, and, after such 
finding or review, receive a petition seeking to list, delist, or 
reclassify that species. The provisions at Sec.  424.14(h)(1)(iii) do 
not state or imply that such petitions will be rejected outright; 
indeed, as noted below, we will consider all requests that meet the 
requirements of Sec.  424.14(c) to be petitions, and we will evaluate 
all petitions and make findings on them. Instead, we include this 
provision to provide prospective petitioners greater predictability and 
clarity, by making clear that we must evaluate such petitions in light 
of the previous

[[Page 66474]]

findings or determinations. Thus, if no new information or analysis is 
provided in such a petition, the outcome will likely (but not always) 
be a not-substantial 90-day finding.
    To clarify some of the terms we used, by using the term 
``considered'' in the phrase ``new information not previously 
considered,'' we mean that information or analysis was evaluated in a 
previous finding, status review, or listing determination. 
``Sufficient'' new information is that information or analysis which 
would lead a reasonable person conducting an impartial scientific 
review to conclude that the action proposed in the petition may be 
warranted, despite the previous review or finding.
    With respect to prior listing determinations, the prospective 
petitioner may review the final listing rule and any supporting 
documentation to see what information was considered and evaluated. 
Five-year status reviews are not published in the Federal Register but 
are posted on the Services' Web sites. FWS status reviews and Federal 
Register documents are posted on the species profile pages maintained 
in FWS' Environmental Conservation Online System (ECOS). Species 
profiles may be accessed by searching on the species name at http://www.ecos.fws.gov/ecp. NMFS' documents can be found at http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov. In conducting status reviews, the Services may 
reevaluate data they already considered in previous status reviews. 
Petitioners may similarly present a new analysis of existing data in 
support of their requests, and the Services will evaluate such requests 
on that basis. A petitioned request could be based on discovery of an 
error in research regarding information previously considered by the 
Services.
    Unless such a petition provides different data, or a different 
analysis or interpretation of, or errors discovered in, the data, model 
or analytic methodology used in a previous finding, review, or 
determination, the conclusions may be the same, and the Services may 
find that such a petition does not provide substantial information 
indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted.
    We make the distinction that, in the case of prior reviews that led 
to final agency actions (such as final listings, 12-month not-warranted 
findings, and 90-day not-substantial findings), a petition would 
generally be presumed not to provide substantial information unless the 
petition provides new information or a new analysis not previously 
considered in the final agency action. On the other hand, if the 
previous status review did not result in a final agency action, the 
petition would not be required to overcome the presumption that, unless 
it includes information or analysis that was not considered in the 
previous status review, it generally will not present substantial 
information indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted.
    Comment (56): One commenter stated that the ``new information'' 
requirement in the revised proposed rule (81 FR 23448; April 21, 2016) 
could severely limit the ability to file delisting petitions that 
assert flaws in the Services' prior consideration of information. 
Petitioners should be able to assert that information the Services 
previously considered was misused, misrepresented, or misinterpreted, 
or that the original data for the species' classification were in error 
as the basis for delisting.
    Our Response: This rule will not limit the ability to file 
delisting or other petitions. In cases where petitioners request an 
outcome that differs from the outcome reached in a previous Service 
finding or determination, the rule simply recognizes that the courts 
apply a presumption that agency actions are valid and reasonable, and 
therefore the petitioner should provide new or additional information 
or a new analysis not previously considered. We add this requirement to 
prevent the petition process from being used inefficiently--in effect, 
to voice disagreement with a previous determination by one of the 
Services without providing any new information or analysis relevant to 
the question at issue, and instead of using the appropriate judicial 
forum to challenge the previous determination directly. An appropriate 
showing may include an explanation of how information used in the 
previous analysis was misused, misrepresented, or misinterpreted. Also, 
this rule does not prevent a petitioner from requesting a delisting of 
a listed entity based on error in classification of that listed entity.

Paragraph (h)--Use of Information in Agency Files

    Comment (57): Several commenters support the agencies' use of 
additional information as described in the proposed rule, as long as it 
is clear that such information is readily available and does not serve 
as a justification for the Service to actively supplement the petition 
or initiate new data collection processes, contracts or research as 
part of the 90-day finding process.
    Our Response: The Services recognize that the statute places the 
obligation squarely on the petitioner to present the requisite level of 
information to meet the ``substantial information'' test; therefore, 
the Services should not seek to supplement petitions. However, in 
determining whether the petition presents substantial scientific or 
commercial information, it may be appropriate to consider readily 
available information to provide context to the information the 
petition presents. It is not the intent of the Services to initiate any 
data collection or research methods, nor is there time for the Services 
to conduct such methods in the 90-day petition finding process.
    Comment (58): A commenter stated that, to the extent that the 
Service intends to review and rely upon readily available information, 
there first must be a public notice and availability of such 
information for review and comment by the public. Otherwise, the public 
would not be made aware of such information and afforded the ability to 
comment on the accuracy, sufficiency and relevance of such information.
    Our Response: The statute does not provide for a public comment 
process at the 90-day stage of review of petitions. The Services 
provide public notice and request information when publishing a 
positive 90-day finding and initiating a 12-month status review in 
response to a petition, but it is neither appropriate nor feasible to 
do this prior to making a 90-day finding due to statutory time 
constraints. Although the Services may consider readily available 
information to provide context in which to evaluate the information 
presented in a petition, the 90-day petition finding is based on the 
information provided in the petition. A 90-day finding is an initial 
assessment of information provided in the petition and, when 
appropriate, information readily available to the Services. When our 
90-day findings are published in the Federal Register, the petition and 
supporting information, and any other information we may have relied 
upon for our finding, is posted online and made available to the 
public. If we find the petition presents substantial information that 
the action may be warranted, we announce the initiation of a status 
review and request information from the public, which may include 
feedback on the accuracy, sufficiency, and relevance of any information 
considered in making the finding. For petitions that are found to be 
not substantial, we publish the finding and make available the petition 
and any supporting information considered for the finding. The public 
is invited to submit information on any species at any time, which may 
include

[[Page 66475]]

evaluation of information considered for any finding.
    Comment (59): A commenter raised a question regarding proposed 
Sec.  424.14(g)(1)(ii) (Sec.  424.14(h)(1)(ii) in this rule), asking 
how can the Services state that ``the intent is not to solicit new 
information,'' when the proposed regulations at Sec.  424.14(b)(10) 
would require the petitioner to gather ``all relevant information'' 
about a species, as well as information from every State where a 
species could possibly be found.
    Our Response: In this final rule, we have removed the proposed 
requirements to which the commenter refers (i.e., that petitioners pre-
coordinate with States and certify that they have provided all relevant 
data). In this rule, Sec.  424.14(h)(1)(ii) describes the type of 
readily available additional information the Services may consider to 
place a petition in context when making their findings. Section 
424.14(h)(1)(ii) states that, in reaching the initial finding on the 
petition, the Services will consider information submitted by the 
petitioner and may also consider information readily available at the 
time the determination is made. This provides a balanced approach that 
will ensure that the Services may take into account the information 
available to us to provide context for assessing the petition, without 
opening the door to the type of wide-ranging information request more 
appropriate for a status review. The intent of this approach is for the 
Services to be able to use readily available information to provide 
context in which to evaluate the information presented in the petition, 
not for the Services to solicit new information on which to make a 
finding.

Comment on National Environmental Policy Act

    Comment (60): A commenter stated that the Services must prepare an 
environmental impact statement (EIS) for the proposed rule because the 
net effect of the changes to the existing regulations will be fewer 
species being protected under the Act, more extinctions, and 
consequently more ecosystems upon which endangered species depend being 
degraded and lost.
    Our Response: We do not anticipate that the changes to the 
regulation set forth in this rule will result in fewer species being 
listed. By providing clearer requirements and expectations to 
prospective petitioners, the quality and completeness of petitions will 
likely improve, leading to more accurate 90-day findings and 
consequently more efficient use of limited resources.
    As discussed in greater detail in the National Environmental Policy 
Act Determination section below and in the Environmental Action 
Statement (available at http://www.regulations.gov, under Docket Nos. 
FWS-HQ-ES-2015-0016 and DOC 150506429-5429-01), we have concluded that 
this final rule revising the regulations at 50 CFR 424.14 falls within 
categorical exclusions from NEPA under both applicable DOI regulations 
and NOAA guidance. Specifically, the regulation falls within the DOI 
categorical exclusion for ``[p]olicies, directives, regulations, and 
guidelines: That are of an administrative, financial, legal, technical, 
or procedural nature.'' 43 CFR 46.210(i). It also falls within the 
substantially identical NOAA categorical exclusion for ``policy 
directives, regulations and guidelines of an administrative, financial, 
legal, technical or procedural nature.'' See NOAA Administrative Orders 
(NAOs) 216-6A (section 6.01) and 216-6 (section 6.03c.3(i)).
    We do not anticipate that this final rule will change the outcomes 
of the Services' 90-day findings as to whether petitions present 
substantial information indicating that the petitioned actions may be 
warranted, because it is administrative and procedural in nature, and 
is designed merely to clarify and streamline the petition process 
consistent with statutory language, legislative history, and case law. 
Moreover, the revised regulations do not limit Secretarial discretion, 
because they do not mandate particular outcomes in future decisions 
regarding whether a request should be accepted as a petition or whether 
a petition presents substantial information that a petitioned action 
may be warranted.
    Although the revised regulations expand on what information must be 
included in a request for it to qualify as a petition under section 
4(b)(3) of the Act, they also provide for a process to inform 
petitioners when the request fails to meet the required criteria and 
allow discretion for the Services to consider a request that 
substantially complies with the required elements even if there is not 
full technical compliance. The Services will, within a reasonable 
timeframe, notify the petitioners of the required information that is 
missing. This will allow the submitters to cure any deficiencies before 
resubmitting the petition to the Services, should they choose to do so. 
Therefore, we do not expect that this additional procedural requirement 
will affect the substantive outcomes of 90-day findings on well 
supported petitions; rather, it will make the Services' consideration 
of petitions more efficient.

Summary of Changes to Previous Regulations at 50 CFR 424.14

General

    Throughout the regulation text we replace the title ``the 
Secretary'' or ``the Secretaries'' with ``the Services,'' as the 
Services are the formal designees of the Secretaries of Commerce and 
the Interior who have the delegated authority to implement the Act.
    We also change the overall organization of the regulations. Instead 
of organizing all aspects of the regulations into the two categories of 
petitions under the Act (petitions to list, delist, or reclassify a 
species are discussed in current paragraph (b), and petitions to revise 
critical habitat are discussed in current paragraph (c)), the new 
regulations are organized by function. Requirements that apply to all 
petitions under the Act appear first (in new paragraphs (a), (b), (c)), 
followed by the list of factors the Services will consider in making 
findings on the two categories of petitions, respectively, (in new 
paragraphs (d) and (e)). Similarly, procedures that apply to all 
petitions under the Act are set out first (in new paragraphs (f) and 
(g) (and also (k)), followed by procedures that apply to the different 
categories of petitions (in new paragraphs (h) and (i) (and also at 
(j), which provides procedures for APA petitions)). We move some of the 
specific provisions from the previous regulations accordingly to fit 
better into this overall structure.

Ability To Petition--Paragraph (a)

    Section 424.14(a) retains the substance of the first sentence of 
the current section, stating that any interested person may submit a 
written petition to the Services requesting that one of the actions 
described in Sec.  424.10 be taken for a species.

Notification of Intent To File Petition--Paragraph (b)

    In our April 21, 2016, revised proposed rule (81 FR 23448), we 
included in Sec.  424.14(b)(9) the requirement that, at least 30 days 
prior to filing a petition, the petitioners provide State agencies 
responsible for the management and conservation of wildlife with 
notice, by letter or electronic mail, of their intent to file a 
petition with the Services, and that copies of these letters or 
communications be included with the petition when it is submitted to 
the Services. In finalizing this rule, we

[[Page 66476]]

realized that the requirement to provide notice to State agencies did 
not belong with the rest of paragraph (b), because that paragraph 
outlined a list of information to be included with a petition 
submission, not actions required of a petitioner before filing. 
Therefore, for clarity and consistency, we have reformatted the 
regulation by adding a new paragraph (b) requiring that petitioners 
notify States before filing petitions. The list of required information 
that was formerly contained in paragraph (b) has now been redesignated 
as paragraph (c). All subsequent paragraphs have been appropriately 
redesignated.
    Therefore, new Sec.  424.14(b) requires that for a petition to 
list, delist, or reclassify a species, or for petitions to revise 
critical habitat, petitioners must provide notice to the State agency 
or agencies primarily responsible for the management and conservation 
of fish, plant, or wildlife resources in each State where the species 
that is the subject of the petition occurs. Petitioners must notify the 
State agency of their intent to file a petition, with either Service, 
at least 30 days prior to petition submission. If the State agency has 
data or information on the subject species that it would like to share 
with the Services, the agency may submit the data and information 
directly to FWS or NMFS. This provision will allow the Services to 
benefit from the States' considerable experience and information on the 
species within their boundaries, because the States would have an 
opportunity to submit to the Service any information they have on the 
species early in the petition process. The Services, in formulating an 
initial finding, may use their discretion to consider any information 
provided by the States (as well as other readily available information, 
including any information they have received from other interested 
parties before the initial finding) as part of the context in which 
they evaluate the information contained in the petition.
    Also in Sec.  424.14(b), we added the following sentence for 
clarification to the language of the revised proposed rule (81 FR 
23448; April 21, 2016): ``This notification requirement shall not apply 
to any petition submitted pertaining to a species that does not occur 
within the United States.'' This addition is to clarify that this 
provision does not apply to foreign species that do not occur in the 
United States, and further that, consistent with the definition in the 
Act at 16 U.S.C. 1532(17), ``States'' refers only to the States, the 
District of Columbia, and the territories and commonwealths of the 
United States.

Requirements for Petitions--Paragraph (c)

    As stated earlier, new Sec.  424.14(c) incorporates the substance 
of the revised proposal's (81 FR 23448; April 21, 2016) Sec.  
424.14(b), setting forth a number of minimum content requirements for a 
request for agency action to qualify as a petition for the purposes of 
section 4(b)(3) of the Act, 16 U.S.C. 1533(b)(3). These include some of 
the minimum requirements from the second and third sentences of current 
paragraph (a). As with Sec.  424.14(b) in the revised proposal, new 
Sec.  424.14(c) also expands upon the list of requirements for a 
petition, drawing in part from the provisions in current paragraph 
(b)(2).
    New Sec.  424.14(c)(2) requires that a petition address only one 
species. However, we revised the language from this statement in the 
revised proposal (81 FR 23448; April 21, 2016) to clarify that a 
petition addressing only one species could include any configuration of 
members of that single species as defined by the Act (the full species, 
one or more subspecies or varieties, and, for vertebrate species, one 
or more distinct population segments (DPSs)). The taxonomic 
(biological) classification system is hierarchical, which means a taxon 
of the rank of species also includes all subspecies or varieties, if 
any, under that species. Similarly, applying the concept of 
hierarchical entities to the Act's use of the term ``species,'' a 
vertebrate species would also include any potential DPSs. Therefore, a 
single-species petition may address (a) one species of fish, wildlife, 
or plant; (b) one or more subspecies (variety) of fish, wildlife, or 
plant; or (c) one or more population segments of any vertebrate species 
(which FWS or NMFS will evaluate per the Services' Policy Regarding the 
Recognition of District Vertebrate Population Segments (61 FR 4722; 
February 7, 1996) (DPS Policy) as to whether it qualifies as a DPS). As 
such, the petitioner need not file separate petitions to address 
different hierarchical configurations of the same species.
    Although the Services in the past have accepted multi-species 
petitions, in practice it has often proven to be difficult to know 
which supporting materials apply to which species. That has at times 
made it difficult to follow the logic of the petition. Because 
petitioners can submit multiple petitions, this requirement does not 
place any limitation on the ability of an interested party to petition 
for section 4 actions, but does ensure that petitioners organize the 
information in a way (on a species-by-species basis) that is necessary 
to inform the species-specific determinations required by the Act and 
will allow more efficient action by the Services.
    The first six requirements (Sec.  424.14(c)(1) through (c)(6)) 
apply to each type of petition recognized under section 4(b)(3) of the 
Act. The first four requirements (Sec.  424.14(c)(1) through (c)(4)) 
were all contained in the previous regulations at Sec.  424.14(a) and 
(b). The fifth and sixth requirements (Sec.  424.14(c)(5) and (c)(6)) 
clarify and expand on the previous provisions at Sec.  424.14(b)(2)(iv) 
regarding a petition's supporting documentation.
    At Sec.  424.14(c)(5), we use the word ``readily'' before ``locate 
the information cited in the petition, including page numbers or 
chapters as applicable.'' The Services should not have to search 
through reference material to locate specific information; the petition 
should provide clear, specific citations that allow the supporting 
information to be located readily.
    The seventh requirement (Sec.  424.14(c)(7)) applies only to 
petitions to list, delist, or reclassify a species from an endangered 
species to a threatened species (i.e, downlisting) or from a threatened 
species to an endangered species (i.e., uplisting), and requires that 
information be presented to demonstrate that the subject entity is or 
may be a ``species'' as defined in the Act (which includes a species, a 
subspecies or variety, or a distinct population segment of a vertebrate 
species that FWS or NMFS may determine to be a DPS). We note that 
currently-listed species are generally recognized by the Services as 
species under the Act; therefore, petitions regarding already-listed 
species need only refer to that species, except when the petition seeks 
a change in the delineation of a ``species'' under the Act (for 
example, to divide a species into more than one species, delist or 
reclassify a portion of a listed species, a change in how FWS or NMFS 
delineates a DPS, or otherwise reconfigure the current listing). 
Section 4(b)(3)(A) of the Act applies only to ``a petition . . . to add 
a species to, or to remove a species from, either of the lists [of 
endangered or threatened wildlife and plants]'' [emphasis added]. This 
provision screens from needless consideration those requests that 
clearly do not involve a species, subspecies, or distinct population 
segment of a vertebrate species.
    The eighth requirement (Sec.  424.14(c)(8)), applies only to 
petitions to list a species, and to petitions to delist or reclassify a 
species in cases

[[Page 66477]]

where the species' range has changed since listing, and requires that 
information be included in the petition describing the current and 
historical range of the species, including range States or countries, 
as appropriate. It is important that the Services have information on 
both the current and historical range of the species; for example, a 
historical range that is significantly larger than the current range 
would show range contraction, which may be an important consideration. 
The previous regulations at Sec.  424.14(b)(2)(ii) identified as one of 
the factors the Services will consider in evaluating listing, 
delisting, and reclassification petitions the degree to which the 
petition contains a detailed narrative describing ``past and present . 
. . distribution of the species. . . .'' New Sec.  424.14(c)(8) now 
expands on this requirement and includes it as one of the essential 
requirements for a petition.
    The ninth requirement, Sec.  424.14(c)(9) relates to the 
requirement of Sec.  424.14(b) that petitioners must provide notice to 
the State agency responsible for the management and conservation of 
fish, plant, or wildlife resources in each State where the species that 
is the subject of the petition occurs, at least 30 days prior to 
petition submission. Copies of the letter or electronic communication 
from the petitioner notifying the State agency of the petitioner's 
intent to file a petition with either Service must be included with the 
petition when it is submitted; such copies are considered a required 
part of the petition.
    Please note that any decision to provide the protections of the Act 
to a species in an expedited manner under the Act's section 4(b)(7) 
(i.e., emergency listing) is at the discretion and determination of the 
Services upon a review of the best available scientific information. In 
any case, because the Services retain discretion to consider a petition 
that has only substantially complied with the requirements for filing 
petitions, they retain discretion to consider such petitions in 
appropriate circumstances, such as where it appears to the Services 
that expedited listing may be warranted. The Services also have 
discretion to simply treat them as petitions seeking the species 
listing on a non-emergency basis.
    The Services apply Sec.  424.14(c) to identify those requests that 
contain all the elements of a petition, so that consideration of the 
request will be an efficient and wise use of agency resources. A 
request that fails to meet these elements may be screened out from 
further consideration, as discussed below, because a request cannot 
meet the statutory standard for demonstrating that the petitioned 
action may be warranted if it does not contain at least some 
information on each of the areas relevant to that inquiry. However, as 
discussed further below, the screening out of petitions due to missing 
required information does not constitute a petition finding under 
Section 4(b)(3)(A) of the Act. In such a situation, the Services will 
explain to petitioners what information was missing so that the 
petitioners can have an opportunity to cure the deficiencies in a new 
petition and obtain a finding on the petition under section 4(b)(3)(A) 
of the Act.

Information To Be Included in Petitions To List, Delist, or Change the 
Status of a Listed Species--Paragraph (d)

    Section 424.14(d) describes the types of information that are 
relevant to the Services' determinations as to whether the petition 
provides substantial scientific or commercial information that the 
petitioned action may be warranted. Petitioners are advised that 
compliance with paragraph (c) is the minimum necessary to require the 
Services to consider their petition, but to provide a more complete and 
robust petition, petitioners should include as much of the types of 
information listed in paragraph (d) as possible, to the extent that it 
is relevant to the type of petition being filed.
    The informational elements for listing, delisting, and 
reclassification petitions in Sec.  424.14(d)(1) through (d)(3) are 
rooted in the substance of current paragraphs (b)(2)(ii) and (iii). 
These elements clarify in the regulations the key considerations that 
are relevant when the Services are determining whether or not the 
petition presents ``substantial scientific or commercial information 
indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted,'' which is the 
standard for making a positive 90-day finding as described in section 
4(b)(3)(A) of the Act, 16 U.S.C. 1533(b)(3)(A).
    Section 424.14(d)(3) refers to inclusion in a petition of a 
description of the magnitude and immediacy of threats. This type of 
information regarding the severity of threats on the species or its 
habitat is generally needed in conducting status reviews, and is 
therefore relevant to determining whether the petition presents 
substantial information indicating that the petitioned action may be 
warranted. In addition, this information may assist FWS in assessing 
the listing priority number of species if FWS subsequently makes a 
warranted-but-precluded finding under FWS' September 21, 1983, 
guidance, which requires assessing, in part, the magnitude and 
immediacy of threats (48 FR 43098). In addition to being useful for 
status reviews, this information should be included to assist in 
determinations on uplisting requests. While such information may also 
be useful to NMFS, NMFS has not adopted the 1983 FWS guidance, and so 
would not apply that guidance to petitions within its jurisdiction.
    Section 424.14(d)(4) refers to inclusion in a petition of 
information on any conservation actions that States, or other parties, 
have initiated or that are ongoing, that benefit the subject species. 
Because this information is relevant to an ultimate determination of 
whether or not listing a species is warranted (the 12-month finding 
standard), it is indirectly relevant and may be useful in evaluating 
whether the action may be warranted (the 90-day finding standard).
    We add a new Sec.  424.14(d)(5), stating that a petitioner should 
provide a complete, balanced presentation of facts pertaining to the 
petitioned species, which would include any information the petitioner 
is aware of that contradicts claims in the petition. The intent of this 
provision is not to place an unnecessary burden on petitioners, but 
rather to encourage petitioners to avoid presenting in a petition only 
information that supports the claims in the petition. This is 
particularly true for information publicly available from affected 
States or Tribes, who often have important and relevant species data 
and information, as well as special status and concerns with respect to 
implementation of the Act. Fostering greater inclusion of such data 
will help ensure that any petition submitted to the Services is based 
on reliable and unbiased information and does not consist simply of 
selected data. We find that, to further the purposes of the Act, 
petitioners should be forthcoming as to the known, relevant facts so 
that the Services have an accurate basis from which to evaluate the 
merits of the petition. Fostering a more transparent and informed 
petition process will ensure that the Services' resources are directed 
productively and not diverted to matters that only superficially appear 
meritorious.
    Section 424.14(d) does not include the language in current 
paragraph (b)(2) that describes information a petitioner may include 
for consideration in designating critical habitat in conjunction with a 
listing or reclassification. We have deleted these two sentences 
because, at the initial stage, the Services focus their evaluation of 
the information to make a finding on whether the petition presents 
substantial information indicating that

[[Page 66478]]

the species may warrant listing, delisting, or reclassification. If the 
Services find that the petition presents substantial information that 
listing may be warranted and proceeds to initiating a status review, 
the Services will seek information concerning critical habitat at that 
time.

Information To Be Included in Petitions To Revise Critical Habitat--
Paragraph (e)

    Section 424.14(e) sets forth the kinds of information a petitioner 
should include in a petition to revise a critical habitat designation. 
The Service's determination as to whether the petition provides 
``substantial scientific information indicating that the revision may 
be warranted'' (16 U.S.C. 1533(b)(3)(D)(i)) will depend in part on the 
degree to which the petition includes this type of information.
    The items set out at new Sec.  424.14(e) are an expanded and 
reworded version of the substance of current paragraph (c)(2). Section 
424.14(e)(1) advises that, to help justify a revision to critical 
habitat, it is important to demonstrate that the existing designation 
includes areas that should not be included or does not include areas 
that should be included. The petition should discuss the benefits of 
designating additional areas, or the reasons to remove areas from an 
existing designation. Additionally, including maps with sufficient 
detail to clearly identify the particular area(s) being recommended for 
inclusion or exclusion will be useful to the Services in making a 
petition finding.
    New Sec.  424.14(e)(2), (e)(3), and (e)(4) are drawn from the 
substance of current paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and (ii), which have been 
reorganized and clarified. Sections 424.14(e)(2), (e)(3), and (e)(4) 
clarify that several distinct pieces of information are helpful in 
analyzing whether any area of habitat should be designated, beginning 
with a description of the ``physical or biological features'' that are 
essential for the conservation of the species and which may require 
special management. If a petitioner believes that the already-
identified physical or biological features in an existing critical 
habitat designation have been incorrectly identified, the petition 
should provide information supporting the recognition of a different 
set of features and explain how the different set of features would 
lead to identification of different areas as qualifying for inclusion 
in a designation of occupied critical habitat. (See also our response 
to comment 47). In other words, petitioners requesting revisions to 
critical habitat designations need not provide information on which 
physical or biological features are essential unless the relevant areas 
were occupied at the time of listing and the petitioners contend that 
some features recognized at the time of designation as essential are 
not, or that features not recognized in the designation as essential 
should be.
    Also, paragraphs (e)(3) and (e)(4) of Sec.  424.14 detail the 
informational needs the Services will have in considering whether the 
petition presents substantial information indicating that it may be 
warranted to add to, or remove from, the critical habitat designation 
specific areas occupied by the species at the timing of listing. 
Further, we clarify that ``features'' specifically refers to the 
``physical or biological features,'' as described in our recent 
revision to 50 CFR 424.12 (81 FR 7414; February 11, 2016). Further, to 
use the same language as the revised 50 CFR 424.12, we replace the 
clause ``(including features that allow the area to support the species 
periodically, over time)'' with ``(including characteristics that 
support ephemeral or dynamic habitat conditions).''
    Section 424.14(e)(5) describes the particular informational needs 
associated with evaluating habitat that was unoccupied at the time of 
listing--that is, information that fulfills the statutory requirement 
that any specific areas designated are ``essential for the conservation 
of the species.'' See section 3(5)(A)(ii) of the Act, 16 U.S.C. 
1532(5)(A)(ii).
    Section 424.14(e)(6) mirrors the revised Sec.  424.14(d)(5), 
stating that a petitioner should provide a complete, balanced 
presentation of facts pertaining to the species' potential critical 
habitat, which would include any information the petitioner is aware of 
that contradicts claims in the petition. This provision recognizes 
that, in availing themselves of the petition process, petitioners seek 
to direct the Services' focus and resources to particular species.

Responses to Petitions--Paragraph (f)

    Section 424.14(f) sets out the possible responses the Services may 
make to requests. Section 424.14(f)(1) clarifies that a request that 
fails to satisfy the mandatory elements set forth in paragraph (c) will 
generally be returned by the Services with an explanation of the reason 
for the rejection, but without a determination on the merits of the 
request. In light of the volume of petitions received by the Services, 
it is critical that we have the option to identify in a reasonable 
timeframe those requests that on their faces are incomplete, in order 
to ensure that agency resources are not diverted from higher 
priorities. Although this authority is implied in the current 
regulations, making the point explicit in these revised regulations 
provides additional notice to petitioners and will result in better-
quality petitions and more efficient and effective (in terms of species 
conservation) use of agency resources.
    The Services retain discretion to determine whether a request 
constitutes a petition and to process that petition where the Services 
determine there has been substantial compliance with the relevant 
requirements. The Services need to maintain some discretion in order to 
apply common-sense principles in accepting or rejecting petitions. 
Petitions will not likely be rejected for minor omissions of the 
requirements set forth at Sec.  424.14(c). The Services also recognize 
that not all elements will be as crucial for particular kinds of 
petitions (e.g., petitions to delist a species due to recovery need not 
provide information on the validity of the entity; currently-listed 
species can be assumed to be valid entities as the Services routinely 
review such matters for listed species under our jurisdiction), and 
maintain discretion regarding acceptance of petitions accordingly.
    We would apply such discretion judiciously. If most of the cited 
source materials have been provided, the Services may accept the 
petition and may evaluate the petition without considering those claims 
for which the source materials have not been provided. Thus, even if 
the petition is accepted, the absence of cited source materials may 
make it more likely to result in a finding that the petition does not 
present substantial information. To avoid rejection of the petition or 
an increased likelihood of a ``not substantial'' finding, we encourage 
the petitioner to include all cited materials with the petition, as 
this is an important step in substantiating the petitioner's claims. It 
should not present a hardship to provide the source material that the 
petitioner used in preparing the petitioned request.
    Section 424.14(f)(1) states that the Services will determine 
whether or not a request contains all of the requisite information for 
qualifying as a petition ``within a reasonable timeframe.'' Although 
this does not establish a specific timeframe, the Act already 
prescribes a number of binding, enforceable deadlines for making 
petition findings, and we do not intend to create a new one with this 
provision. Our goal is to minimize the amount of

[[Page 66479]]

time it will take the Services to review a request and determine 
whether it qualifies as a petition. We anticipate that the 
determination can be made within weeks of receiving the request.
    The revision to Sec.  424.14(f)(2) confirms that a request that 
complies with the mandatory requirements will be acknowledged (as 
required under current 424.14(a)); however, we have removed the 
requirement to provide the acknowledgement in writing within 30 days of 
the receipt of the petition. We make this revision to allow the 
Services greater flexibility in the means and timing of communicating 
with the petitioner its determination of whether the petition complies 
with the mandatory requirements. This revision also reflects the fact 
that, in light of current electronic means of communication, it is more 
efficient for petitioners to refer to the Services' online lists of 
active petitions, which are accessible to the public at http://ecos.fws.gov/ecp/report/table/petitions-received.html and http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov, or on individual species profile pages accessed by 
searching for the species at https://www.ecos.fws.gov and http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov. We find that continuing the practice of sending 
confirmations via formal letter no longer provides the most effective 
or efficient means of communicating to all interested parties regarding 
the status of petitions.

Supplemental Information--Paragraph (g)

    We clarify in Sec.  424.14(g) that a petitioner submitting 
supplemental information later in time from their original petition has 
the option to specify whether or not the information being submitted is 
intended to be part of the petition. Specifying that the supplemental 
information is intended to be part of the petition will have the 
consequence that the Services will be obligated to consider it in the 
course of reaching a finding on the petition. It will also, however, 
have the related consequence that the timeframes under section 4 of the 
Act for when findings are due will be reset and begin to run anew from 
the time the supplemental information is received. In contrast, if the 
petitioner does not specify that the information is intended to be part 
of the petition, the Services will treat the supplemental information 
as they would any readily available information from any source. As we 
have explained, the Services have discretion to consider such 
information as appropriate to place the petition in context, but are 
not required to consider such information. Because the Act requires 
that the 90-day finding evaluate whether the petition presents 
substantial information to indicate that the petitioned action may be 
warranted, the submission of new information intended to supplement a 
petition is in effect a new petition. It is thus reasonable and 
necessary to reset the timeframes when new information intended to 
supplement the petition is received. The final regulation thus strikes 
a balance that is fair to petitioners by giving them the choice to 
determine the consequences of submitting new information.
    This provision will ensure the Services have adequate time to 
consider the supplemental information relevant to a petition and that 
the process is not interrupted by receipt of new information that may 
fundamentally change the evaluation. Also, by providing clear notice of 
this process, the Services are encouraging petitioners to assemble all 
the information necessary to support the petition prior to sending it 
to the Services for consideration, further enhancing the efficiency of 
the petition process.

Findings on a Petition To List, Delist, or Reclassify--Paragraph (h)

    Section 424.14(h) explains the kinds of findings the Services may 
make on a petition to list, delist, or reclassify a species, and the 
standards to be applied in that process. Section 424.14(h)(1) is drawn 
largely from current paragraph (b)(1), with some revisions. Most 
significantly, Sec.  424.14(h)(1)(i) clarifies the substantial-
information standard for 90-day findings by defining it as credible 
scientific and commercial information that would lead a reasonable 
person conducting an impartial scientific review to conclude that the 
action proposed in the petition may be warranted. Thus it makes clear 
that conclusory statements made in a petition without the support of 
credible scientific or commercial information are not ``substantial 
information.'' For example, a petition that states only that a species 
is rare, and thus should be listed, without other credible information 
regarding its status and threats, likely does not provide substantial 
information. As demonstrated by the Scott's riffle beetle case 
(WildEarth Guardians v. Salazar, No. 10-cv-00091-WYD (D. Colo. Sept. 
14, 2011)), the inclusion of this statement clarifies, but does not 
alter, the Services' standard for evaluating 90-day findings. In that 
case, FWS made a negative 90-day finding, because the petition did not 
present any information of any potential threat currently affecting the 
species or reasonably likely to do so in the foreseeable future, nor 
did it indicate a population decline. The court rejected a merits 
challenge to that petition finding, and found that information as to 
the rarity of a species, without more information, is not ``substantial 
information'' that listing the species may be warranted.
    In Sec.  424.14(h)(1)(ii), we have added a new sentence to clarify 
that the Services are not required to consider any supporting materials 
cited by the petitioner if the cited documents, or relevant excerpts or 
quotations from the cited documents, are not provided in accordance 
with paragraph (c)(6) of this section. Additionally, we clarify that 
the Services may consider information provided in a petition in the 
context of other information that is readily available at the time it 
makes a 90-day finding. For purposes of Sec.  424.14(h)(1), the 
Services recognize that the statute places the obligation squarely on 
the petitioner to present the requisite level of information to meet 
the ``substantial information'' test, and that the Services should not 
seek to supplement petitions. (See the Columbian sharp-tailed grouse 
case (WildEarth Guardians v. U.S. Secretary of the Interior, No. 4:08-
CV-00508-EJL-LMB (D. Idaho Mar. 28, 2011)), which provided, among other 
things, that the petitioner has the burden of providing substantial 
information.) In order for the Services to find that a petition 
presents substantial information indicating that the petitioned action 
may be warranted, the petition should itself present that information. 
The Services need not resort to supplemental information to bolster, 
plug gaps in, or otherwise supplement a petition that is inadequate on 
its face.
    However, in determining whether a petition is substantial or not, 
the Services must determine whether the claims are credible. Therefore, 
it is appropriate for the Services to consider readily available 
information that provides context in which to evaluate whether or not 
the information that a petition presents is timely and up-to-date, and 
whether it is reliable or representative of the available information 
on that species, in making its determination as to whether the petition 
presents substantial information.
    The precise range of information considered will vary with 
circumstances. In a discussion of judicial review of the Secretary's 
90-day findings on petitions, a House Conference report states that, 
when courts review such a decision, the ``object of [the judicial] 
review is to determine whether the Secretary's

[[Page 66480]]

action was arbitrary or capricious in light of the scientific and 
commercial information available concerning the petitioned action'' 
[emphasis added] (H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 97-835, at 20, reprinted in 1982 
U.S.C.C.A.N. 2860, 2862). By requiring courts to evaluate the 
Secretary's substantial information findings in light of information 
``available,'' this statement suggests that the drafters anticipated 
that the Secretary could evaluate petitions in the context of 
scientific and commercial information available to the Services, and 
not limited arbitrarily to the subset of available information that is 
presented in the petitions. In these regulatory amendments, the 
Services have crafted a balanced approach that will ensure that the 
Services may take into account the information readily available to us 
as context for the information provided in a petition, without opening 
the door to the type of wide-ranging survey more appropriate for a 
status review.
    Although the Services are mindful that, at the stage of formulating 
an initial finding, they should not engage in outside research or an 
effort to comprehensively compile the best available information, they 
must be able to place the information presented in the petition in 
context. The Act contemplates a two-step process in reviewing a 
petition. The 12-month finding is meant to be the more in-depth 
determination and follows a status review, while the 90-day finding is 
meant to be a quicker evaluation of a more limited set of information. 
However, based on our experience in administering the Act, the Services 
conclude that evaluating the information presented in the petition in a 
vacuum can lead to inaccurately supported decisions and misdirection of 
resources away from higher priorities. It would be difficult for the 
Services to bring informed expertise to their evaluation of the facts 
and claims alleged in a petition without considering the petition in 
the context of other information of the sort that the Services have 
readily available and would routinely consult in the course of their 
work. It is reasonable for the Services to be able to examine the 
information and claims included in a petition in light of readily 
available scientific information prior to committing limited Federal 
resources to the significant expense of a status review. Some examples 
of readily available information that the Services may use include 
information sent to the Services by State wildlife agencies or other 
parties, State fish and wildlife databases, the Integrated Taxonomic 
Identification System (ITIS), the International Union for the 
Conservation of Nature (IUCN), the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate 
Change (IPCC), stock assessments, and fishery management plans (this 
list is not all-inclusive).
    The information the Services may use may not only be stored in the 
traditional hard copy format in files, but may also be electronic data 
files as well, or stored on Web sites created by the Services or other 
Web sites routinely accessed by the Services. As noted, the range of 
information considered readily available will vary with circumstances, 
but could include the information physically held by any office within 
the Services (including, for example, NMFS Science Centers and FWS 
Field Offices), and may also include information stored electronically 
in databases routinely consulted by the Services in the ordinary course 
of their work. For example, it would be appropriate to consult online 
databases such as ITIS (http://www.itis.gov), a database of 
scientifically credible taxonomic nomenclature information maintained 
in part by the Services.
    Section 424.14(h)(1)(iii) addresses situations in which the 
Services have already made a finding on or conducted a review of the 
listing status of a species, and, after such finding or review, receive 
a petition seeking to list, delist, or reclassify that species. Such 
prior reviews constitute information readily available to the Services 
and provide important context for evaluation of petitions. Although the 
substantial-information standard applies to all petitions under section 
4(b)(3)(A) of the Act, the standard's application is influenced by the 
context in which the finding is being made. The context of a finding 
after a status review and determination is quite different from that 
before any status review has been completed. Further, prior reviews 
represent a significant expenditure of the Services' resources, and it 
would be inefficient and unnecessary to require the Services to revisit 
issues for which a determination has already been made, unless there is 
a basis for reconsideration. In the case of prior reviews that led to 
final agency actions (such as final listings, 12-month not warranted 
findings, and 90-day not-substantial findings), a petition generally 
would not be found to provide substantial information unless the 
petition provides new information or a new analysis or interpretation 
not previously considered in the final agency action. By ``new'' we 
mean that the information was not considered by the Services in the 
prior determination or that the petitioner is presenting a different 
interpretation or analysis of that data.
    These revisions are not meant to imply that the Service's finding 
on a petition addressing the same species as a prior determination 
would necessarily be negative. For example, the more time that has 
elapsed from the completion of the prior review, the greater the 
potential that substantial new information has become available. As 
another example, the Services may have concluded a 5-year status review 
in which we find that a listed species no longer warrants listing, but 
we have not as yet initiated a rulemaking to delist the species (in 
other words, have not yet undertaken a final agency action). If we 
receive a petition to delist that species, in which the petitioner 
provides no new or additional information than was considered in the 5-
year status review, we would likely still find that the petition 
presents substantial information that the petitioned action may be 
warranted.
    Paragraph (h)(2) is substantially the same as current paragraph 
(b)(3). Among other changes, we added new language clarifying the 
standard for making expeditious-progress determinations in warranted-
but-precluded findings, including (in paragraph (h)(2)(iii)(B)) a clear 
acknowledgement that such determinations are to be made in light of 
resources available, after complying with nondiscretionary duties, 
court orders, and court-approved settlement agreements to take actions 
under section 4 of the Act. In this rule, we are redesignating current 
paragraph (b)(4) as paragraph (h)(3), although we have removed the 
reference in the current language that ``no further finding of 
substantial information will be required,'' as it merely repeats 
statutory language.
    In Sec.  424.14(h)(2), we replace the conditional clause ``If a 
positive finding is made'' (as we used in our proposed rule published 
on May 21, 2015 (80 FR 29286)) with ``If the Services find that the 
petition presents substantial information indicating that the 
petitioned action may be warranted,'' for clarity, and to avoid 
introducing an additional, undefined term. We also add clarity in Sec.  
424.14(h)(2), by adding the phrase, ``At the conclusion of the status 
review,'' before the reference to the obligation of the Services to 
make a 12-month finding.

Findings on a Petition To Revise Critical Habitat--Paragraph (i)

    Paragraph (i) explains the kinds of findings that the Services may 
make on

[[Page 66481]]

a petition to revise critical habitat. Paragraph (i)(1) is essentially 
the same as current paragraph (c)(1), and describes the standard 
applicable to the Service's finding at the 90-day stage. Please refer 
to the discussion of the ``substantial information'' standard discussed 
in the description of Sec.  424.14(h)(1), above. Paragraph (i)(2) 
specifically acknowledges, consistent with the statute, that a 12-month 
determination on a petition that presents substantial information 
indicating that a revision to critical habitat may be warranted may, 
but need not, take a form similar to one of the findings called for at 
the 12-month stage in the review of a petition to list, delist, or 
reclassify species. Section 4(a)(3)(A) of the Act establishes a 
mandatory duty to designate critical habitat for listed species to the 
maximum extent prudent and determinable at the time of listing, but 
provides with respect to subsequent revision of such habitat only that 
the Services ``may, from time-to-time thereafter as appropriate, revise 
such designation'' [emphasis added] (16 U.S.C. 1533(a)(3)(A)(ii)).
    The Services' broad discretion to decide when it is appropriate to 
revise critical habitat is evident in the differences between the Act's 
provisions discussing petitions to revise critical habitat, on the one 
hand, and the far more prescriptive provisions regarding the possible 
findings that can be made at the 12-month stage on petitions to list, 
delist, or reclassify species, on the other. Section 4(b)(3)(B) of the 
Act includes three detailed and exclusive options for 12-month findings 
on petitions to list, delist, or reclassify species. In contrast, 
section 4(b)(3)(D)(ii) requires only that, within 12 months of receipt 
of a petition to revise critical habitat that has been found to present 
substantial information that the petitioned revision may be warranted, 
the Secretaries (acting through the Services) determine how they intend 
``to proceed with the requested revision'' and promptly publish notice 
of such intention in the Federal Register. The differences in these 
subsections indicates that the statute does not mandate that the 12-
month finding procedures for petitions to list, delist, or reclassify 
species be followed in determining how to proceed with petitions to 
revise critical habitat. See Sierra Club v. U.S. Fish and Wildlife 
Service, 930 F. Supp. 2d 198 (D.D.C. 2013) (leatherback sea turtle) 
(12-month determinations on petitions to revise are committed to the 
agency's discretion by law, and thus unreviewable under the 
Administrative Procedure Act); and Morrill v. Lujan, 802 F. Supp. 424 
(S.D. Ala. 1992) (revisions to critical habitat are discretionary); see 
also Barnhart v. Sigman Coal Co., Inc., 122 S. Ct. 941, 951 (2002) 
(noting that ``it is a general principle of statutory construction that 
when `Congress includes particular language in one section of a statute 
but omits it in another section of the same Act, it is generally 
presumed that Congress acts intentionally and purposely in the 
disparate inclusion or exclusion''') (citing Russello v. United States, 
464 U.S. 16, 23 (1983)); Federal Election Commission v. National Rifle 
Ass'n of America, 254 F.3d 173, 194 (D.C. Cir. 2001) (same).
    Further, the legislative history for the 1982 amendments that added 
the petition provisions to the Act confirms that Congress intended to 
grant discretion to the Services in determining how to respond to 
petitions to revise critical habitat. After discussing at length the 
detailed listing petition provisions and their intended meaning, 
Congress said of the critical habitat petition requirements, 
``Petitions to revise critical habitat designations may be treated 
differently'' (H.R. Rep. No. 97-835, at 22 (1982), reprinted in 1982 
U.S.C.C.A.N. 2860, 2862).
    The Services may find in particular situations that terminology 
similar to that used in the listing-petition provisions is useful for 
explaining their determination at the 12-month stage of how they intend 
to proceed on a petition to revise critical habitat. For example, the 
Services have, at times, used the term ``warranted'' to indicate that 
requested revisions of critical habitat would satisfy the definition of 
critical habitat in section 3 of the Act. However, use of the listing-
petition terms in a determination of how the Services intend to proceed 
on a petition to revise critical habitat would not mean that the 
associated listing-petition procedures and timelines apply or are 
required to be followed with respect to the petition. For example, if 
the Services find that a petitioned revision of critical habitat is, in 
effect, ``warranted,'' in that the areas would meet the definition of 
``critical habitat,'' that finding would not require the Services to 
publish a proposed rule to implement the revision in any particular 
timeframe. Similarly, a finding on a petition to revise critical 
habitat that uses the phrase ``warranted but precluded,'' or a 
functionally similar phrase, to describe the Secretary's intention 
would not trigger the requirements of section 4(b)(3)(B)(iii) or 
section 4(b)(3)(C) (establishing requirements to make particular 
findings, to implement a monitoring system, etc.).
    Although the Services have discretion to determine how to proceed 
with a petition to revise critical habitat, the Services think that 
certain factors regarding conservation and recovery of the species at 
issue are likely to be relevant and potentially important to most such 
determinations. Such factors may include, but are not limited to: The 
status of the existing critical habitat for which revisions are sought 
(e.g., when it was designated, the extent of the species' range 
included in the designation); the effectiveness or potential of the 
existing critical habitat to contribute to the conservation of the 
listed species at issue; the potential conservation benefit of the 
petitioned revision to the listed species relative to the existing 
designation; whether there are other, higher-priority conservation 
actions that need to be completed under the Act, particularly for the 
species that is the subject of the petitioned revision; the 
availability of personnel, funding, and contractual or other resources 
required to complete the requested revision; and the precedent that 
accepting the petition might set for subsequent requested revisions.
    At Sec.  424.14(i)(2), compared to our revised proposal of the rule 
(81 FR 23448; April 21, 2016), we add the introductory clause, ``If the 
Services find that the petition presents substantial information that 
the requested revision may be warranted,'' for clarity.

Petitions To Initially Designate Critical Habitat and Petitions for 
4(d), 4(e), and 10(j) Rules--Paragraph (j)

    Paragraph (j) is substantially the same as current paragraph (d), 
which refers to petitions to ``designate critical habitat or adopt 
special rules.'' In this regulation, for clarity, we expressly refer to 
the types of petitions that are covered, which are those requesting 
that the Services initially designate critical habitat or adopt rules 
under sections 4(d), 4(e), or 10(j) of the Act.

Withdrawn Petitions--Paragraph (k)

    Paragraph (k) describes the process for a petitioner to withdraw a 
petition, and the Services' discretion to discontinue action on the 
withdrawn petition. Although the Services may discontinue work on a 90-
day or 12-month finding for a petition that is withdrawn, in the case 
of a petition to list a species, the Services may use their own process 
to evaluate whether the species may warrant listing and whether it 
should become a candidate for listing. In the case of the withdrawal of 
a petition to delist, uplist or downlist a species, the Services may 
use the 5-year review

[[Page 66482]]

process or the annual candidate review to further evaluate the status 
of the species, or elect to consider the issue at any time.

Required Determinations

Regulatory Planning and Review (Executive Orders 12866 and 13563)

    Executive Order (E.O.) 12866 provides that the Office of Management 
and Budget's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) will 
review all significant rules. The OIRA has determined that this rule is 
not significant.
    E.O. 13563 reaffirms the principles of E.O. 12866 while calling for 
improvements in the nation's regulatory system to promote 
predictability, to reduce uncertainty, and to use the best, most 
innovative, and least burdensome tools for achieving regulatory ends. 
The executive order directs agencies to consider regulatory approaches 
that reduce burdens and maintain flexibility and freedom of choice for 
the public where these approaches are relevant, feasible, and 
consistent with regulatory objectives. E.O. 13563 emphasizes further 
that regulations must be based on the best available science and that 
the rulemaking process must allow for public participation and an open 
exchange of ideas. We have developed this rule in a manner consistent 
with these requirements. This rule is consistent with E.O. 13563, and 
in particular with the requirement of retrospective analysis of 
existing rules, designed ``to make the agency's regulatory program more 
effective or less burdensome in achieving the regulatory objectives.''

Regulatory Flexibility Act

    Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (as amended by the Small 
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA) of 1996; 5 U.S.C. 
601 et seq.), whenever a Federal agency is required to publish a notice 
of rulemaking for any proposed or final rule, it must prepare, and make 
available for public comment, a regulatory flexibility analysis that 
describes the effect of the rule on small entities (i.e., small 
businesses, small organizations, and small government jurisdictions). 
However, no regulatory flexibility analysis is required if the head of 
an agency, or his designee, certifies that the rule will not have a 
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. 
SBREFA amended the Regulatory Flexibility Act to require Federal 
agencies to provide a statement of the factual basis for certifying 
that a rule will not have a significant economic impact on a 
substantial number of small entities. Pursuant to section 605(b), the 
Chief Counsel for Regulation, Department of Commerce, certified to the 
Chief Counsel for Advocacy, Small Business Administration that this 
final rule, if promulgated, will not have a significant economic impact 
on a substantial number of small entities. The Director of the U.S. 
Fish and Wildlife Service also certifies that this rule will not have a 
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. 
The following discussion explains our rationale.
    This rule will revise and clarify the regulations governing 
documentation needed by the Services in order to effectively and 
efficiently evaluate petitions under the Act. While some of the changes 
may require petitioners to expend some time (such as notifying 
State(s)) and effort (providing complete petitions), we do not expect 
this will prove to be a hardship, economically or otherwise. Further, 
following a review of entities that have petitioned the Services, we 
find that most are individuals or organizations that are not considered 
small business entities. And while small entities may choose to 
petition the Services, any economic effects would be minimal because 
any increase in costs (such as notification to States or electronic 
filing of the petition versus hardcopy should they choose) will be 
nominal, i.e., not a significant economic impact. As a result, we have 
determined that these revised regulations will not result in a 
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.

Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.)

    In accordance with the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1501 
et seq.):
    (a) On the basis of information contained in the Regulatory 
Flexibility Act section above, this rule will not ``significantly or 
uniquely'' affect small governments. We have determined and certify 
pursuant to the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, 2 U.S.C. 1502, that this 
rule will not impose a cost of $100 million or more in any given year 
on local or State governments or private entities. A Small Government 
Agency Plan is not required. As explained above, small governments will 
not be affected because the rule will not place additional mandates on 
any city, county, or other local municipalities.
    (b) This rule will not produce a Federal mandate on State, local, 
or tribal governments or the private sector of $100 million or greater 
in any year; that is, this rule is not a ``significant regulatory 
action''' under the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act. This rule will impose 
no obligations on State, local, or tribal governments.

Takings (E.O. 12630)

    In accordance with E.O. 12630, this rule will not have significant 
takings implications. This rule will not pertain to ``taking'' of 
private property interests, nor will it directly affect private 
property. A takings implication assessment is not required because this 
rule (1) will not effectively compel a property owner to suffer a 
physical invasion of property and (2) will not deny all economically 
beneficial or productive use of the land or aquatic resources. This 
rule will substantially advance a legitimate government interest 
(conservation and recovery of endangered and threatened species) and 
will not present a barrier to all reasonable and expected beneficial 
use of private property.

Federalism (E.O. 13132)

    In accordance with E.O. 13132, we have considered whether this rule 
will have significant Federalism effects and have determined that a 
federalism summary impact statement is not required. This rule pertains 
only to the petition process under the Endangered Species Act, and will 
not have substantial direct effects on the States, on the relationship 
between the Federal Government and the States, or on the distribution 
of power and responsibilities among the various levels of government.

Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)

    This rule does not unduly burden the judicial system and meets the 
applicable standards provided in sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of Executive 
Order 12988. This rule will clarify the petition process under the 
Endangered Species Act.

Government-to-Government Relationship With Tribes

    In accordance with Executive Order 13175 (``Consultation and 
Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments,'' November 6, 2000), the 
Department of the Interior Manual at 512 DM 2, the Department of 
Commerce (DOC) Tribal Consultation and Coordination Policy (May 21, 
2013), DOC Departmental Administrative Order (DAO) 218-8, and NOAA 
Administrative Order (NAO) 218-8 (April 2012), we have considered 
possible effects of this final rule on federally recognized Indian 
Tribes. Following an exchange of information with tribal 
representatives, we have determined that this rule, which

[[Page 66483]]

clarifies the general process for submission and review of petitions, 
does not have ``tribal implications'' as defined in Executive Order 
13175. This rule will assist petitioners in providing complete 
petitions and enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of the petition 
process to support species conservation. We will continue to 
collaborate with Tribes on issues related to federally listed species 
and their habitats and work with them as we implement the provisions of 
the Act. See Joint Secretarial Order 3206 (``American Indian Tribal 
Rights, Federal-Tribal Trust Responsibilities, and the Endangered 
Species Act,'' June 5, 1997).

Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA)

    This final rule contains information collections for which the 
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) approval is required under the 
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). We (National 
Marine Fisheries Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Services) 
may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, 
a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB 
control number. OMB has approved the information collection 
requirements associated with this rule and assigned OMB Control Number 
1018-0165, which expires September 30, 2019.
    Any interested person may submit a written petition to the Services 
requesting to add a species to the Lists of Endangered or Threatened 
Wildlife and Plants (Lists), remove a species from the Lists, change 
the listed status of a species, or revise the boundary of an area 
designated as critical habitat. OMB has approved the following 
information collection:
    Petitions. Sec.  424.14(c) of this rule specifies the information 
that must be included in petitions.
    Notification of States. Sec.  424.14(b) requires that petitioners 
must notify applicable States of their intention to submit a petition 
to list, delist, or change the status of a species, or to revise 
critical habitat. This notification must be made at least 30 days prior 
to submission of the petition. Copies of the notification letters must 
be included with the petition.
    The burden table below includes information for both NMFS and FWS. 
Based on the average number of species per year over the past 5 years 
regarding which FWS and NMFS were petitioned, we estimate the average 
annual number of petitions received by both Services combined to be 50 
(25 for FWS and 25 for NMFS). Because each petition will be limited to 
a single species under the regulations, the average number of species 
included in petitions over the past 5 years may be more accurate than 
the average number of petitions as a gauge of the number of petitions 
we are likely to receive going forward. This estimate of the number of 
petitions the Services will receive in the future may be generous. We 
estimate that there will be a need for a petitioner to notify an 
average of 10 States per petition. Many species are narrow endemics and 
may only occur in one State, but others are wide-ranging and may occur 
in many States. However, we are erring on the side of over-estimating 
the potential number of States petitioners will need to notify on 
average.
    OMB Control No: 1018-0165.
    Title: Petitions, 50 CFR 424.14.
    Service Form Number(s): None.
    Description of Respondents: Individuals, businesses, or 
organizations.
    Respondent's Obligation: Required to obtain or retain a benefit.
    Estimated Annual Number of Respondents: 50.
    Frequency of Collection: On occasion.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                    Completion
                                                                   Total annual      time per      Total annual
                      Activity/requirement                           responses       response      burden hours
                                                                                      (hours)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Petitioner--prepare and submit petitions........................              50             120           6,000
Petitioner--notify States.......................................             500               1             500
                                                                 -----------------------------------------------
    Total.......................................................             550  ..............           6,500
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Total Annual Nonhour Cost Burden: $1,000.00, based on $20 per 
petition (for materials, printing, postage, data equipment maintenance, 
etc).
    During the proposed rule stage, we solicited comments for a period 
of 30 days on the information collection requirements. We received one 
comment.
    Comment: The commenter agreed that most petitions can be prepared 
in approximately 120 hours, but more complex petitions can take much 
more time to assemble the information within the petition.
    Response: We agree that in some cases, time to prepare a petition 
submission may be considerably greater than our estimate, while in 
other cases, it may be less. We believe 120 hours is a reasonable 
estimate for the average petition, acknowledging that there could be a 
small proportion of submissions that require more or less time. We have 
retained our estimate of 120 hours. All comments on the rule are 
addressed in the preamble above.
    The public may comment, at any time, on any aspect of the 
information collection requirements in this rule and may submit any 
comments to the Information Collection Clearance Officer, U.S. Fish and 
Wildlife Service, MS: BPHC, 5275 Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041-
3803 (mail); or [email protected] (email).

National Environmental Policy Act

    We have analyzed this regulation in accordance with the criteria of 
the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA; 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), 
the Department of the Interior regulations on Implementation of the 
National Environmental Policy Act (43 CFR 46.10-46.450), the Department 
of the Interior Manual (516 DM 1-6 and 8), and NOAA Administrative 
Orders (NAOs) 216-6A and 216-6. Our analysis includes evaluating 
whether this action is administrative, legal, technical, or procedural 
in nature and, therefore, a categorical exclusion applies.
    Following a review of the changes to the regulations at 50 CFR 
424.14 and our requirements under NEPA, we find that the categorical 
exclusion found at 43 CFR 46.210(i) applies to these regulation 
changes. At 43 CFR 46.210(i), the Department of the Interior has found 
that the following category of actions would not individually or 
cumulatively have a significant effect on the human environment and 
are, therefore, categorically excluded from the requirement for 
completion of an environmental assessment or environmental impact 
statement: ``Policies, directives, regulations, and guidelines: That 
are of an administrative, financial, legal, technical, or procedural 
nature.''

[[Page 66484]]

    NAO 216-6 contains a substantially identical exclusion for ``policy 
directives, regulations and guidelines of an administrative, financial, 
legal, technical or procedural nature'' (Sec.  6.03c.3(i)).
    At the time DOI's categorical exclusion was promulgated, there was 
no preamble language that would assist in interpreting what kinds of 
actions fall within the categorical exclusion. However, in 2008, the 
preamble for a language correction to this categorical exclusion gave 
as an example of an action that would fall within the exclusion the 
issuance of guidance to applicants for transferring funds 
electronically to the Federal Government. In addition, an example of a 
recent Federal Register notice invoking this categorical exclusion was 
a final rule that established the timing requirements for the 
submission of a Site Assessment Plan or General Activities Plan for a 
renewable energy project on the Outer Continental Shelf (78 FR 12676; 
February 26, 2013). These regulations fell within the categorical 
exclusion because they affected the process inherent to an agency 
action rather than the agency action itself, or clarified, rather than 
changed, the substance of the agencies' analyses or outcomes of their 
decisions.
    The changes to the petition regulations are similar to these 
examples of actions that are fundamentally administrative, technical, 
and procedural in nature. The changes to the regulations at 50 CFR 
424.14 clarify the procedures for submitting and evaluating petitions 
under Section 4 of the Act. In addition, the regulation revisions 
provide transparency for the practices and interpretations that the 
Services have adopted and applied as a result of case law or pragmatic 
considerations. The Services also make minor wording and formatting 
revisions throughout the regulations to reflect plain-language 
standards. The regulation revision as a whole carries out the 
requirements of Executive Order 13563 because, in this rule, the 
Services have analyzed existing rules retrospectively ``to make the 
agencies' regulatory program more effective or less burdensome in 
achieving the regulatory objectives.''
    We also considered whether any ``extraordinary circumstances'' 
apply to this situation, such that the DOI categorical exclusion would 
not apply. See 43 CFR 46.215 (``Categorical Exclusions: Extraordinary 
Circumstances''). We determined that no extraordinary circumstances 
apply. Although the final regulations would revise the implementing 
regulations for section 4 of the Act to provide greater clarity to 
petitioners on information that is likely to improve efficiency and 
accuracy in processing petitions, the effects of these proposed changes 
would not ``have significant impacts on species listed, or proposed to 
be listed, on the List of Endangered or Threatened Species or have 
significant impacts on designated Critical Habitat for these species,'' 
as nothing in the revised regulations is expected to determine or 
change the outcome of any status review of a species or any decision on 
a petition to revise critical habitat. Furthermore, the revised 
regulations do not ``[e]stablish a precedent for future action or 
represent a decision in principle about future actions with potentially 
significant environmental effects'' (43 CFR 46.215(e)). None of the 
extraordinary circumstances in 43 CFR 46.215(a) through (l) apply to 
the revised regulations.
    Nor would the final regulations trigger any of the extraordinary 
circumstances of NAO 216-6. This rule does not involve a geographic 
area with unique characteristics, is not the subject of public 
controversy based on potential environmental consequences, will not 
result in uncertain environmental impacts or unique or unknown risks, 
does not establish a precedent or decision in principle about future 
proposals, will not have significant cumulative impacts, and will not 
have any adverse effects upon endangered or threatened species or their 
habitats (Sec.  5.05c).
    We completed an Environmental Action Statement for the Categorical 
Exclusion for the revised regulations in 50 CFR 424.14.

Energy Supply, Distribution or Use (E.O. 13211)

    Executive Order 13211 requires agencies to prepare Statements of 
Energy Effects when undertaking certain actions. This rule is not 
expected to affect energy supplies, distribution, or use. Therefore, 
this action is not a significant energy action, and no Statement of 
Energy Effects is required.

List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 424

    Administrative practice and procedure, Endangered and threatened 
species.

Regulation Promulgation

    Accordingly, we amend part 424, subchapter A of chapter IV, title 
50 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as set forth below:

PART 424--LISTING ENDANGERED AND THREATENED SPECIES AND DESIGNATING 
CRITICAL HABITAT

0
1. The authority citation for part 424 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.


0
2. Add Sec.  424.03 to read as follows:


Sec.  424.03  Has the Office of Management and Budget approved the 
collection of information?

    The Office of Management and Budget reviewed and approved the 
information collection requirements contained in subpart B and assigned 
OMB Control No. 1018-0165. We use the information to evaluate and make 
decisions on petitions. We may not conduct or sponsor and you are not 
required to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a 
currently valid OMB control number. You may send comments on the 
information collection requirements to the Information Collection 
Clearance Officer, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, at the address 
listed at 50 CFR 2.1(b).

0
3. Revise Sec.  424.14 to read as follows:


Sec.  424.14  Petitions.

    (a) Ability to petition. Any interested person may submit a written 
petition to the Services requesting that one of the actions described 
in Sec.  424.10 be taken for a species.
    (b) Notification of intent to file petition. For a petition to 
list, delist, or reclassify a species, or for petitions to revise 
critical habitat, petitioners must provide notice to the State agency 
responsible for the management and conservation of fish, plant, or 
wildlife resources in each State where the species that is the subject 
of the petition occurs. This notification must be made at least 30 days 
prior to submission of the petition. This notification requirement 
shall not apply to any petition submitted pertaining to a species that 
does not occur within the United States.
    (c) Requirements for petitions. A petition must clearly identify 
itself as such, be dated, and contain the following information:
    (1) The name, signature, address, telephone number, if any, and the 
association, institution, or business affiliation, if any, of the 
petitioner;
    (2) The scientific name and any common name of a species of fish or 
wildlife or plants that is the subject of the petition. Only one 
species may be the subject of a petition, which may include, by 
hierarchical extension based on taxonomy and the Act, any subspecies or 
variety, or (for vertebrates)

[[Page 66485]]

any potential distinct population segments of that species;
    (3) A clear indication of the administrative action the petitioner 
seeks (e.g., listing of a species or revision of critical habitat);
    (4) A detailed narrative justifying the recommended administrative 
action that contains an analysis of the information presented;
    (5) Literature citations that are specific enough for the Services 
to readily locate the information cited in the petition, including page 
numbers or chapters as applicable;
    (6) Electronic or hard copies of supporting materials, to the 
extent permitted by U.S. copyright law, or appropriate excerpts or 
quotations from those materials (e.g., publications, maps, reports, 
letters from authorities) cited in the petition;
    (7) For a petition to list, delist, or reclassify a species, 
information to establish whether the subject entity is a ``species'' as 
defined in the Act;
    (8) For a petition to list a species, or for a petition to delist 
or reclassify a species in cases where the species' range has changed 
since listing, information on the current and historical geographic 
range of the species, including the States or countries intersected, in 
whole or part, by that range; and
    (9) For a petition to list, delist or reclassify a species, or for 
petitions to revise critical habitat, copies of the notification 
letters or electronic communication which petitioners provided to the 
State agency or agencies responsible for the management and 
conservation of fish, plant, or wildlife resources in each State where 
the species that is the subject of the petition currently occurs.
    (d) Information to be included in petitions to add or remove 
species from the lists, or change the listed status of a species. The 
Service's determination as to whether the petition provides substantial 
scientific or commercial information indicating that the petitioned 
action may be warranted will depend in part on the degree to which the 
petition includes the following types of information:
    (1) Information on current population status and trends and 
estimates of current population sizes and distributions, both in 
captivity and the wild, if available;
    (2) Identification of the factors under section 4(a)(1) of the Act 
that may affect the species and where these factors are acting upon the 
species;
    (3) Whether and to what extent any or all of the factors alone or 
in combination identified in section 4(a)(1) of the Act may cause the 
species to be an endangered species or threatened species (i.e., the 
species is currently in danger of extinction or is likely to become so 
within the foreseeable future), and, if so, how high in magnitude and 
how imminent the threats to the species and its habitat are;
    (4) Information on adequacy of regulatory protections and 
effectiveness of conservation activities by States as well as other 
parties, that have been initiated or that are ongoing, that may protect 
the species or its habitat; and
    (5) A complete, balanced representation of the relevant facts, 
including information that may contradict claims in the petition.
    (e) Information to be included in petitions to revise critical 
habitat. The Services' determinations as to whether the petition 
provides substantial scientific information indicating that the 
petitioned action may be warranted will depend in part on the degree to 
which the petition includes the following types of information:
    (1) A description and map(s) of areas that the current designation 
does not include that should be included, or includes that should no 
longer be included, and a description of the benefits of designating or 
not designating these specific areas as critical habitat. Petitioners 
should include sufficient supporting information to substantiate the 
requested changes, which may include GIS data or boundary layers that 
relate to the request, if appropriate;
    (2) A description of physical or biological features essential for 
the conservation of the species and whether they may require special 
management considerations or protection;
    (3) For any areas petitioned to be added to critical habitat within 
the geographical area occupied by the species at time it was listed, 
information indicating that the specific areas contain one or more of 
the physical or biological features (including characteristics that 
support ephemeral or dynamic habitat conditions) that are essential to 
the conservation of the species and may require special management 
considerations or protection. The petitioner should also indicate which 
specific areas contain which features;
    (4) For any areas petitioned for removal from currently designated 
critical habitat within the geographical area occupied by the species 
at the time it was listed, information indicating that the specific 
areas do not contain the physical or biological features (including 
characteristics that support ephemeral or dynamic habitat conditions) 
that are essential to the conservation of the species, or that these 
features do not require special management considerations or 
protection;
    (5) For areas petitioned to be added to or removed from critical 
habitat that were outside the geographical area occupied by the species 
at the time it was listed, information indicating why the petitioned 
areas are or are not essential for the conservation of the species; and
    (6) A complete, balanced representation of the relevant facts, 
including information that may contradict claims in the petition.
    (f) Response to petitions. (1) If a request does not meet the 
requirements set forth at paragraph (c) of this section, the Services 
will generally reject the request without making a finding, and will, 
within a reasonable timeframe, notify the sender and provide an 
explanation of the rejection. However, the Services retain discretion 
to process a petition where the Services determine there has been 
substantial compliance with the relevant requirements.
    (2) If a request does meet the requirements set forth at paragraph 
(c) of this section, the Services will acknowledge receipt of the 
petition by posting information on the respective Service's Web site.
    (g) Supplemental information. If the petitioner provides 
supplemental information before the initial finding is made and states 
that it is part of the petition, the new information, along with the 
previously submitted information, is treated as a new petition that 
supersedes the original petition, and the statutory timeframes will 
begin when such supplemental information is received.
    (h) Findings on petitions to add or remove a species from the 
lists, or change the listed status of a species. (1) To the maximum 
extent practicable, within 90 days of receiving a petition to add a 
species to the lists, remove a species from the lists, or change the 
listed status of a species, the Services will make a finding as to 
whether the petition presents substantial scientific or commercial 
information indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted. The 
Services will publish the finding in the Federal Register.
    (i) For the purposes of this section, ``substantial scientific or 
commercial information'' refers to credible scientific or commercial 
information in support of the petition's claims such that a reasonable 
person conducting an impartial scientific review would conclude that 
the action proposed in the petition may be warranted. Conclusions drawn 
in the petition without the

[[Page 66486]]

support of credible scientific or commercial information will not be 
considered ``substantial information.''
    (ii) In reaching the initial finding on the petition, the Services 
will consider the information referenced at paragraphs (c), (d), and 
(g) of this section. The Services may also consider information readily 
available at the time the determination is made. The Services are not 
required to consider any supporting materials cited by the petitioner 
if the cited document is not provided in accordance with paragraph 
(c)(6) of this section.
    (iii) The ``substantial scientific or commercial information'' 
standard must be applied in light of any prior reviews or findings the 
Services have made on the listing status of the species that is the 
subject of the petition. Where the Services have already conducted a 
finding on, or review of, the listing status of that species (whether 
in response to a petition or on the Services' own initiative), the 
Services will evaluate any petition received thereafter seeking to 
list, delist, or reclassify that species to determine whether a 
reasonable person conducting an impartial scientific review would 
conclude that the action proposed in the petition may be warranted 
despite the previous review or finding. Where the prior review resulted 
in a final agency action, a petitioned action generally would not be 
considered to present substantial scientific and commercial information 
indicating that the action may be warranted unless the petition 
provides new information not previously considered.
    (2) If the Services find that a petition presents substantial 
information indicating that the petitioned action may be warranted, the 
Services will commence a review of the status of the species concerned. 
At the conclusion of the status review and within 12 months of receipt 
of the petition, the Services will make one of the following findings:
    (i) The petitioned action is not warranted, in which case the 
Service shall publish a finding in the Federal Register.
    (ii) The petitioned action is warranted, in which case the Services 
shall publish in the Federal Register a proposed regulation to 
implement the action pursuant to Sec.  424.16; or
    (iii) The petitioned action is warranted, but:
    (A) The immediate proposal and timely promulgation of a regulation 
to implement the petitioned action is precluded because of other 
pending proposals to list, delist, or change the listed status of 
species; and
    (B) Expeditious progress is being made to list, delist, or change 
the listed status of qualified species, in which case such finding will 
be published in the Federal Register together with a description and 
evaluation of the reasons and data on which the finding is based. The 
Secretary will make any determination of expeditious progress in 
relation to the amount of funds available after complying with 
nondiscretionary duties under section 4 of the Act and court orders and 
court-approved settlement agreements to take actions pursuant to 
section 4 of the Act.
    (3) If a finding is made under paragraph (h)(2)(iii) of this 
section with regard to any petition, the Services will, within 12 
months of such finding, again make one of the findings described in 
paragraph (h)(2) of this section with regard to such petition.
    (i) Findings on petitions to revise critical habitat. (1) To the 
maximum extent practicable, within 90 days of receiving a petition to 
revise a critical habitat designation, the Services will make a finding 
as to whether the petition presents substantial scientific information 
indicating that the revision may be warranted. The Services will 
publish such finding in the Federal Register.
    (i) For the purposes of this section, ``substantial scientific 
information'' refers to credible scientific information in support of 
the petition's claims such that a reasonable person conducting an 
impartial scientific review would conclude that the revision proposed 
in the petition may be warranted. Conclusions drawn in the petition 
without the support of credible scientific information will not be 
considered ``substantial information.''
    (ii) The Services will consider the information referenced at 
paragraphs (c), (e), and (g) of this section. The Services may also 
consider other information readily available at the time the 
determination is made in reaching its initial finding on the petition. 
The Services are not required to consider any supporting materials 
cited by the petitioner if the cited documents are not provided in 
accordance with paragraph (b)(6) of this section.
    (2) If the Services find that the petition presents substantial 
information that the requested revision may be warranted, the Services 
will determine, within 12 months of receiving the petition, how to 
proceed with the requested revision, and will promptly publish notice 
of such intention in the Federal Register. That notice may, but need 
not, take a form similar to one of the findings described under 
paragraph (h)(2) of this section.
    (j) Petitions to designate critical habitat or adopt rules under 
sections 4(d), 4(e), or 10(j) of the Act. The Services will conduct a 
review of petitions to designate critical habitat or to adopt a rule 
under section 4(d), 4(e), or 10(j) of the Act in accordance with the 
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 553) and applicable Departmental 
regulations, and take appropriate action.
    (k) Withdrawal of petition. A petitioner may withdraw the petition 
at any time during the petition process by submitting such request in 
writing. If a petition is withdrawn, the Services may, at their 
discretion, discontinue action on the petition finding, even if the 
Services have already made a 90-day finding that there is substantial 
information indicating that the requested action may be warranted.

    Dated: September 15, 2016.
Michael J. Bean,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks.
    Dated: September 12, 2016.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine 
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2016-23003 Filed 9-26-16; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 4333-15-P;3510-22-P



                                                                                                       Vol. 81                           Tuesday,
                                                                                                       No. 187                           September 27, 2016




                                                                                                       Part IV


                                                                                                       Department of the Interior
                                                                                                       Fish and Wildlife Service




                                                                                                       Department of Commerce
                                                                                                       National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
                                                                                                       50 CFR Part 424
                                                                                                       Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Revisions to the
                                                                                                       Regulations for Petitions; Final Rule
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                                                  66462            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR                              Marine Fisheries Service (Services) use               Summary of Comments and
                                                                                                          the rulemaking process in our                         Recommendations
                                                  Fish and Wildlife Service                               administration of the Endangered                         In the proposed rule published on
                                                                                                          Species Act of 1973 (Act; 16 U.S.C. 1531              May 21, 2015 (80 FR 29286), we
                                                  DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE                                  et seq.), as amended, in particular                   requested that all interested parties
                                                                                                          section 4. Section 4(b)(3) of the Act                 submit written comments on the
                                                  National Oceanic and Atmospheric                        establishes deadlines and standards for               proposal by July 20, 2015. We did not
                                                  Administration                                          making findings on petitions to conduct               receive any requests for a public
                                                                                                          rulemakings under section 4. Thus, in                 hearing. We received several requests
                                                  50 CFR Part 424
                                                                                                          this context, the primary purpose of the              for an extension of the public comment
                                                  [Docket Nos. FWS–HQ–ES–2015–0016 and                    Act’s petition process is to empower the              period, and on July 17, 2015 (80 FR
                                                  DOC 150506429–6767–04; 4500030113]                      public, in effect, to direct the attention            42466), we extended the public
                                                  RIN 1018–BA53; 0648–BF06                                of the Services to (1) species that may               comment period to October 18, 2015. In
                                                                                                          be imperiled and may warrant listing,                 total, we received 347 comments.
                                                  Endangered and Threatened Wildlife                      but whose status the Services have not                   After further consideration of the
                                                  and Plants; Revisions to the                            yet determined, (2) changes to a listed               issues, we revised the proposed rule and
                                                  Regulations for Petitions                               species’ threats or other circumstances               reopened a comment period for an
                                                                                                          that may warrant reclassification of that             additional 30 days on April 21, 2016 (81
                                                  AGENCY:  U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service                                                                       FR 23448), to allow the public an
                                                  (FWS), Interior; National Marine                        species’ status (i.e., ‘‘downlisting’’ the
                                                                                                          species from an endangered species to a               opportunity to comment on proposed
                                                  Fisheries Service (NMFS), National                                                                            changes made in response to the
                                                  Oceanic and Atmospheric                                 threatened species, or ‘‘uplisting’’ from
                                                                                                                                                                comments we received on the original
                                                  Administration (NOAA), Commerce.                        a threatened species to an endangered
                                                                                                                                                                proposal. In that revised rule, we also
                                                  ACTION: Final rule.                                     species) or delisting of the species (i.e.,
                                                                                                                                                                requested comment on the information
                                                                                                          removing the species from the Federal                 collection aspects of the proposed rule
                                                  SUMMARY:   We, the U.S. Fish and                        List of Endangered and Threatened                     under the Paperwork Reduction Act. We
                                                  Wildlife Service and the National                       Wildlife or List of Endangered and                    received 27 comments on the revised
                                                  Marine Fisheries Service (Services),                    Threatened Plants), or (3) information                proposed rule. All substantive
                                                  finalize changes to the regulations                     that would support making revisions to                information and relevant comments
                                                  concerning petitions, to improve the                    critical habitat designations. The                    provided during the comment periods
                                                  content and specificity of petitions and                petition process is a central feature of              have been considered, and where
                                                  to enhance the efficiency and                           the Act, and serves a beneficial public               appropriate, have either been
                                                  effectiveness of the petition process to                purpose.                                              incorporated directly into this final rule
                                                  support species conservation. Our
                                                                                                                                                                or addressed in the more specific
                                                  revisions to the regulations clarify and                Purpose of Revising the Regulations
                                                                                                                                                                responses to comments below.
                                                  enhance the procedures by which the
                                                                                                             The Services are revising the                      Comments are grouped into categories.
                                                  Services evaluate petitions under
                                                  section 4(b)(3) of the Endangered                       regulations at 50 CFR 424.14 concerning               General Comments
                                                  Species Act of 1973, as amended. These                  petitions to improve the content and
                                                                                                          specificity of petitions in order to                     Comment (1): Several commenters
                                                  revisions will also maximize the                                                                              expressed concern that the proposal
                                                  efficiency with which the Services                      enhance the efficiency and effectiveness
                                                                                                                                                                would create a substantial burden and
                                                  process petitions, making the best use of               of the petition process to support
                                                                                                                                                                restriction of petitioners’ rights under
                                                  available resources.                                    species conservation. Our revisions to                various authorities, including the First
                                                  DATES: This rule is effective October 27,               § 424.14 clarify and enhance the                      Amendment, APA, and Executive Order
                                                  2016.                                                   procedures by which the Services will                 13563.
                                                  FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                        evaluate petitions under section 4(b)(3)                 Our Response: These regulations do
                                                  Douglas Krofta, U.S. Fish and Wildlife                  of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1533(b)(3)). The                not restrict or limit a citizen’s right to
                                                  Service, Division of Conservation and                   revised regulations pertaining to the                 petition the Services, but rather clarify
                                                  Classification, 5275 Leesburg Pike, Falls               petition process will provide greater                 the petition process for the public by
                                                  Church, VA 22041–3803; telephone                        clarity to the public on the petition-                identifying what would make the
                                                  703/358–2171; facsimile 703/358–1735;                   submission process, which will assist                 process most efficient and effective for
                                                  or Angela Somma, National Marine                        petitioners in providing complete                     both citizens and agencies. Although the
                                                  Fisheries Service, Office of Protected                  petitions. These revisions will also                  First Amendment to the U.S.
                                                  Resources, 1315 East-West Highway,                      maximize the efficiency with which the                Constitution guarantees members of the
                                                  Silver Spring, MD 20910; telephone                      Services process petitions, making the                public the rights to, among other things,
                                                  301/427–8403. If you use a                              best use of available resources. These                ‘‘petition the Government for a redress
                                                  telecommunications device for the deaf                  changes will improve the quality of                   of grievances’’ and to express their
                                                  (TDD), call the Federal Information                     petitions through clarified content                   views, it does not require a Federal
                                                  Relay Service (FIRS) at 800–877–8339.                   requirements and guidelines, and, in so               agency to treat every such expression as
                                                  SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                              doing, better focus the Services’                     a petition under the APA. The APA
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                                                                                                          resources on petitions that merit further             requires Federal agencies to give ‘‘an
                                                  Background                                                                                                    interested person the right to petition
                                                                                                          analysis. In the following discussion, we
                                                     The Administrative Procedure Act                     first summarize the comments received                 for the issuance, amendment, or repeal
                                                  (APA; 5 U.S.C. 553(e)) gives interested                 during the two public comment periods;                of a rule,’’ 5 U.S.C. 553(e), but does not
                                                  persons the right to petition for the                                                                         speak to the particulars of the petition
                                                                                                          we then summarize the changes and
                                                  issuance, amendment, or repeal of an                                                                          process. As a result, agencies have
                                                                                                          explain the benefits of making these
                                                  agency’s rule. The U.S. Fish and                                                                              discretion to design a reasonable and
                                                  Wildlife Service and the National                       changes.
                                                                                                                                                                efficient process for receiving and


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                       66463

                                                  considering petitions. Many Federal                     the discretion to consider, as                           Comment (6): A commenter stated
                                                  agencies have developed regulations to                  appropriate, readily available                        that there should be a nominal filing fee
                                                  govern the petition process, including                  information that provides context                     for each petition. This requirement
                                                  setting out requirements for the content                necessary to evaluate whether the                     could serve as a deterrent for filing
                                                  and informational support of petitions                  information that a petition presents is               hundreds of petitions at a time.
                                                  similar to those included in this final                 timely and up-to-date, and whether it is                 Our Response: Petitioning the
                                                  rule. See Jason A. Schwartz and Richard                 reliable or representative of the                     Services is a right the public has under
                                                  L. Revesz, ‘‘Petitions for Rulemaking:                  available information on that species, in             the Act and the APA. Neither of those
                                                  Final Report to the Administrative                      making a determination as to whether                  authorities provides for assessing fees.
                                                  Conference of the United States’’ (Nov.                 the petition presents substantial                     We conclude that the petition process is
                                                  5, 2014). In further response to the                    information. If the Services were to                  not like an application for a permit,
                                                  comment, we note that executive orders                  consider petitions in a vacuum, this                  where charging a fee may be
                                                  such as E.O. 13563 set out guidance for                 could lead to consequences that would                 appropriate; petitioners do not receive
                                                  Federal agencies, but do not create                     be at odds with the purposes of the Act               any tangible authorizations or rights
                                                  substantive or procedural rights in any                 by diverting agency resources to matters              through submission of a petition.
                                                  party.                                                  that only appear superficially to meet                Instead, the intent of the petition
                                                     Comment (2): A commenter noted that                  the statutory and regulatory standards                process is to allow the public to direct
                                                  general claims about efficiency do not                  for further consideration. In these                   the Services’ attention to a matter
                                                  justify restrictions on fundamental                     regulatory amendments, the Services                   concerning the status of a species under
                                                  rights.                                                 have crafted a balanced approach that                 their jurisdictions and authority.
                                                     Our Response: The revised                            will ensure that the Services may                        Comment (7): A commenter stated
                                                  regulations do not restrict the right of                evaluate the information readily                      that the Services should publish in the
                                                  the public to petition the Services under               available to us, without conducting a                 Federal Register notices indicating that
                                                  the Act. Rather, they provide                           more wide-ranging collection of                       they received petitions to list, delist, or
                                                  clarification to petitioners as to what                 information and analysis more                         reclassify a species, or publish the
                                                  they must include in a petition in order                appropriate for a 12-month status                     petitions themselves. Further, the
                                                  for the Services to be able to evaluate                 review.                                               Services should post all information
                                                  whether or not the petition contains                       Comment (4): Several commenters                    from a petition under review on a public
                                                  substantial information indicating that                 expressed concern that the initially                  Web site if a species status review is
                                                  the petitioned action may be warranted.                 proposed requirements could                           begun.
                                                  As noted above, agencies have                           potentially be cost-prohibitive with                     Our Response: The Services are
                                                  discretion to devise reasonable                         respect to the provisions for State pre-              required, to the maximum extent
                                                  requirements as to the format, content                  coordination and gathering all relevant               practicable, to reach an initial finding
                                                  and informational support of petitions                  data. Thus, whether an interested                     on a petition within 90 days of receiving
                                                  to ensure that agency resources are used                person submits a petition to the Services             the petition and to promptly publish
                                                  effectively.                                            may be influenced by the financial                    such finding in the Federal Register.
                                                     Comment (3): A commenter noted that                  capacity of the petitioner, and not based             The Act does not include a requirement
                                                  the Services’ proposed rule departs                     on the best scientific evidence available.            to publish notices of the receipt of a
                                                  significantly from the case law that                       Our Response: Based on public                      petition. To publish separate Federal
                                                  states the threshold for a substantial 90-              feedback and reconsideration of the                   Register notices simply to announce our
                                                  day finding is low, and therefore should                issues, the Services revised our original             receipt of petitions would unnecessarily
                                                  not necessitate a petitioner assembling                 proposal, as discussed in our April 21,               burden this process and take resources
                                                  all the information available on a                      2016 revised proposed rule (81 FR                     away from evaluating petitions and
                                                  species. The Services should make a                     23448). In the re-proposal, we modified               conducting higher-priority conservation
                                                  preliminary finding on a petition                       the originally proposed requirement for               work. The Services provide information
                                                  without access to all of the scientific                 pre-coordination with States and the                  on publicly accessible Web sites
                                                  information that could be discovered;                   proposed requirement to provide all                   showing all currently active petitions
                                                  that approach is more appropriate in a                  relevant data. For further discussion of              (see https://ecos.fws.gov/ecp/report/
                                                  status review.                                          these changes, please see comments and                table/petitions-received.html and http://
                                                     Our Response: The Act places the                     responses below under Paragraph (b)—                  www.nmfs.noaa.gov/), and we make the
                                                  obligation squarely on the petitioner to                Requirement for State Coordination                    petitions available as supporting
                                                  present the requisite level of                          Prior to Petition Submission to FWS and               information on http://www/
                                                  information to meet the ‘‘substantial                   Paragraph (c)—All Relevant Data                       regulations.gov when we publish our
                                                  information’’ test to demonstrate that                  Certification.                                        90-day findings.
                                                  the petitioned action may be warranted.                    Comment (5): A commenter stated                       Comment (8): A commenter stated
                                                  Therefore, in determining whether the                   that the Services should provide                      that the Services should set up a Web
                                                  petition presents substantial                           examples of good and bad petitions.                   site for electronic submission of
                                                  information, the Services are not                          Our Response: In the revised                       petitions to offset any potential
                                                  required to seek out any supporting                     regulation, we provide greater clarity                increased cost of printing and mailing of
                                                  source materials beyond what is                         and detail as to what elements make up                multiple petitions.
                                                  included with a given petition. As a                    a thorough, complete, and robust                         Our Response: We currently receive
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                                                  result, the Services will not base their                petition. The facts of each petition may              many petitions electronically by email,
                                                  90-day findings on any claims for which                 vary significantly, so it is difficult to             and encourage petitioners to submit
                                                  supporting source materials have not                    extrapolate that across the board.                    petitions electronically as well. Current
                                                  been provided in the petition. However,                 However, each petition and subsequent                 contact information for both Services
                                                  as discussed in more detail below in the                finding is available on http://                       may be found on their respective Web
                                                  section, Findings on a Petition to List,                www.regulations.gov, so the public can                sites, at https://www.fws.gov/ecological-
                                                  Delist, or Reclassify—Paragraph (h), the                evaluate the petitions and findings                   services/map/index.html and http://
                                                  Services are confirming that they have                  themselves.                                           www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/contact.htm.


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                                                  66464            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  However, given the file size of source                  reasonable person conducting an                          Comment (11): A commenter stated
                                                  information typically provided with                     impartial scientific review would                     that the Services propose to replace the
                                                  petitions, it may not always be                         conclude that the action proposed in the              title ‘‘the Secretary’’ or ‘‘the Secretaries’’
                                                  practicable to provide source material                  petition may be warranted despite the                 with ‘‘the Services’’ throughout the
                                                  by email. In such cases, we recommend                   previous review or finding. Where the                 regulation text because the Services are
                                                  that petitioners mail appropriate digital-              prior review resulted in a final agency               the designees of the Secretaries of
                                                  storage media (or hard copies, if                       action, a petitioned action generally                 Commerce and the Interior in
                                                  preferable to the petitioner) to the                    would not be considered to present                    implementing the Act. The commenter
                                                  appropriate office. This should help                    substantial scientific and commercial                 disagreed with the change. Although the
                                                  reduce printing costs for petitioners.                  information indicating that the action                Services are the agencies designated to
                                                  Further, we are not requiring that copies               may be warranted unless the petition                  implement the Act, the Secretaries are
                                                  of petitions be mailed to States.                       provides new information not                          those designated and confirmed by
                                                     Comment (9): A commenter noted that                  previously considered.                                Congress to serve on the Cabinet and
                                                  a similar alteration in the citizen                        As explained in response to Comment                responsible for carrying out those
                                                  petition process in a 1996 policy was                   (55), below, all requests which meet the              specific acts given to the Executive
                                                  rejected by the Ninth Circuit Court of                  requirements of § 424.14(c) are                       Branch by the Legislative Branch of the
                                                  Appeals and the District of Columbia                    considered petitions, will be evaluated,              government.
                                                  Court (Ctr. For Biological Diversity v.                 and a finding will be made. Therefore,                   Our Response: While we agree that
                                                  Norton, 254 F.3d 833 (9th Cir. 2001);                   § 424.14(h)(1)(iii) does not suffer from              the authority for making decisions
                                                  Am. Lands Alliance v. Norton, 360 F.                    the deficiencies that the courts                      under the Act ultimately rest with the
                                                  Supp. 2d 1, 6 (D.D.C. 2003)). The                       identified with respect to the                        Secretaries of Commerce and the
                                                  proposed rule change at issue here has                  ‘‘redundancy’’ provision in the PMG.                  Interior, the Secretaries have formally
                                                  the same effect.                                        The Services will still evaluate and                  delegated authority to make petition
                                                     Our Response: We have revised the                    make petition findings on all petitions               findings to the Services. As such, we
                                                  language of the rule to make clear that                 they receive regardless of whether the                have maintained the language as ‘‘the
                                                  the cases the commenter references do
                                                                                                          species is already a candidate or a                   Services.’’
                                                  not apply to this rule. Those cases
                                                                                                          finding on a petition requesting the
                                                  involved a provision of the 1996                                                                              Paragraph (b)—Requirement for State
                                                                                                          same action has already been made. In
                                                  Petition Management Guidance (PMG)                                                                            Coordination Prior To Petition
                                                                                                          making such a petition finding, we
                                                  that stated, ‘‘[A] petition to list a                                                                         Submission to FWS
                                                                                                          would have created a record that would
                                                  candidate species is redundant and will
                                                                                                          allow for meaningful review not only of                  Comment (12): We received many
                                                  be treated as a second petition.’’ The
                                                                                                          any determination that listing is                     comments raising concerns with the
                                                  PMG also provided that a second
                                                                                                          warranted, but also of any                            requirement for State pre-coordination,
                                                  petition would require only a prompt
                                                                                                          determination that listing is precluded               as originally proposed on May 21, 2015
                                                  response informing the submitter of the
                                                  prior petition, and would be treated as                 by higher-priority listing actions and we             (80 FR 29286). These included concerns
                                                  a comment on the previous petition.                     are making expeditious progress                       that the provision would be too
                                                  The courts held that this ‘‘redundancy’’                towards adding qualified species to the               burdensome, potentially requiring a
                                                  provision in the PMG violated the Act,                  lists. Finally, the findings on such a                petitioner to mail thousands of pages of
                                                  because it allowed the Secretary to                     petition will still be subject to the Act’s           petition material; it is outside the
                                                  avoid explaining why the petitioned                     statutory deadlines.                                  responsibility of the petitioner to do this
                                                  action was precluded, did not create a                     Comment (10): A commenter stated                   coordination; it is the responsibility of
                                                  sufficient record to allow for meaningful               that petitioners should be advised if                 the Services to coordinate with the
                                                  judicial review of any finding on a                     their request was screened out and                    States; it could result in adversarial
                                                  ‘‘redundant’’ petition, and circumvented                provided with the reasons for the                     relationships between petitioners and
                                                  the statutory requirement that the                      petition rejection. The Services could                States; and it would slow the petition
                                                  Service comply with deadlines for                       develop a form letter indicating which                process. Concerns were also expressed
                                                  making petition findings. In contrast,                  mandatory requirements the petition                   that the coordination requirement could
                                                  this rule, as revised, does not provide                 was missing. This way, a petitioner may               create a significant amount of additional
                                                  for treating petitions to list a candidate              easily understand which items of                      work for State agencies. In addition,
                                                  species as second petitions. Rather,                    information should have been included                 most State commenters requested a
                                                  § 424.14(h)(1)(iii) provides that any                   in the petition but were not.                         longer coordination period, as long as
                                                  previous reviews or findings contributes                   Our Response: Section 424.14(e)(1) of              120 days.
                                                  to the context for making a petition                    the revised proposed rule (81 FR 23448;                  Our Response: We have removed the
                                                  finding:                                                April 21, 2016) (§ 424.14(f)(1) in this               requirement for coordination from this
                                                     The ‘‘substantial scientific or                      rule) does provide that, if the Services              final rule, and replaced it with the
                                                  commercial information’’ standard must                  reject a petition for not meeting the                 simpler requirement that a prospective
                                                  be applied in light of any prior reviews                requirements of proposed § 424.14(b)                  petitioner send a notification letter to
                                                  or findings the Services have made on                   (§ 424.14(c) in this rule), they will,                the State(s) within the current range of
                                                  the listing status of the species that is               within a reasonable timeframe, notify                 the species stating the intent to file a
                                                  the subject of the petition. Where the                  the sender and provide an explanation                 petition with either Service at least 30
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                                                  Services have already conducted a                       of the rejection. It further provides that            days prior to filing the petition. This
                                                  finding on, or review of, the listing                   the Services will generally reject the                notification will allow States time and
                                                  status of that species (whether in                      request without making a finding;                     opportunity to send data directly to the
                                                  response to a petition or on the Services’              therefore, the submitter could rectify the            Services, should they desire. This
                                                  own initiative), the Services will                      deficiencies in the petition and resubmit             change acknowledges the special role of
                                                  evaluate any petition received thereafter               it. We appreciate the suggestion of form              States as evidenced in section 6 of the
                                                  seeking to list, delist, or reclassify that             letters, and will identify which elements             Act while not overly burdening
                                                  species to determine whether a                          are missing in our responses.                         petitioners.


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                        66465

                                                     While not required under this final                  regardless of when it was received, will              such information in their petitioned
                                                  rule, we encourage members of the                       put the Services in a better position to              requests.
                                                  public who are preparing a petition to                  make the statutorily required finding—                   Comment (16): Several commenters
                                                  coordinate with the appropriate State                   whether or not the petition presents                  expressed concern that the revised
                                                  agencies when gathering information;                    substantial information indicating that               requirement for State coordination
                                                  this coordination will help in preparing                the petitioned action may be                          would create a burden on State
                                                  a complete petition with adequate                       warranted—by providing factual context                agencies, because it would shift the
                                                  information. Additionally, we value the                 in which to evaluate the information                  States’ role from determining what
                                                  input and expertise of our State partners               provided in the petition. Further,                    information was missing from a petition
                                                  and wish to provide them the                            nothing in the Act precludes                          to directing their limited resources
                                                  opportunity to be aware that species in                 consideration of information up until                 towards providing potentially all of the
                                                  their States are the subject of petitions               the time a decision is made. It is                    relevant information on a petitioned
                                                  and to provide pertinent information on                 consistent with case law because it                   species, even if this is redundant with
                                                  those species to the Services, should                   stops short of allowing the Services to               what the petitioner eventually provides.
                                                  they have such information and wish to                  solicit new information for purposes of                  Our Response: This final rule does not
                                                  share it.                                               a 90-day finding, which courts have                   require the States to submit information
                                                     Comment (13): Several States and                     held to be beyond the scope of a 90-day               to the Services; whether they do so will
                                                  other commenters expressed concerns                     finding. E.g., Colorado River Cutthroat               be their choice. If a relevant State would
                                                  that the Services removed the originally                Trout v. Kempthorne, 448 F. Supp. 2d                  like to have a copy of the petition, they
                                                  proposed requirement for full State pre-                170 (D.D.C. 2006). Please see Findings                may ask petitioners or the Services for
                                                  coordination, which would have                          on a Petition to List, Delist, or                     a copy, or obtain a copy from the
                                                  assured the States a role in the petition               Reclassify—Paragraph (h) under                        respective Service’s Web sites after the
                                                  process.                                                Summary of Changes to Previous                        petition has been filed.
                                                     Our Response: Affected States will                   Regulations at 50 CFR 424.14, below, for                 Comment (17): Commenters noted
                                                  have the opportunity to submit data and                 further discussion.                                   that nothing in the Act requires
                                                  information to the Services in the 30-                     Comment (14): A commenter                          consultation (with respect to petitions)
                                                  day period before a petition is filed.                  expressed concern that the changed                    with anyone. A requirement to notify a
                                                  Further, § 424.14(h)(1)(ii) of this revised             requirement for State coordination                    third party, specifically State agencies,
                                                  regulation allows us to consider data                   undermines our expectation that                       prior to the submission of a petition
                                                  and information readily available at the                petitioners present unbiased and                      under the Act or the APA is without
                                                  time the finding is made. Because                       balanced information. If petitioners are              legal support. The APA provides the
                                                  information received after the petition is              not required to seek State information,               right of each citizen to petition the
                                                  filed would be readily available at the                 they may keep their awareness of the                  government, and the Act provides the
                                                  time the finding is made, the Services                  complete information intentionally low.               right to petition for the listing, delisting,
                                                  could consider any information received                    Our Response: While we encourage                   or reclassifying of a species.
                                                  up until the time the Services make                     prospective petitioners to contact State                 Our Response: Section 4(b)(1)(A) and
                                                  their findings (including any data and                  wildlife agencies for information on                  6 of the Act require the Services to take
                                                  information States have voluntarily sent                their subject species as part of creating             into consideration those efforts by States
                                                  to the Services in response to the                      a robust, well-balanced petition, we                  to protect species and their habitats and
                                                  notification letters).                                  conclude that at the 90-day finding                   coordinate with States on the
                                                     The requirement of a petitioner to                   stage, it is not appropriate to expect                conservation of listed species and
                                                  notify States at least 30 days prior to                 petitioners to coordinate on the contents             species at risk. Our modified language
                                                  filing a petition is a minimum. We                      of a petition with another entity.                    requiring petitioners to notify State
                                                  encourage petitioners to notify States                     Comment (15): A commenter                          wildlife agencies of their intent to file a
                                                  earlier, even as soon as they                           requested that the Services increase the              petition with respect to a species found
                                                  contemplate petitioning a species for                   timeframe for States to respond to a                  in those States with the appropriate
                                                  protection under the Act. Further, we                   petition to at least 60 days.                         Service assists us in meeting the
                                                  encourage petitioners to contact State                     Our Response: The Services think that              requirements of the Act regarding State
                                                  wildlife agencies and consult State Web                 a minimum of 30-day notification prior                coordination. Our revised requirement
                                                  sites as valuable sources of information                to filing a petition provides time for                for State coordination does not infringe
                                                  on their subject species, and incorporate               States to engage the Services during the              on the right of the public to submit
                                                  any such information in their petitioned                petition process without substantially                petitions under section 4 of the Act.
                                                  requests.                                               increasing the likelihood that the                    Rather, it allows States the opportunity,
                                                     The use of such information, up until                Services will be unable to meet the                   should they choose, to participate in the
                                                  the time the Services make their                        90-day timeframe. Further, while we                   petition process by providing
                                                  findings, is a change from prior practice.              encourage States to submit any                        information to the Services, while at the
                                                  However, we find that this change will                  information within this 30-day time                   same time removing any potentially
                                                  expand the ability of the States and any                period, the States (and any interested                onerous requirements on petitioners.
                                                  interested parties to take the initiative of            parties) are able to submit information                  Comment (18): Several commenters
                                                  submitting input and information for                    up until the finding is made (please see              asked how they determine to which
                                                  the Services to consider in making                      our response to Comment (13), above).                 State agencies they must send letters of
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                                                  90-day findings, thereby making the                        The requirement that a petitioner                  intent to file a petition. One commenter
                                                  petition process both more efficient and                notify States at least 30 days prior to               seemed to suggest that the Services
                                                  more thorough. In addition, this                        filing a petition is, as noted, a                     provide each State the opportunity to
                                                  interpretation is consistent with the                   minimum. Also, we encourage                           designate all appropriate agencies to
                                                  statutory purpose and with case law. It                 petitioners to contact State wildlife                 receive a copy of the petition, and
                                                  is consistent with the statutory purposes               agencies and consult State Web sites as               maintain a master contact list for
                                                  of the Act because providing for                        valuable sources of information on their              petitioners to access when contacting
                                                  consideration of all information,                       subject species, and incorporate any                  States.


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                                                  66466            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                     Our Response: Petitioners must send                  close to the time they would have done                and Tribal information, as well as other
                                                  letters to the State(s) that are in the                 so in the absence of the notification                 sources.
                                                  known, current geographic range of the                  requirement. In fact, we encourage                       Comment (23): A commenter
                                                  species. Section 3(18) of the Act defines               prospective petitioners to contact States             encouraged the Services to reject
                                                  the term ‘‘State agency’’ to mean any                   notifying them of their intent to file a              petitions that do not include data and
                                                  State agency, department, board,                        petition on a subject species as soon as              information from the affected States
                                                  commission, or other governmental                       they contemplate doing so. Thus, some                 because, in their view, these would not
                                                  entity which is responsible for the                     or all of the notification period could               present a complete, balanced
                                                  management and conservation of fish,                    run concurrently with the time that the               representation of the relevant facts.
                                                  plant, or wildlife resources within a                   petitioner is researching and preparing                  Our Response: As noted, we
                                                  State. The Association of Fish and                      the petition submission.                              encourage petitioners to use a broad
                                                  Wildlife Agencies (AFWA), which is a                       Petitioners may request listing on an              range of source materials, including
                                                  professional association for State,                     emergency basis; however, the Services                information from State wildlife
                                                  provincial and territorial fish and                     are only required to treat such requests              agencies, which often have considerable
                                                  wildlife agencies, is a helpful resource                as a regular listing petition, and to                 experience and information on the
                                                  in determining contact information for                  follow the statutory timelines for                    species within their boundaries.
                                                  State agencies. Further, in researching                 responding to the petition as a regular               However, we would evaluate the
                                                  the information to support the                          listing petition. At any time, if one of              petition and supporting evidence on a
                                                  petitioned request, the petitioner should               the Services determines that there is an              case-by-case basis to determine whether
                                                  look for range information, and thereby                 emergency posting a significant risk to               it presents substantial information to
                                                  find the State(s) in which the species                  the well-being of a species, it is within             indicate that the action may be
                                                  occurs. We note that when there are                     that Service’s discretion under Section               warranted. We note that, in this final
                                                  multiple range States and in cases                      4(b)(7) whether to consider                           rule, § 424.14 (d)(5) and (e)(6) state that,
                                                  where there is some ambiguity about the                 promulgating a regulation that takes                  in determining whether a petition
                                                  extent of range, we would not envision                  effect immediately.                                   presents substantial information
                                                  rejecting a petition because the                           Comment (21): A commenter noted                    indicating that the petitioned action
                                                  petitioner did not notify every State in                that petitions regarding species under                may be warranted, one of the factors the
                                                  question, as long as it appears that the                NMFS jurisdiction should also be                      Services will consider is whether the
                                                  petitioner made an attempt to do so.                    subjected to the provision of pre-                    petition presents a complete and
                                                     Comment (19): A commenter                            coordination with States within the                   balanced representation of the relevant
                                                  recommended that, to further reduce the                 range of the petitioned species. They                 facts. Because it is not required in
                                                  burden on petitioners, petitioners be                   stated that the rationale of increased                section (c), the inclusion of a complete
                                                  allowed to send (email) notification                    logistical difficulties for petitions on              and balanced representation of the
                                                  letters to State wildlife agencies                      NMFS species is not a valid argument                  relevant facts is not part of the essential
                                                  electronically instead of limiting the                  because many terrestrial and freshwater               information that is required for all
                                                  requirement to mailing hard copy                        species under FWS jurisdiction are also               petitions to be accepted as a petition.
                                                  letters.                                                wide-ranging and would theoretically                  Rather, whether such a presentation is
                                                     Our Response: We appreciate this                     present the same logistical problems.                 included is one of the factors the
                                                  suggestion, and clarify in this rule that                  Our Response: In our revised                       Services will consider in making our
                                                  petitioners are to include copies of                    proposed rule (81 FR 23448; April 21,                 finding of whether a petition presents
                                                  notification letters or emails as a                     2016), we revised the requirement for                 substantial information that the
                                                  required part of their petition                         petitioners to simply notify States of                requested action may be warranted. We
                                                  submission.                                             their intent to file petitions at least 30            nevertheless encourage petitioners to
                                                     Comment (20): One commenter stated                   days prior to submission of petitions to              check for availability of such
                                                  that the minimum 30-day requirement                     the Services, and we applied this                     information, to contact State wildlife
                                                  for notifying States of intent to file a                requirement to petitions sent to either               agencies or consult State Web sites in
                                                  petition improperly extends the                         Service. Therefore, this final rule                   researching species that are the subject
                                                  mandatory timelines that Congress                       applies to submissions to both NMFS                   of their requests, and to include in the
                                                  established. Another commenter stated                   and FWS.                                              petition any State information that
                                                  that a required 30-day coordination                        Comment (22): Several commenters                   would contribute to providing the
                                                  timeframe with States could be to the                   were opposed to the provision in the                  detailed narrative and/or citations
                                                  detriment of imperiled species,                         original proposal requiring the                       required under § 424.14(c)(4) and (c)(5).
                                                  especially those petitioned for                         petitioner to certify inclusion of data                  Comment (24): A commenter noted
                                                  emergency listing.                                      from State Web sites, as the information              that the discretion for the Services to
                                                     Our Response: The Act directs the                    on those sites is superficial and not                 choose whether or not to consider
                                                  Services to make a finding on whether                   adequate for a species review.                        information provided by States is a
                                                  a petition presents substantial scientific                 Our Response: After reviewing public               disincentive to the States to undertake
                                                  or commercial information indicating                    comment on the May 21, 2015,                          the considerable work necessary to
                                                  that the petitioned action may be                       proposed rule (80 FR 29286), we                       provide information.
                                                  warranted within 90 days of the receipt                 developed a revised proposal that                        Our Response: The Services
                                                  of the petition, to the maximum extent                  removed this provision. This final                    appreciate all information and data
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                                                  practicable. The 30 days’ notice that                   regulation in no way limits petitioners               provided by States, and generally intend
                                                  will be given under the regulations prior               to the sources of information they may                to consider timely information provided
                                                  to submitting a petition is by definition               consult and include in petitions. We                  by the States, along with other readily
                                                  not part of the 90-day statutory                        encourage petitioners to use a broad                  available information, to put the
                                                  timeframe that begins to run from                       range of source materials, in order to                information in the petition in context.
                                                  receipt of the petition. Further, the State             create a well-balanced presentation of                Further, following substantial 90-day
                                                  notification requirement need not delay                 facts, including information provided by              findings, the Services will carefully
                                                  petitioners from filing their petitions                 researchers, species experts, State data,             evaluate all information provided in


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                      66467

                                                  conducting subsequent status reviews.                   the Services with information they may                Presidential Memorandum of 1994,
                                                  For further discussion, please see                      have on species of concern at any time.               which set forth the general conditions
                                                  Findings on a Petition to List, Delist, or              Finally, during any subsequent status                 under which these consultative actions
                                                  Reclassify—Paragraph (h), in Summary                    reviews, it is the practice of the Services           are to occur, and cited Executive Order
                                                  of Changes to Previous Regulations at 50                to request additional information from                13175, which specifically provides
                                                  CFR 424.14, below.                                      all interested parties, including State               guidance for coordination and
                                                     Comment (25): A commenter                            wildlife agencies.                                    collaboration on policies that have
                                                  suggested that the Services add a                          Comment (27): A commenter                          Tribal implications. Further, FWS’ tribal
                                                  requirement that petitioners must                       suggested adding a new paragraph in
                                                                                                                                                                policy supports early coordination with
                                                  inform the affected States of the actual                § 424.14(h)(2): ‘‘During the 12-month
                                                                                                                                                                Tribes, and states that the ‘‘Service will
                                                  date that they intend to submit their                   finding, the Service will fully include
                                                  petitions to one of the Services. If, for               State biologists in evaluating the current            consult with Native American
                                                  example, a petitioner gives a State                     status of the species proposed for                    governments on fish and wildlife
                                                  notice 12 months before submitting a                    listing. Status assessments will typically            resource matters of mutual interest and
                                                  petition and that State provides data to                include: developing population and                    concern,’’ and that the ‘‘goal is to keep
                                                  the Services within 30 days of receiving                habitat models, identifying and                       Native American governments involved
                                                  that notice, the State’s data that the                  evaluating threats, habitat requirements,             in such matters from initiation to
                                                  Services ultimately use to consider the                 and current species distributions. When               completion of related Service activities’’
                                                  petition could be outdated.                             possible, authorship of the Species                   [emphasis added].
                                                     Our Response: We encourage                           Status Assessments will be shared                        Our Response: The Services greatly
                                                  petitioners to give the States an estimate              between State and Service biologists to               value the conservation partnerships we
                                                  of when the petitioner will be                          balance workload and promote data                     have with Tribes, as reflected in the
                                                  submitting the petition to the Services,                sharing.’’                                            intra-governmental guidance documents
                                                  but we do not require it. While we                         Our Response: The scope of this
                                                                                                                                                                cited, and appreciate the conservation
                                                  appreciate the commenter’s concern that                 regulation only includes how the
                                                  the Services be provided the best, most                 Services will conduct 90-day petition                 efforts and programs many Tribes have
                                                  current information, we do not think it                 findings, so it would not be appropriate              established. While there are no specific
                                                  will pose a problem if a petitioner                     to include the proposed language.                     notification requirements for petitioners
                                                  chooses to notify States of their intent                However, to the extent practicable and                regarding Tribes, we encourage
                                                  to file a petition more than 30 days prior              appropriate, we will consult with and                 prospective petitioners, should they
                                                  to submission to the Services. In fact,                 involve State agencies and other                      find that the range of a species includes
                                                  we encourage prospective petitioners to                 appropriate experts when conducting                   Tribal lands, to contact the appropriate
                                                  notify States earlier than 30 days before               status reviews. The ability and need to               Tribes to coordinate with them and
                                                  submission, to allow States more time to                do so will vary case-by-case, and                     obtain information which they may
                                                  submit species information to the                       depend on the expertise and resources                 have, and include this information in
                                                  Services.                                               available. However, the Act specifically              their petition documents. Further,
                                                     Comment (26): A commenter noted                      charges the Services with the authority               during any subsequent status reviews,
                                                  that Congress chose to provide States                   and obligation to implement the                       the Services are committed to
                                                  the same procedural rights that every                   provisions of the Act; the Services are               proactively coordinating with Tribes on
                                                  other stakeholder is provided—an                        ultimately responsible for making                     any species of interest on Tribal lands
                                                  opportunity to provide their                            determinations under the Act and                      and to incorporating information and
                                                  perspectives on positive 90-day findings                cannot delegate that authority to other               data Tribes provide into our reviews of
                                                  and to submit any relevant information                  agencies.
                                                                                                                                                                those species.
                                                  concerning the finding and species                         The Services recognize the expertise
                                                  during the 12-month review process.                     and in-depth knowledge many State                        Comment (29): In response to our
                                                  They should not have an opportunity to                  wildlife agencies have concerning                     revised proposed rule (81 FR 23448;
                                                  comment on petitions before the                         species under their jurisdictions, value              April 21, 2016), a commenter noted that
                                                  Services have made their 90-day                         greatly our partnerships with State                   the Services should expand the
                                                  findings.                                               wildlife agencies, and take seriously the             requirements to send a letter to States of
                                                     Our Response: We have revised our                    provisions of section 4 and 6 of the Act              intent to file a petition to also include
                                                  original proposed rule (80 FR 29286;                    in coordinating and cooperating with                  other government entities. Many
                                                  May 21, 2015) such that we do not                       the States. It is the practice of the                 county-level governments have
                                                  require petitioners to provide copies of                Services to contact State wildlife                    dedicated wildlife departments that
                                                  their petitions to States before                        agencies during status reviews to seek                manage and monitor species and that
                                                  submission to the Services. However,                    information on the subject species, and               could provide additional data on
                                                  we do note the special role envisioned                  we invite States at any time to provide               species status and habitat requirements.
                                                  for States under section 6 of the Act and               information and data they may have on
                                                  find it is helpful for States to receive                species within the State. Many States                    Our Response: It would be difficult
                                                  notifications of intent to file petitions on            provide frequent, regular updates to the              for petitioners to determine all county-
                                                  species found within their borders, to                  Services on information about species                 level or other level government agencies
                                                  afford States the opportunity to provide                that occur in their States.                           that may have information on a subject
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                                                  information to the Services on those                       Comment (28): Several commenters                   species, and contact all such entities.
                                                  species, should they choose. If, in                     suggested adding Tribal entities to the               Therefore, it would be unrealistic to
                                                  response to the required notification                   originally proposed requirement for                   make this a requirement for a request to
                                                  letter, any such State information is                   petitioners to send copies of petitions to            qualify as a petition. However, we do
                                                  received before the 90-day finding is                   State wildlife agencies, and                          encourage petitioners to avail
                                                  made, it may be useful in placing the                   incorporating any materials States send               themselves of such potential
                                                  information in the petition in context.                 as part of the petition. They cited                   information sources whenever they are
                                                  Further, we encourage States to provide                 Secretarial Order 3206 and the                        aware of them.


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                                                  66468            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  Paragraph (c)—Single Species Petition                   or subspecies or varieties of plants, and             be able to demonstrate the relevance of
                                                  Limitation                                              DPSs of vertebrate species) that consist              general information to each individual
                                                     Comment (30): We received several                    of members of a single species. Please                species in order to support our finding.
                                                  comments expressing concerns about                      see a more detailed discussion of this                The petition needs to clearly link the
                                                  the single species per petition                         issue in Summary of Changes to                        information provided to particular
                                                  requirement. These included concerns                    Previous Regulations at 50 CFR 424.14,                species and claims made. The petition
                                                  that limiting a petition to a single                    Requirements for Petitions—Paragraph                  needs to make the case for each
                                                  species will lead to an increase in the                 (c), below.                                           individual species. However, nothing
                                                                                                             We encourage members of the public                 would prevent petitioners from
                                                  Services’ processing time, a decrease in
                                                                                                          to write their petition so that it                    submitting a batch of separate but
                                                  the efficiency of the listing process, and
                                                                                                          addresses the appropriate rank (species,              related petitions for species occurring in
                                                  a reduction in listing species under the
                                                                                                          subspecies, variety, or population                    the same habitats or experiencing
                                                  Act.
                                                                                                          segment), but we also recognize that it               similar threats. While petitioners might
                                                     Our Response: By having multiple
                                                                                                          is sometimes difficult to clearly                     prefer to prepare a request that
                                                  well-organized and complete single-
                                                                                                          determine the appropriate rank with the               addresses species in groups for their
                                                  species petitions, we anticipate that in
                                                                                                          available information. We do not expect               own convenience, we find that the
                                                  many cases we will be able to evaluate
                                                                                                          members of the public who may not                     purposes of the statute are directly
                                                  each petition much more efficiently and
                                                                                                          have the expertise in taxonomy or                     furthered by requiring petitions to
                                                  effectively compared to a multi-species                 genetics to make independent                          present information species-by-species,
                                                  petition. It has been our experience that               determinations on conflicting                         because this will promote clarity and
                                                  the quality of the information varies                   taxonomic assessments that may be                     facilitate making the determinations
                                                  from species to species in the multi-                   available in the scientific literature.               required under the Act.
                                                  species petitions we have received.                     Along a similar line, if there is                        Comment (33): Several commenters
                                                  Multispecies petitions have often                       information to suggest that a vertebrate              cited the 1994 Services’ Interagency
                                                  generalized or referenced information                   species occurs in population segments                 Policy for the Ecosystem Approach to
                                                  across species, which significantly                     that may be discrete and significant (per             the Endangered Species Act. In that
                                                  complicates the evaluation process,                     the DPS Policy), then the petitioner may              document, the first stated policy of the
                                                  because it is unclear which references                  request that we consider one or more of               Services is to ‘‘[g]roup listing decisions
                                                  apply to which species. Because the Act                 these population segments as DPSs.                    on a geographic, taxonomic, or
                                                  requires us to make a finding on each                   Such a petitioner should include                      ecosystem basis where possible.’’ The
                                                  petitioned action and species                           information to allow the Services to                  commenters stated that the proposed
                                                  individually, we have determined that                   determine whether a given population                  rule does not acknowledge that these
                                                  the approach outlined in this final rule                segment of a vertebrate species may                   other ecosystem-based policies exist, or
                                                  will greatly enhance efficiency and                     qualify as a DPS (i.e., whether it may be             that there may be practical
                                                  effectiveness for both the public and the               both discrete and significant to the                  consequences stemming from these
                                                  Services. Further, we do not think it                   taxon to which it belongs). Thus, when                proposed changes.
                                                  will take appreciably more time or effort               the appropriate rank for listing is not                  Our Response: While in some
                                                  for the petitioner to provide a series of               clear to a petitioner, it is reasonable for           instances it has proven to be efficient for
                                                  well-organized and complete single-                     a petition to address multiple entities,              the Services to adopt an ecosystem-
                                                  species petitions than it would to                      potentially at various ranks, as long as              based approach to listing several species
                                                  produce one well-organized and                          they all refer to the same species. In any            in the same ecosystem facing the same
                                                  complete multi-species petition.                        case, as noted above, the petitioner has              threats, we have found through
                                                     Comment (31): One commenter                          the burden to demonstrate that any                    experience that applying this approach
                                                  asserted that requiring separate petitions              entity not already recognized as a                    to petitions has proven impractical. As
                                                  to list species, or one or more                         ‘‘species’’ under the Act may qualify as              noted above, we must make individual
                                                  subspecies or distinct population                       such, and to provide specific                         findings on each species for which we
                                                  segment (DPS) of the same species will                  information to demonstrate that listing               receive a petition. Species-specific
                                                  result in an increase to the Services’                  may be warranted.                                     petitions facilitate the Services’ ability
                                                  workload. Another commenter noted                          Comment (32): Commenters expressed                 to make the determinations for each
                                                  that if a petitioner seeks an action on a               the opinion that species sharing the                  species efficiently. However, if the
                                                  subspecies or DPS, the petition must                    same habitat types or facing the same                 Services find that multiple species
                                                  present substantial scientific or                       threats, or having other commonalities                warrant listing in a specific ecosystem,
                                                  commercial information indicating that                  in data should be allowed to be                       then we can propose a listing rule
                                                  the action may be warranted for each                    included in one petition for the sake of              setting out determinations for each of
                                                  specified subspecies or DPS. The                        efficiency as to the preparation of                   several species in that common
                                                  petitioner cannot rely upon general                     petitions and review of petitions. Other              ecosystem. The Services have found
                                                  information regarding the species to                    commenters noted that, if the Services                great efficiencies in resources and time
                                                  support petitioned actions related to                   find the petition does not provide                    in grouping determinations into a single
                                                  particular subspecies or DPS.                           sufficient information for one species,               rule, and that approach comports with
                                                     Our Response: We agree with the                      the Services have the right to make a                 our 1994 policy.
                                                  comments regarding the petitioner’s                     negative finding for that species.
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                                                  burden to provide specific information                     Our Response: The Act requires us to               Paragraph (c)—All Relevant Data
                                                  to support requested actions for all                    make findings for each petitioned                     Certification
                                                  ‘‘species’’ included in the petition. We                species individually. Therefore, multi-                 Comment (34): We received many
                                                  clarify in this final rule that a petition              species petitions do not save the                     comments expressing concerns about
                                                  may address either a single species or                  Services time, even for species within                the requirement for including all
                                                  any number and configuration of                         similar habitat or facing similar threats.            relevant data in petitions and certifying
                                                  ‘‘species’’ as defined by the Act                       Even if species are found within similar              to that effect, as we originally proposed.
                                                  (including subspecies of fish or wildlife               habitats or face similar threats, we must             The commenters raised various


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                       66469

                                                  concerns regarding the practicality and                 information that is required in all                   with States before submitting a petition
                                                  legality of this provision.                             petitions (§ 424.14(c)), and identified               also removes the element of cooperation
                                                     Our Response: The Services                           the specific information which will help              that was being fostered through the
                                                  appreciate the difficulty of determining                the Services in reaching their finding                original proposal. Anything the Services
                                                  whether all relevant information on a                   (§ 424.14(d) and (§ 424.14(e)). The                   can do to foster increased dialogue
                                                  subject species has been gathered.                      Services retain discretion to consider a              between petitioners, other interest
                                                  Therefore, in our April 21, 2016 (81 FR                 request to be a petition and process a                groups and State agencies engaged in
                                                  23448), revised proposed rule, we                       petition where the Services determine                 wildlife conservation will ultimately be
                                                  removed this requirement, and instead                   there has been substantial, but not full              for the benefit of the species.
                                                  require petitioners to include a                        technical, compliance with the relevant                  Our Response: By requiring the
                                                  ‘‘detailed narrative justification for the              requirements (see discussion under                    notification of States at least 30 days
                                                  recommended administrative action that                  Responses to Requests—Paragraph (f),                  prior to submission of a petition, it is
                                                  contains an analysis of the information                 in Summary of Changes to Previous                     the Services’ intention both to inform,
                                                  presented,’’ and recommend that                         Regulations at 50 CFR 424.14, below).                 and to foster the cooperation of, State
                                                  petitioners provide a ‘‘complete,                          Comment (36): A commenter noted                    partners while balancing the desire for
                                                  balanced representation of the relevant                 that petitioners need to let the Services             State coordination with the required
                                                  facts, including information that may                   know what sources were consulted. If                  timeframes associated with petition
                                                  contradict claims in the petition.’’ In                 an obvious source is missing or used                  findings and the rights of petitioners.
                                                  availing themselves of the petition                     incorrectly, then the Services should be              This change provides a role for State
                                                  process, petitioners seek to direct the                 able to quickly and efficiently reject the            agencies that the current regulations do
                                                  Services’ focus and resources to                        petition.                                             not have. We agree that communication
                                                  particular species. They should be                         Our Response: Under the revised                    and collaboration between State
                                                  forthcoming as to the known, relevant                   regulations, requests for agency action               agencies or other interested parties and
                                                  facts so that the Services have an                      must contain electronic or hard copies                the Services generally helps further the
                                                  accurate basis from which to evaluate                   of supporting materials, or appropriate               conservation of species. State agencies
                                                  the merits of the petition while making                 excerpts or quotations from those                     may send the Services any information
                                                  efficient use of its focus and resources.               materials, to qualify as petitions.                   relevant to a petition after they have
                                                     Comment (35): Several commenters                     Therefore, the Services are not required              been notified of a petition’s pending
                                                  expressed support for the provision                     to consider claims for which cited                    submission. In order for the information
                                                  requiring submitters to include all                     source materials are not included with                to be available to be considered as
                                                  relevant data in petitions and to certify               the petition. The Services will review                context for the petition, it should be
                                                  that they have done so, because it would                this information to ensure compliance                 submitted in a timely fashion.
                                                  provide supporting and refuting                         with the provisions set forth in this rule,
                                                  information and avoid limiting the                      and will take into consideration the                  Paragraph (c)—Other Requirements
                                                  Services to consideration of only biased                extent to which the source materials                     Comment (39): A commenter stated
                                                  information. Other commenters support                   included with the petition support a                  the requirement of proposed
                                                  the provision authorizing the Services to               complete, balanced presentation of the                § 424.14(b)(6) (§ 424.14(c)(6) in this
                                                  reject petitions if they do not meet the                facts, in any 90-day findings on                      rule), concerning providing electronic or
                                                  ‘‘all relevant data’’ requirement.                      petitions.                                            hard copies of supporting material)
                                                     Our Response: We realize that it                        Comment (37): A commenter stated                   could become burdensome and quite
                                                  would be difficult to provide all                       that there is a lack of peer-reviewed                 expensive for petitioners. Additionally,
                                                  relevant data, and difficult to assess                  science in petitions. Further, data in                the Services should clarify that the
                                                  (and certify) that all information                      petitions should be reviewed by the                   provisions of proposed § 424.14(b)(6)
                                                  concerning a species has been                           affected States’ wildlife agencies using              would cover only sources that the
                                                  discovered; for example, not all species                local information, science, and                       petitioners choose to rely on for their
                                                  information is publicly available, and                  observations to corroborate the findings              petitions. The commenter further
                                                  research for many species is ongoing.                   before the data could be used in a                    suggested revising proposed
                                                  Therefore, we have revised this final                   petition.                                             § 424.14(b)(8) to: ‘‘For a petition to list
                                                  rule so that we encourage petitioners to                   Our Response: We encourage                         a species, delist a species, or change the
                                                  provide a complete, balanced                            petitioners to conduct a review of the                status of a listed species, information on
                                                  presentation of facts, including those                  peer-reviewed literature on the species               the current geographic range of the
                                                  which may tend to refute or contradict                  at issue as thoroughly as possible in                 species, including range States or
                                                  claims in the petition. However, that is                order to ensure the petition is well-                 countries, to the extent that petitioners
                                                  not part of the essential information that              supported. While State review of                      have this information.’’
                                                  is required in all petitions. Rather, it is             petitions and their supporting                           Our Response: Copies of source
                                                  one of the factors that the Services will               information would be helpful, it would                material cited in support of a petitioned
                                                  consider when making the 90-day                         be impractical to require this during the             action are key information needed by
                                                  finding on the petition. This change is                 time frame associated with our making                 the Services to evaluate a petition
                                                  to encourage prospective petitioners to                 90-day findings. However, should the                  efficiently and effectively. The Services
                                                  include in the petition a complete,                     Services make a substantial 90-day                    are not required to search out source
                                                  balanced presentation of facts for the                  finding, States and members of the                    materials not provided in the petition to
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                                                  Services to evaluate in the 90-day                      public will have an opportunity to                    find justification for claims in the
                                                  finding and, if the finding is substantial,             review and provide comments on source                 petition. Therefore, it is the petitioner’s
                                                  to consider in a species status                         materials used in the petition at that                responsibility to provide justification for
                                                  assessment, without establishing it as an               time, as well as provide additional                   the claims in the detailed narrative; this
                                                  essential requirement that could unduly                 information.                                          responsibility includes providing the
                                                  burden petitioners.                                        Comment (38): A commenter stated                   source material on which they base their
                                                     We are revising the regulations to                   that the removal of the proposed                      claims. These sources may be provided
                                                  clearly communicate the essential                       requirement that petitioners coordinate               in hard copy or in electronic form. Most


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                                                  66470            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  petitioners opt to provide source                          Comment (41): A commenter stated                   petition must present ‘‘substantial
                                                  materials electronically, which saves                   forcing petitioners to append                         scientific or commercial information’’
                                                  mailing and printing costs and provides                 information from the States interferes                indicating that the petitioned action
                                                  an efficient way to include this essential              with a petitioner’s rights under the APA              may be warranted (§ 4(b)(3)(A)), whereas
                                                  part of a petition to the Services.                     because it no longer allows for a                     a petition to revise a critical habitat
                                                     Further, a robust petition should                    balanced presentation of information to               designation must present ‘‘substantial
                                                  provide a balanced presentation of facts,               the Federal Government.                               scientific information’’ (§ 4(b)(3)(D)(i)).
                                                  including those which may be                               Our Response: Based on public                      Note that the statute does use the term
                                                  contradictory. Including such                           comments on our May 21, 2015,                         ‘‘substantial information’’ in § 4(b)(3)(B)
                                                  information and source material                         proposed rule (80 FR 29286), we                       and and 4(b)(3)(D)(ii). In the final rule,
                                                  demonstrates that the petitioner has                    published a revised proposed rule (81                 we continue to define the relevant terms
                                                  diligently investigated the important                   FR 23448; April 21, 2016) removing the                directly in the respective subsections
                                                  issues addressed in their petition and                  requirement that petitioners must                     setting out how we make findings on
                                                  not merely compiled an                                  include information from States in their              each type of petition. For example, our
                                                  unrepresentative sample of information.                 petitions. As a result, in this final rule,           explanation of what we consider to be
                                                  Including contradictory information                     we clarify that petitioners should                    substantial scientific or commercial
                                                  also gives the petitioner the opportunity               include information from various                      information appears in final
                                                  to offer their analysis or explanation as               sources in support of their requests, and             § 424.14(h)(1)(i), because paragraph (h)
                                                  to why that contradictory information is                we require that copies of the cited                   explains the standards we use in making
                                                  not conclusive.                                         source information be included with                   findings on petitions to list species,
                                                     Finally, the suggested language                      submitted requests, in order for the                  delist listed species, or reclassify listed
                                                  regarding requiring geographic range                    Services to be able to evaluate the                   species, and is therefore the most logical
                                                  and range State information is already                  claims in the petition. In determining                place for that explanation, even though
                                                  covered in this rule at § 424.14(c)(8),                 whether the petition presents                         the term is first used in § 424.14(d)
                                                  and would be redundant. This is                         substantial information, the Services are             (which alludes to the standard that the
                                                  important information to include in a                   not required to consider claims for                   Secretary must apply but primarily is
                                                  petition, and we do not think it                        which supporting materials are not                    setting out recommended content
                                                  unreasonable to make this a requirement                 included with the petition. In the past,              items).
                                                                                                          we have found that that information in                   Comment (44): A commenter
                                                  under § 424.14(c)(8).
                                                                                                          petitions can be incomplete,
                                                     Comment (40): A commenter stated                                                                           suggested changing proposed
                                                                                                          misrepresented, or one-sided. As a
                                                  that the Services should carefully                                                                            § 424.14(c)(3) (§ 424.14(d)(3) in this
                                                                                                          result, we have revised these regulations
                                                  consider the implications of requiring                                                                        rule), concerning inclusion of
                                                                                                          to encourage petitioners to provide a
                                                  petitioners to include ‘‘electronic or                                                                        magnitude and imminence of threats in
                                                                                                          complete, balanced presentation of
                                                  hard copies of supporting materials                                                                           the petition) by omitting the final clause
                                                                                                          facts, including any information the
                                                  (e.g., publications, maps, reports, letters                                                                   and replacing it with: ‘‘. . . including,
                                                                                                          petitioner is aware of that contradicts
                                                  from authorities) cited in the petition.’’                                                                    where available, a description of the
                                                                                                          claims in the petition.
                                                  Petitioners often cite publications that                                                                      magnitude and imminence of the
                                                                                                             Comment (42): A commenter noted
                                                  are available only through paid                                                                               threats.’’
                                                                                                          that petitioners occasionally reference
                                                  databases that restrict the distribution                unpublished data. The proposed rules                     Our Response: The change the
                                                  and use of those publications through                   contain no criteria for use of and access             commenter is requesting is the addition
                                                  copyright law. Because publications                     to these data. We recommend the                       of the condition ‘‘where available’’ with
                                                  appended to listing petitions are                       Services specify that such material is                respect to including a description of the
                                                  presumably accessible to the public                     subject to the same requirements.                     magnitude and imminence of threats to
                                                  (e.g., through Freedom of Information                      Our Response: We agree that copies of              a species. Please note that the elements
                                                  Act (FOIA; 5 U.S.C. 552) requests), there               all information used to support a                     of § 424.14(d) in this rule are not
                                                  may be conflicts between the supporting                 petitioned action should be provided                  absolute requirements to qualify as a
                                                  materials requirement and the legal                     with the petition for the Services to                 petition, but the Services’ findings will
                                                  restrictions under which petitioners                    consider and evaluate.                                depend, in part, on the degree to which
                                                  obtain certain publications.                                                                                  the petition includes this type of
                                                     Our Response: We have clarified in                   Paragraph (d)—Types of Information To                 information. The magnitude and
                                                  section (c)(6) of the final regulations that            Be Included in Petitions To List, Delist,             imminence of threats are generally key
                                                  petitioners may provide either full                     or Change the Status of a Listed Species              determinants of whether a species may
                                                  copies of supporting materials or                          Comment (43): Some comments                        or may not warrant protection under the
                                                  appropriate excerpts or quotations that                 related to our definitions and usage of               Act. Thus, although we would not reject
                                                  support the assertions in the petition.                 the terms ‘‘substantial information’’ and             a petition for not including information
                                                  Where a petitioner believes a source                    ‘‘substantial scientific and commercial               on magnitude and imminence of threats,
                                                  material to be protected by copyright                   information.’’ These comments included                our evaluation of whether the petition
                                                  laws, they should consider including                    a suggestion to define the relevant terms             presents substantial information
                                                  limited excerpts or quotations from such                in the first paragraph in which they                  indicating that the petitioned action
                                                  material that they believe support their                appear and to be consistent in the use                may be warranted would need to take
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                                                  statements. This will fulfill the                       of the terminology throughout the rule.               into consideration the presence, the
                                                  petitioners’ obligation to present                         Our Response: We appreciate the                    imminence, and the severity of threats.
                                                  information to support the statements in                comments. We have revised the text of                 Therefore, we think it advisable to
                                                  the petition, without creating potential                this rule to reflect the specific language            include in petitions information
                                                  conflicts with copyright protections.                   of the Act setting out the standard that              regarding the threat severity
                                                  Where materials are subject to copyright                applies to each type of petition. The                 (magnitude) and the timing of those
                                                  protection, the Services may not be able                standard that applies to petitions to list,           threats (currently occurring, imminent,
                                                  to obtain such materials.                               delist, or reclassify a species is that the           in the foreseeable future, etc.).


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                      66471

                                                  Paragraph (e)—Information to Be                         information, along with readily                       have moved (no longer present in one
                                                  Included in Petitions to Revise Critical                available information we may consult                  area, but more recently developed in
                                                  Habitat                                                 for context on the species and the                    others), or there may be newer
                                                     Comment (45): Several commenters                     requested action, when determining if                 information on a species’ needs and,
                                                  noted that the requirement of proposed                  the petition presents substantial                     consequently, PBFs may change, PBFs
                                                  § 424.14(d)(6) for ‘‘a complete                         information indicating that the                       previously identified may no longer be
                                                  presentation of the relevant facts,                     petitioned action may be warranted.                   essential to the conservation of the
                                                  including an explanation of what                           Comment (46): Many commenters                      species, or new PBFs may be identified.
                                                  sources of information the petitioner                   noted the language of proposed                        Therefore, the Services will consider
                                                  consulted in drafting the petition, as                  § 424.14(d)(5) (§ 424.14(e)(5) in this                petitions seeking to modify the
                                                                                                          rule) was inconsistent with the previous              description of PBFs in an original
                                                  well as any relevant information known
                                                                                                          regulations at 50 CFR 424.12 in that the              designation where recognizing a
                                                  to the petitioner not included in the
                                                                                                          proposed petition regulations do not                  different set of PBFs would result in
                                                  petition,’’ would be duplicative and
                                                                                                          reference a ‘‘determination’’ that                    changes to the areas of occupied habitat
                                                  indiscernible from the requirements of
                                                                                                          occupied areas are not enough for                     that would qualify for inclusion. PBFs
                                                  proposed § 424.14(b) (§ 424.14(c) in this
                                                                                                          conservation of a species before moving               are analyzed in the course of developing
                                                  rule), and recommended proposed
                                                                                                          on to consideration of unoccupied areas               designations, but it is the specific areas
                                                  § 424.14 (d)(6) not be adopted. Another
                                                                                                          (e.g., limiting the designation of critical           as shown on a map that are designated.
                                                  commenter asked how ‘‘a complete
                                                                                                          habitat to the species’ current range                 Quite often scientific understanding of
                                                  presentation of the relevant facts’’
                                                                                                          would be inadequate to conserve the                   essential features advances after a
                                                  differs from a ‘‘detailed justification for             species).                                             designation is made, and the Services
                                                  the recommended administrative action                      Our Response: This rule is consistent              must consider the best available
                                                  that contains an analysis of the                        with the revised 50 CFR 424.12                        information when conducting section 7
                                                  information presented.’’                                regulations that became effective on
                                                     Our Response: Based on comments                                                                            consultations, not just what was
                                                                                                          March 14, 2016 (81 FR 7414; February                  described at the time of designation.
                                                  received on the original proposal, we                   11, 2016). The current 50 CFR 424.12(b)               Thus, even without a rule revising a
                                                  revised our proposal to address these                   states ‘‘Where designation of critical                critical habitat designation, the Services
                                                  issues. Recognizing that it could be an                 habitat is prudent and determinable, the              will always consider the best available,
                                                  undue burden to require petitioners to                  Secretary will identify specific areas                current information about the essential
                                                  include all relevant information that is                within the geographical area occupied                 PBFs and what makes them essential in
                                                  reasonably available, and certify to that               by the species at the time of listing and             the course of section 7 consultations.
                                                  effect, in this rule we have removed the                any specific areas outside the                        Petitions seeking to ‘‘revise’’ a list of
                                                  certification requirement from the                      geographical area occupied by the                     features, with no consequential changes
                                                  § 424.14(c) list of essential requirements              species to be considered for designation              to areas of occupied habitat that are
                                                  for all petitions. Section 424.14(c)                    as critical habitat.’’ The Services are no            included in a designation, are thus both
                                                  retains the more-general essential                      longer required to consider whether a                 unnecessary and ineffective.
                                                  requirement that all petitions include a                designation limited to the occupied                      Comment (48): A commenter
                                                  detailed narrative justification for the                areas would be sufficient before                      suggested specific wording revisions to
                                                  recommended administrative action that                  considering unoccupied areas.                         proposed § 424.14(d)(5) (§ 424.14(e)(5)
                                                  contains an analysis of the information                 Therefore, no additional language is                  in this rule): ‘‘For any areas petitioned
                                                  presented. The Services will reject                     needed in the provision of § 424.14(e)(5)             to be added to critical habitat that were
                                                  petitions that do not meet this detailed-               of this rule.                                         outside the geographical area occupied
                                                  narrative requirement, but petitioners                     Comment (47): A commenter stated                   by the species at the time it was listed,
                                                  could still resubmit their petition after               that the requirement to describe the                  information explaining: (1) Why the
                                                  adding a detailed narrative in                          physical or biological features (PBFs)                species’ present range is inadequate to
                                                  accordance with § 424.14(c). In this rule,              provides little value because the                     ensure its conservation; (2) why the
                                                  paragraphs (d) and (e) of § 424.14(d) and               Services have already described them in               petitioned area presently contains
                                                  (e), on the other hand, do not prescribe                the final critical habitat rule for the               features essential to the conservation of
                                                  essential requirements for all petitions,               species.                                              the species; and (3) how the designation
                                                  and instead identify factors that the                      Our Response: In requests to revise                will impact, economically and
                                                  Services will consider in making 90-day                 critical habitat in occupied areas, it is             otherwise, the use of the petitioned area
                                                  findings. One of these factors, set forth               essential to provide information on                   for other purposes. For any areas
                                                  at § 424.14(d)(5) and § 424.14(e)(6), is                whether the PBFs are present or absent                petitioned to be removed from critical
                                                  the degree to which the petition                        in those areas (see § 424.14(e)(4): ‘‘For             habitat that were outside the
                                                  includes ‘‘[a] complete, balanced                       any areas petitioned for removal from                 geographical area occupied by the
                                                  representation of the relevant facts,                   currently designated critical habitat                 species at the time it was listed,
                                                  including information that may                          within the geographical area occupied                 information indicating why the
                                                  contradict claims in the petition.’’ A                  by the species at the time it was listed,             petitioned areas are no longer essential
                                                  request will not be rejected as a petition              information indicating that the specific              to the conservation of the species.’’
                                                  for failing to meet § 424.14(d)(5) or                   areas do not contain the physical or                     Our Response: We appreciate the
                                                  § 424.14(e)(6). It may be difficult for a               biological features. . . .’’). In some                commenter’s concern that unoccupied
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                                                  non-scientist to locate and present all of              cases, petitioners may believe that we                habitat not be added to an existing
                                                  the relevant facts completely, and,                     have misidentified or not included all                critical habitat designation without good
                                                  although the Services encourage                         PBFs, and that recognizing a different                reason, but choose to retain the
                                                  petitioners to provide a balanced                       set of PBFs would lead to additional                  proposed language at § 424.14(e)(5):
                                                  presentation of facts, there may not                    areas of occupied habitat qualifying for              ‘‘For areas petitioned to be added to or
                                                  always be information contradicting                     inclusion in a designation, or certain                removed from critical habitat that were
                                                  claims made in the petition. As a result,               areas of the existing designation no                  outside the geographical area occupied
                                                  the Services will consider this                         longer qualifying. Similarly, PBFs may                by the species at the time it was listed,


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                                                  66472            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  information indicating why the                          reasonable timeframe, notify the sender               finding. Please see Findings on a
                                                  petitioned areas are or are not essential               and provide an explanation of the                     Petition to List, Delist, or Reclassify—
                                                  for the conservation of the species.’’                  rejection. The petitioner will then be                Paragraph (h) under Summary of
                                                  There are several reasons for this:                     able to correct the request and resubmit              Changes to Previous Regulations at 50
                                                     • In light of recent revisions to 50                 to the Services at their convenience.                 CFR 424.14, below, for further
                                                  CFR 424.12, the Services are not                           Comment (50): Some commenters                      discussion.
                                                  required to first consider whether a                    asked whether petitioners would be
                                                  designation limited to present range is                 notified when a request is determined                 Paragraph (h)—Findings on Petitions To
                                                  adequate to ensure conservation.                        not to constitute a petition and given the            List, Delist, or Reclassify
                                                     • This provision needs to address                    reasons for such determination. As                       Comment (52): Several commenters
                                                  requests to add as well as remove                       drafted, the proposed rule does not                   expressed concerns about the
                                                  unoccupied areas from a critical habitat                indicate the Services will notify                     information standard we use in
                                                  designation.                                            petitioners of a compliant petition.                  evaluating petitioned requests. Some
                                                     • The language is consistent with the                   Our Response: As noted above,                      specifically noted the addition of the
                                                  definition of critical habitat in the Act               submissions that do not qualify as                    term ‘‘credible’’ in definition of the
                                                  (16 U.S.C. 1532(5)(A)(ii)), which                       petitions will be returned to the sender,             substantial scientific or commercial
                                                  includes unoccupied areas, that is,                     along with a form letter or checklist                 information standard in proposed
                                                  ‘‘specific areas outside the geographical               describing what components are                        § 424.14(g) (§ 424.14(h) in this rule).
                                                  area occupied by the species at the time                missing. However, for expediency, we                  One commenter expressed concern that
                                                  it is listed in accordance with the                     will generally not notify petitioners of              the Services would define credible as
                                                  provisions of section 4 of this Act, upon               acceptance of petitions in a separate                 precluding certain categories of
                                                  a determination by the Secretary that                   communication; in most cases,                         information or data, such as traditional
                                                  such areas are essential for the                        publication of the Services’ 90-day                   ecological knowledge or gray literature
                                                  conservation of the species.’’ Unlike the               findings will serve as such notifications.            that may not be published or available
                                                  geographical areas occupied by the                         Comment (51): A commenter                          in traditional scientific journals.
                                                  species at the time it is listed,                       supported the deletion of the phrase ‘‘in             Conversely, another commenter noted
                                                  unoccupied areas need not include the                   the agency’s possession’’ as it relates to            that the Services should only consider
                                                  essential PBFs (see 16 U.S.C. 1532(5)(A)                information the Services may consider                 peer-reviewed literature provided in a
                                                  (i) of the Act). Therefore, it would be                 when analyzing a petition. In the past,               petition to be credible, sound science.
                                                  inconsistent with the Act to require                    the ‘‘in the agency’s possession’’                       Our Response: Section 4(b)(3)(A) of
                                                  such information in requests to revise                  requirement has been interpreted as the               the Act directs the Services to make a
                                                  unoccupied critical habitat.                            inability of the Services to even do a                finding as to whether a petition presents
                                                     • A determination as to whether                      simple Internet search for helpful                    ‘‘substantial scientific or commercial
                                                  unoccupied areas are essential for the                  information after a petition has been                 information indicating that the
                                                  conservation of the species is made by                  received. The Services should not be                  petitioned action may be warranted.’’
                                                  the Services, not the petitioner.                       limited to the use of information they                This is the threshold required of the
                                                  However, it may be helpful if the                       have in their possession at the time they             information provided in a petition, and
                                                  petitioners include information                         receive a petition. Such a limitation                 is the standard we use at § 424.14(h) in
                                                  indicating why the petitioned areas are                 could lead to a ‘‘substantial’’ 90-day                this rule. The Act notably does not
                                                  or are not essential for the conservation               finding, not because a species may be at              require that the Services make 90-day
                                                  of the species.                                         risk, but simply because the petition                 findings on the basis of the ‘‘best
                                                                                                          presents a skewed or impartial view of                scientific and commercial data
                                                  Paragraph (f)—Response to Requests                      the facts.                                            available.’’ Nevertheless, we are
                                                    Comment (49): A commenter stated                         Our Response: We agree. The phrase                 cognizant that positive ‘‘substantial
                                                  the Services should accept petitions that               ‘‘in the agency’s possession’’ was                    information’’ findings require that the
                                                  make a good faith effort to comply with                 interpreted by some as meaning hard                   Services devote additional time and
                                                  provisions of the regulations and not                   (paper) copies of information materials               resources towards completing status
                                                  reject for minor procedural flaws. The                  stored in agency office files at a physical           assessments for those species, as well as
                                                  Services should include a ‘‘cure’’                      location. Most information and data are               12-month findings. Therefore, we have
                                                  provision in which the Services alert the               now accessed and stored electronically.               concluded that it would be more
                                                  petitioner to flaws in the petition and                 Therefore, it is appropriate for the                  efficient and would better advance the
                                                  the steps that must be taken to remedy                  Services to place petitions in context by             purposes of the Act to clarify for
                                                  them and allow a specified amount of                    consulting readily available                          petitioners that—for a petition to
                                                  time for the petitioner to fix the flaws.               information, such as information that is              indicate that the petitioned action may
                                                  Unless petitioners are supplied with                    stored electronically in databases                    be warranted, and thereby merit this
                                                  constructive feedback, this will greatly                routinely consulted by the Services in                additional expenditure of the Services’
                                                  hamper the petition process.                            the ordinary course of their work. For                resources—the information provided in
                                                    Our Response: In this rule at                         example, it would be appropriate to                   the petition must, at a minimum, be
                                                  § 424.14(f), the Services retain                        consult online databases such as the                  credible. ‘‘Credible scientific or
                                                  discretion to treat as a petition a request             Integrated Taxonomic Information                      commercial information’’ may include
                                                  that the Services determine                             System (http://www.itis.gov), a database              all types of data, such as peer-reviewed
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                                                  substantially complies with the relevant                of scientifically credible taxonomic                  literature, gray literature, traditional
                                                  requirements. Therefore, it is unlikely                 nomenclature information maintained                   ecological knowledge, etc.
                                                  that a request will be rejected for minor               in part by the Services. This rule allows                Comment (53): A commenter stated
                                                  omissions. However, if the Services                     the Services to use readily available                 that the Secretaries still appear to have
                                                  determine that the request does not                     information to provide context for the                broad discretion in establishing the
                                                  meet the requirements set forth at                      claims in the petition, even should it be             definition of ‘‘reasonable person.’’ The
                                                  § 424.14(c), they will, as noted at                     received after the time the petition is               commenter asserts that the definition
                                                  paragraph § 424.14(f)(1), within a                      filed, up to the time we make the                     leaves open the very type of arbitrary or


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                       66473

                                                  capricious litigation the Service is                    review is to determine whether the                    expenditure of the Services’ resources—
                                                  attempting to resolve by citing the                     Secretary’s action was arbitrary or                   the information provided in the petition
                                                  reasoning in the Congressional                          capricious in light of the scientific and             must, at a minimum, be credible. In
                                                  Conference Report. The courts typically                 commercial information available                      other words, the Services must evaluate
                                                  defer to the agencies’ interpretation of                concerning the petitioned action.’’ (H.R.             whether the information in the petition
                                                  scientific information. Therefore,                      Conf. Rep. No. 97–835, at 20 (1982),                  is substantiated and not mere
                                                  petitioners are left without remedy                     reprinted in 1982 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2860,                  speculation or opinion. Only those
                                                  when placed in disagreement with the                    2862) [emphasis added]. Finally, a                    claims or conclusions drawn in the
                                                  Secretary’s conclusion.                                 ‘‘reasonable person’’ standard is                     petition with the support of credible
                                                     Our Response: The Act requires the                   commonly used in legal contexts.                      scientific or commercial information
                                                  Services to consider whether a petition                    If a person disagrees with a Service’s             should be considered ‘‘substantial
                                                  presents substantial information to                     finding, in the case of 90-day petition               information.’’
                                                  demonstrate that the requested action                   findings in which the Service finds                      The addition of ‘‘conducting an
                                                  may be warranted, but does not define                   there is substantial information                      impartial scientific review’’ to the
                                                  ‘‘substantial information.’’ The Services               indicating that the petitioned action                 reasonable person standard for what
                                                  therefore have discretion to adopt a                    may be warranted (in other words, not                 constitutes ‘‘substantial scientific and
                                                  reasonable interpretation of this                       a final agency action), that person could             commercial information’’ similarly
                                                  foundational standard that furthers the                 provide additional information                        clarifies to petitioners the context
                                                  statutory purposes and reflects the                     regarding the species to help inform                  against which the Services will
                                                  scientific context in which the Service                 future agency actions such as the                     necessarily evaluate petitions. The
                                                  makes decisions.                                        subsequent 12-month finding. In the                   Services must evaluate petitions on the
                                                     In the interest of providing greater                 case of not-substantial 90-day findings               basis of the scientific validity of the
                                                  clarity and transparency to the public,                 (which are final agency actions), one                 request; that is, impartially evaluate
                                                  we have promulgated this rule to clarify                remedy would be to submit a new                       whether there is a scientific basis for the
                                                  and more thoroughly explain what is                     petition with further justification and               requested action, and not just
                                                  required in a petition and how the                      rationale for the requested action. Also,             unsubstantiated claims. Because the
                                                  Services make their findings. We thus                   final agency actions are judicially                   context for this action involves
                                                  explain that the ‘‘substantial scientific               reviewable.                                           evaluating scientific information, it is
                                                  or commercial information’’ standard                       Comment (54): Proposed                             appropriate and necessary to take as our
                                                  (which applies to listing, delisting, and               § 424.14(g)(1)(i) (§ 424.14(h)(1)(i) in this          reference a person conducting an
                                                  reclassification petitions) refers to                   rule) expands on the ‘‘substantial                    impartial scientific review. There is
                                                  credible scientific or commercial                       scientific or commercial information’’                nothing in the Act to suggest that 90-day
                                                  information in support of the petition’s                standard of the Act. Under the existing               findings should be evaluated based on
                                                  claims such that a reasonable person                    petitions regulation, ‘‘substantial                   what persons lacking scientific
                                                  conducting an impartial scientific                      scientific or commercial information’’                background would conclude, and to
                                                  review would conclude that the action                   means ‘‘that amount of information that               adopt a generic standard would not
                                                  proposed in the petition may be                         would lead a reasonable person to                     further the purposes of the Act or reflect
                                                  warranted. (We similarly interpret the                  believe that the measure proposed in the              how the Services must and do actually
                                                  ‘‘substantial scientific information’’                  petition may be warranted.’’ Now, the                 go about evaluating petitions.
                                                  standard that applies to petitions                      Services add to this ‘‘a reasonable                      Comment (55): Several commenters
                                                  seeking critical habitat revisions.) This               person conducting an impartial                        raised questions regarding the Services’
                                                  interpretation clarifies that the Services              scientific review would conclude that                 treatment of a subsequent petition,
                                                  must evaluate petitions in their capacity               the action proposed in the petition may               including the definitions and
                                                  as biologists with the scientific expertise             be warranted.’’ Normally, reasonable                  interpretations of the terms
                                                  to investigate whether a species may be                 people do not, in the course of their                 ‘‘considered’’ and ‘‘sufficient’’; how our
                                                  imperiled. As such, the Services analyze                daily lives, conduct impartial scientific             determination would relate to other
                                                  and decide whether petitions present                    reviews.                                              reviews, such as 5-year reviews; and
                                                  ‘‘substantial information’’ consistent                     Our Response: Section 424.14(h)(1)(i)              how new information or new analyses,
                                                  with the analyses and decisions that a                  clarifies and expands on the substantial-             such as models, would be evaluated.
                                                  hypothetical reasonable biologist would                 information standard by defining it as                   Our Response: In this rule,
                                                  make. In addition, this hypothetical                    credible scientific and commercial                    § 424.14(h)(1)(iii) addresses situations in
                                                  reasonable scientist would need to be                   information that would lead a                         which the Services have already made
                                                  impartial and approach the question as                  reasonable person conducting an                       a finding on or conducted a review of
                                                  he or she would any scientific inquiry.                 impartial scientific review to conclude               the listing status of a species, and, after
                                                  Finally, the hypothetical person                        that the action proposed in the petition              such finding or review, receive a
                                                  evaluating the information in the                       may be warranted. (We similarly define                petition seeking to list, delist, or
                                                  petition would need to perceive that the                the ‘‘substantial scientific information’’            reclassify that species. The provisions at
                                                  information is credible; conclusions                    standard that applies to petitions                    § 424.14(h)(1)(iii) do not state or imply
                                                  drawn in the petition without the                       seeking revisions to critical habitat at              that such petitions will be rejected
                                                  support of credible scientific or                       424.12(i)(1)(i).) As discussed in                     outright; indeed, as noted below, we
                                                  commercial information will not be                      response to Comment 53, the Services                  will consider all requests that meet the
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                                                  considered ‘‘substantial information.’’                 have the discretion and a need to adopt               requirements of § 424.14(c) to be
                                                  These concepts are in no way new to the                 a reasonable interpretation of this key               petitions, and we will evaluate all
                                                  Services’ practice; this is how we have                 standard, which is not defined in the                 petitions and make findings on them.
                                                  and must evaluate petitions. Further, we                statute. We have included the term                    Instead, we include this provision to
                                                  believe this clarification aligns with the              ‘‘credible,’’ because—for a petition to               provide prospective petitioners greater
                                                  House Conference report, which states                   indicate that the standard for the                    predictability and clarity, by making
                                                  that, when courts review such a                         petitioned action may have been met,                  clear that we must evaluate such
                                                  decision, the ‘‘object of [the judicial]                and thereby merit the additional                      petitions in light of the previous


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                                                  66474            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  findings or determinations. Thus, if no                 agency action. On the other hand, if the              squarely on the petitioner to present the
                                                  new information or analysis is provided                 previous status review did not result in              requisite level of information to meet
                                                  in such a petition, the outcome will                    a final agency action, the petition would             the ‘‘substantial information’’ test;
                                                  likely (but not always) be a not-                       not be required to overcome the                       therefore, the Services should not seek
                                                  substantial 90-day finding.                             presumption that, unless it includes                  to supplement petitions. However, in
                                                     To clarify some of the terms we used,                information or analysis that was not                  determining whether the petition
                                                  by using the term ‘‘considered’’ in the                 considered in the previous status                     presents substantial scientific or
                                                  phrase ‘‘new information not previously                 review, it generally will not present                 commercial information, it may be
                                                  considered,’’ we mean that information                  substantial information indicating that               appropriate to consider readily available
                                                  or analysis was evaluated in a previous                 the petitioned action may be warranted.               information to provide context to the
                                                  finding, status review, or listing                         Comment (56): One commenter stated                 information the petition presents. It is
                                                  determination. ‘‘Sufficient’’ new                       that the ‘‘new information’’ requirement              not the intent of the Services to initiate
                                                  information is that information or                      in the revised proposed rule (81 FR                   any data collection or research methods,
                                                  analysis which would lead a reasonable                  23448; April 21, 2016) could severely                 nor is there time for the Services to
                                                  person conducting an impartial                          limit the ability to file delisting                   conduct such methods in the 90-day
                                                  scientific review to conclude that the                  petitions that assert flaws in the                    petition finding process.
                                                  action proposed in the petition may be                  Services’ prior consideration of                         Comment (58): A commenter stated
                                                  warranted, despite the previous review                  information. Petitioners should be able               that, to the extent that the Service
                                                  or finding.                                             to assert that information the Services               intends to review and rely upon readily
                                                     With respect to prior listing                        previously considered was misused,                    available information, there first must
                                                  determinations, the prospective                         misrepresented, or misinterpreted, or                 be a public notice and availability of
                                                  petitioner may review the final listing                 that the original data for the species’               such information for review and
                                                  rule and any supporting documentation                   classification were in error as the basis             comment by the public. Otherwise, the
                                                  to see what information was considered                  for delisting.                                        public would not be made aware of such
                                                  and evaluated. Five-year status reviews                    Our Response: This rule will not limit
                                                                                                                                                                information and afforded the ability to
                                                  are not published in the Federal                        the ability to file delisting or other
                                                                                                                                                                comment on the accuracy, sufficiency
                                                  Register but are posted on the Services’                petitions. In cases where petitioners
                                                                                                                                                                and relevance of such information.
                                                  Web sites. FWS status reviews and                       request an outcome that differs from the
                                                  Federal Register documents are posted                   outcome reached in a previous Service                    Our Response: The statute does not
                                                  on the species profile pages maintained                 finding or determination, the rule                    provide for a public comment process at
                                                  in FWS’ Environmental Conservation                      simply recognizes that the courts apply               the 90-day stage of review of petitions.
                                                  Online System (ECOS). Species profiles                  a presumption that agency actions are                 The Services provide public notice and
                                                  may be accessed by searching on the                     valid and reasonable, and therefore the               request information when publishing a
                                                  species name at http://                                 petitioner should provide new or                      positive 90-day finding and initiating a
                                                  www.ecos.fws.gov/ecp. NMFS’                             additional information or a new analysis              12-month status review in response to a
                                                  documents can be found at http://                       not previously considered. We add this                petition, but it is neither appropriate nor
                                                  www.nmfs.noaa.gov. In conducting                        requirement to prevent the petition                   feasible to do this prior to making a 90-
                                                  status reviews, the Services may                        process from being used inefficiently—                day finding due to statutory time
                                                  reevaluate data they already considered                 in effect, to voice disagreement with a               constraints. Although the Services may
                                                  in previous status reviews. Petitioners                 previous determination by one of the                  consider readily available information
                                                  may similarly present a new analysis of                 Services without providing any new                    to provide context in which to evaluate
                                                  existing data in support of their                       information or analysis relevant to the               the information presented in a petition,
                                                  requests, and the Services will evaluate                question at issue, and instead of using               the 90-day petition finding is based on
                                                  such requests on that basis. A petitioned               the appropriate judicial forum to                     the information provided in the
                                                  request could be based on discovery of                  challenge the previous determination                  petition. A 90-day finding is an initial
                                                  an error in research regarding                          directly. An appropriate showing may                  assessment of information provided in
                                                  information previously considered by                    include an explanation of how                         the petition and, when appropriate,
                                                  the Services.                                           information used in the previous                      information readily available to the
                                                     Unless such a petition provides                      analysis was misused, misrepresented,                 Services. When our 90-day findings are
                                                  different data, or a different analysis or              or misinterpreted. Also, this rule does               published in the Federal Register, the
                                                  interpretation of, or errors discovered                 not prevent a petitioner from requesting              petition and supporting information,
                                                  in, the data, model or analytic                         a delisting of a listed entity based on               and any other information we may have
                                                  methodology used in a previous finding,                 error in classification of that listed                relied upon for our finding, is posted
                                                  review, or determination, the                           entity.                                               online and made available to the public.
                                                  conclusions may be the same, and the                                                                          If we find the petition presents
                                                  Services may find that such a petition                  Paragraph (h)—Use of Information in                   substantial information that the action
                                                  does not provide substantial                            Agency Files                                          may be warranted, we announce the
                                                  information indicating that the                           Comment (57): Several commenters                    initiation of a status review and request
                                                  petitioned action may be warranted.                     support the agencies’ use of additional               information from the public, which may
                                                     We make the distinction that, in the                 information as described in the                       include feedback on the accuracy,
                                                  case of prior reviews that led to final                 proposed rule, as long as it is clear that            sufficiency, and relevance of any
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                                                  agency actions (such as final listings,                 such information is readily available                 information considered in making the
                                                  12-month not-warranted findings, and                    and does not serve as a justification for             finding. For petitions that are found to
                                                  90-day not-substantial findings), a                     the Service to actively supplement the                be not substantial, we publish the
                                                  petition would generally be presumed                    petition or initiate new data collection              finding and make available the petition
                                                  not to provide substantial information                  processes, contracts or research as part              and any supporting information
                                                  unless the petition provides new                        of the 90-day finding process.                        considered for the finding. The public is
                                                  information or a new analysis not                         Our Response: The Services recognize                invited to submit information on any
                                                  previously considered in the final                      that the statute places the obligation                species at any time, which may include


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                        66475

                                                  evaluation of information considered for                   As discussed in greater detail in the              petitions; rather, it will make the
                                                  any finding.                                            National Environmental Policy Act                     Services’ consideration of petitions
                                                     Comment (59): A commenter raised a                   Determination section below and in the                more efficient.
                                                  question regarding proposed                             Environmental Action Statement
                                                  § 424.14(g)(1)(ii) (§ 424.14(h)(1)(ii) in                                                                     Summary of Changes to Previous
                                                                                                          (available at http://www.regulations.gov,
                                                  this rule), asking how can the Services                                                                       Regulations at 50 CFR 424.14
                                                                                                          under Docket Nos. FWS–HQ–ES–2015–
                                                  state that ‘‘the intent is not to solicit               0016 and DOC 150506429–5429–01), we                   General
                                                  new information,’’ when the proposed                    have concluded that this final rule
                                                                                                                                                                  Throughout the regulation text we
                                                  regulations at § 424.14(b)(10) would                    revising the regulations at 50 CFR
                                                  require the petitioner to gather ‘‘all                                                                        replace the title ‘‘the Secretary’’ or ‘‘the
                                                                                                          424.14 falls within categorical
                                                  relevant information’’ about a species,                                                                       Secretaries’’ with ‘‘the Services,’’ as the
                                                                                                          exclusions from NEPA under both
                                                  as well as information from every State                                                                       Services are the formal designees of the
                                                                                                          applicable DOI regulations and NOAA
                                                  where a species could possibly be                                                                             Secretaries of Commerce and the
                                                                                                          guidance. Specifically, the regulation
                                                  found.                                                                                                        Interior who have the delegated
                                                                                                          falls within the DOI categorical
                                                     Our Response: In this final rule, we                                                                       authority to implement the Act.
                                                                                                          exclusion for ‘‘[p]olicies, directives,
                                                  have removed the proposed                                                                                       We also change the overall
                                                                                                          regulations, and guidelines: That are of
                                                  requirements to which the commenter                     an administrative, financial, legal,                  organization of the regulations. Instead
                                                  refers (i.e., that petitioners pre-                     technical, or procedural nature.’’ 43 CFR             of organizing all aspects of the
                                                  coordinate with States and certify that                 46.210(i). It also falls within the                   regulations into the two categories of
                                                  they have provided all relevant data). In               substantially identical NOAA                          petitions under the Act (petitions to list,
                                                  this rule, § 424.14(h)(1)(ii) describes the             categorical exclusion for ‘‘policy                    delist, or reclassify a species are
                                                  type of readily available additional                    directives, regulations and guidelines of             discussed in current paragraph (b), and
                                                  information the Services may consider                   an administrative, financial, legal,                  petitions to revise critical habitat are
                                                  to place a petition in context when                     technical or procedural nature.’’ See                 discussed in current paragraph (c)), the
                                                  making their findings. Section                          NOAA Administrative Orders (NAOs)                     new regulations are organized by
                                                  424.14(h)(1)(ii) states that, in reaching               216–6A (section 6.01) and 216–6                       function. Requirements that apply to all
                                                  the initial finding on the petition, the                (section 6.03c.3(i)).                                 petitions under the Act appear first (in
                                                  Services will consider information                         We do not anticipate that this final               new paragraphs (a), (b), (c)), followed by
                                                  submitted by the petitioner and may                     rule will change the outcomes of the                  the list of factors the Services will
                                                  also consider information readily                       Services’ 90-day findings as to whether               consider in making findings on the two
                                                  available at the time the determination                 petitions present substantial                         categories of petitions, respectively, (in
                                                  is made. This provides a balanced                       information indicating that the                       new paragraphs (d) and (e)). Similarly,
                                                  approach that will ensure that the                      petitioned actions may be warranted,                  procedures that apply to all petitions
                                                  Services may take into account the                      because it is administrative and                      under the Act are set out first (in new
                                                  information available to us to provide                  procedural in nature, and is designed                 paragraphs (f) and (g) (and also (k)),
                                                  context for assessing the petition,                     merely to clarify and streamline the                  followed by procedures that apply to the
                                                  without opening the door to the type of                 petition process consistent with                      different categories of petitions (in new
                                                  wide-ranging information request more                   statutory language, legislative history,              paragraphs (h) and (i) (and also at (j),
                                                  appropriate for a status review. The                    and case law. Moreover, the revised                   which provides procedures for APA
                                                  intent of this approach is for the                      regulations do not limit Secretarial                  petitions)). We move some of the
                                                  Services to be able to use readily                      discretion, because they do not mandate               specific provisions from the previous
                                                  available information to provide context                particular outcomes in future decisions               regulations accordingly to fit better into
                                                  in which to evaluate the information                    regarding whether a request should be                 this overall structure.
                                                  presented in the petition, not for the                  accepted as a petition or whether a                   Ability To Petition—Paragraph (a)
                                                  Services to solicit new information on                  petition presents substantial
                                                  which to make a finding.                                information that a petitioned action may                Section 424.14(a) retains the
                                                                                                          be warranted.                                         substance of the first sentence of the
                                                  Comment on National Environmental                          Although the revised regulations                   current section, stating that any
                                                  Policy Act                                              expand on what information must be                    interested person may submit a written
                                                     Comment (60): A commenter stated                     included in a request for it to qualify as            petition to the Services requesting that
                                                  that the Services must prepare an                       a petition under section 4(b)(3) of the               one of the actions described in § 424.10
                                                  environmental impact statement (EIS)                    Act, they also provide for a process to               be taken for a species.
                                                  for the proposed rule because the net                   inform petitioners when the request
                                                                                                                                                                Notification of Intent To File Petition—
                                                  effect of the changes to the existing                   fails to meet the required criteria and
                                                                                                                                                                Paragraph (b)
                                                  regulations will be fewer species being                 allow discretion for the Services to
                                                  protected under the Act, more                           consider a request that substantially                   In our April 21, 2016, revised
                                                  extinctions, and consequently more                      complies with the required elements                   proposed rule (81 FR 23448), we
                                                  ecosystems upon which endangered                        even if there is not full technical                   included in § 424.14(b)(9) the
                                                  species depend being degraded and lost.                 compliance. The Services will, within a               requirement that, at least 30 days prior
                                                     Our Response: We do not anticipate                   reasonable timeframe, notify the                      to filing a petition, the petitioners
                                                  that the changes to the regulation set                  petitioners of the required information               provide State agencies responsible for
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                                                  forth in this rule will result in fewer                 that is missing. This will allow the                  the management and conservation of
                                                  species being listed. By providing                      submitters to cure any deficiencies                   wildlife with notice, by letter or
                                                  clearer requirements and expectations to                before resubmitting the petition to the               electronic mail, of their intent to file a
                                                  prospective petitioners, the quality and                Services, should they choose to do so.                petition with the Services, and that
                                                  completeness of petitions will likely                   Therefore, we do not expect that this                 copies of these letters or
                                                  improve, leading to more accurate 90-                   additional procedural requirement will                communications be included with the
                                                  day findings and consequently more                      affect the substantive outcomes of 90-                petition when it is submitted to the
                                                  efficient use of limited resources.                     day findings on well supported                        Services. In finalizing this rule, we


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                                                  66476            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  realized that the requirement to provide                territories and commonwealths of the                  organize the information in a way (on a
                                                  notice to State agencies did not belong                 United States.                                        species-by-species basis) that is
                                                  with the rest of paragraph (b), because                                                                       necessary to inform the species-specific
                                                                                                          Requirements for Petitions—Paragraph
                                                  that paragraph outlined a list of                                                                             determinations required by the Act and
                                                                                                          (c)
                                                  information to be included with a                                                                             will allow more efficient action by the
                                                  petition submission, not actions                           As stated earlier, new § 424.14(c)                 Services.
                                                  required of a petitioner before filing.                 incorporates the substance of the                        The first six requirements
                                                  Therefore, for clarity and consistency,                 revised proposal’s (81 FR 23448; April                (§ 424.14(c)(1) through (c)(6)) apply to
                                                  we have reformatted the regulation by                   21, 2016) § 424.14(b), setting forth a                each type of petition recognized under
                                                  adding a new paragraph (b) requiring                    number of minimum content                             section 4(b)(3) of the Act. The first four
                                                  that petitioners notify States before                   requirements for a request for agency                 requirements (§ 424.14(c)(1) through
                                                  filing petitions. The list of required                  action to qualify as a petition for the               (c)(4)) were all contained in the
                                                  information that was formerly contained                 purposes of section 4(b)(3) of the Act, 16            previous regulations at § 424.14(a) and
                                                  in paragraph (b) has now been                           U.S.C. 1533(b)(3). These include some                 (b). The fifth and sixth requirements
                                                  redesignated as paragraph (c). All                      of the minimum requirements from the                  (§ 424.14(c)(5) and (c)(6)) clarify and
                                                  subsequent paragraphs have been                         second and third sentences of current                 expand on the previous provisions at
                                                  appropriately redesignated.                             paragraph (a). As with § 424.14(b) in the             § 424.14(b)(2)(iv) regarding a petition’s
                                                     Therefore, new § 424.14(b) requires                  revised proposal, new § 424.14(c) also                supporting documentation.
                                                                                                          expands upon the list of requirements                    At § 424.14(c)(5), we use the word
                                                  that for a petition to list, delist, or
                                                                                                          for a petition, drawing in part from the              ‘‘readily’’ before ‘‘locate the information
                                                  reclassify a species, or for petitions to
                                                                                                          provisions in current paragraph (b)(2).               cited in the petition, including page
                                                  revise critical habitat, petitioners must                  New § 424.14(c)(2) requires that a                 numbers or chapters as applicable.’’ The
                                                  provide notice to the State agency or                   petition address only one species.                    Services should not have to search
                                                  agencies primarily responsible for the                  However, we revised the language from                 through reference material to locate
                                                  management and conservation of fish,                    this statement in the revised proposal                specific information; the petition should
                                                  plant, or wildlife resources in each State              (81 FR 23448; April 21, 2016) to clarify              provide clear, specific citations that
                                                  where the species that is the subject of                that a petition addressing only one                   allow the supporting information to be
                                                  the petition occurs. Petitioners must                   species could include any configuration               located readily.
                                                  notify the State agency of their intent to              of members of that single species as                     The seventh requirement
                                                  file a petition, with either Service, at                defined by the Act (the full species, one             (§ 424.14(c)(7)) applies only to petitions
                                                  least 30 days prior to petition                         or more subspecies or varieties, and, for             to list, delist, or reclassify a species from
                                                  submission. If the State agency has data                vertebrate species, one or more distinct              an endangered species to a threatened
                                                  or information on the subject species                   population segments (DPSs)). The                      species (i.e, downlisting) or from a
                                                  that it would like to share with the                    taxonomic (biological) classification                 threatened species to an endangered
                                                  Services, the agency may submit the                     system is hierarchical, which means a                 species (i.e., uplisting), and requires that
                                                  data and information directly to FWS or                 taxon of the rank of species also                     information be presented to demonstrate
                                                  NMFS. This provision will allow the                     includes all subspecies or varieties, if              that the subject entity is or may be a
                                                  Services to benefit from the States’                    any, under that species. Similarly,                   ‘‘species’’ as defined in the Act (which
                                                  considerable experience and                             applying the concept of hierarchical                  includes a species, a subspecies or
                                                  information on the species within their                 entities to the Act’s use of the term                 variety, or a distinct population segment
                                                  boundaries, because the States would                    ‘‘species,’’ a vertebrate species would               of a vertebrate species that FWS or
                                                  have an opportunity to submit to the                    also include any potential DPSs.                      NMFS may determine to be a DPS). We
                                                  Service any information they have on                    Therefore, a single-species petition may              note that currently-listed species are
                                                  the species early in the petition process.              address (a) one species of fish, wildlife,            generally recognized by the Services as
                                                  The Services, in formulating an initial                 or plant; (b) one or more subspecies                  species under the Act; therefore,
                                                  finding, may use their discretion to                    (variety) of fish, wildlife, or plant; or (c)         petitions regarding already-listed
                                                  consider any information provided by                    one or more population segments of any                species need only refer to that species,
                                                  the States (as well as other readily                    vertebrate species (which FWS or NMFS                 except when the petition seeks a change
                                                  available information, including any                    will evaluate per the Services’ Policy                in the delineation of a ‘‘species’’ under
                                                  information they have received from                     Regarding the Recognition of District                 the Act (for example, to divide a species
                                                  other interested parties before the initial             Vertebrate Population Segments (61 FR                 into more than one species, delist or
                                                  finding) as part of the context in which                4722; February 7, 1996) (DPS Policy) as               reclassify a portion of a listed species,
                                                  they evaluate the information contained                 to whether it qualifies as a DPS). As                 a change in how FWS or NMFS
                                                  in the petition.                                        such, the petitioner need not file                    delineates a DPS, or otherwise
                                                     Also in § 424.14(b), we added the                    separate petitions to address different               reconfigure the current listing). Section
                                                  following sentence for clarification to                 hierarchical configurations of the same               4(b)(3)(A) of the Act applies only to ‘‘a
                                                  the language of the revised proposed                    species.                                              petition . . . to add a species to, or to
                                                  rule (81 FR 23448; April 21, 2016):                        Although the Services in the past                  remove a species from, either of the lists
                                                  ‘‘This notification requirement shall not               have accepted multi-species petitions,                [of endangered or threatened wildlife
                                                  apply to any petition submitted                         in practice it has often proven to be                 and plants]’’ [emphasis added]. This
                                                  pertaining to a species that does not                   difficult to know which supporting                    provision screens from needless
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                                                  occur within the United States.’’ This                  materials apply to which species. That                consideration those requests that clearly
                                                  addition is to clarify that this provision              has at times made it difficult to follow              do not involve a species, subspecies, or
                                                  does not apply to foreign species that do               the logic of the petition. Because                    distinct population segment of a
                                                  not occur in the United States, and                     petitioners can submit multiple                       vertebrate species.
                                                  further that, consistent with the                       petitions, this requirement does not                     The eighth requirement
                                                  definition in the Act at 16 U.S.C.                      place any limitation on the ability of an             (§ 424.14(c)(8)), applies only to petitions
                                                  1532(17), ‘‘States’’ refers only to the                 interested party to petition for section 4            to list a species, and to petitions to
                                                  States, the District of Columbia, and the               actions, but does ensure that petitioners             delist or reclassify a species in cases


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                       66477

                                                  where the species’ range has changed                    that the petitioned action may be                     immediacy of threats (48 FR 43098). In
                                                  since listing, and requires that                        warranted if it does not contain at least             addition to being useful for status
                                                  information be included in the petition                 some information on each of the areas                 reviews, this information should be
                                                  describing the current and historical                   relevant to that inquiry. However, as                 included to assist in determinations on
                                                  range of the species, including range                   discussed further below, the screening                uplisting requests. While such
                                                  States or countries, as appropriate. It is              out of petitions due to missing required              information may also be useful to
                                                  important that the Services have                        information does not constitute a                     NMFS, NMFS has not adopted the 1983
                                                  information on both the current and                     petition finding under Section 4(b)(3)(A)             FWS guidance, and so would not apply
                                                  historical range of the species; for                    of the Act. In such a situation, the                  that guidance to petitions within its
                                                  example, a historical range that is                     Services will explain to petitioners what             jurisdiction.
                                                  significantly larger than the current                   information was missing so that the                      Section 424.14(d)(4) refers to
                                                  range would show range contraction,                     petitioners can have an opportunity to                inclusion in a petition of information on
                                                  which may be an important                               cure the deficiencies in a new petition               any conservation actions that States, or
                                                  consideration. The previous regulations                 and obtain a finding on the petition                  other parties, have initiated or that are
                                                  at § 424.14(b)(2)(ii) identified as one of              under section 4(b)(3)(A) of the Act.                  ongoing, that benefit the subject species.
                                                  the factors the Services will consider in                                                                     Because this information is relevant to
                                                                                                          Information To Be Included in Petitions               an ultimate determination of whether or
                                                  evaluating listing, delisting, and
                                                                                                          To List, Delist, or Change the Status of              not listing a species is warranted (the
                                                  reclassification petitions the degree to
                                                                                                          a Listed Species—Paragraph (d)                        12-month finding standard), it is
                                                  which the petition contains a detailed
                                                  narrative describing ‘‘past and present                    Section 424.14(d) describes the types              indirectly relevant and may be useful in
                                                  . . . distribution of the species. . . .’’              of information that are relevant to the               evaluating whether the action may be
                                                  New § 424.14(c)(8) now expands on this                  Services’ determinations as to whether                warranted (the 90-day finding standard).
                                                  requirement and includes it as one of                   the petition provides substantial                        We add a new § 424.14(d)(5), stating
                                                  the essential requirements for a petition.              scientific or commercial information                  that a petitioner should provide a
                                                     The ninth requirement, § 424.14(c)(9)                that the petitioned action may be                     complete, balanced presentation of facts
                                                  relates to the requirement of § 424.14(b)               warranted. Petitioners are advised that               pertaining to the petitioned species,
                                                  that petitioners must provide notice to                 compliance with paragraph (c) is the                  which would include any information
                                                  the State agency responsible for the                    minimum necessary to require the                      the petitioner is aware of that
                                                  management and conservation of fish,                    Services to consider their petition, but              contradicts claims in the petition. The
                                                  plant, or wildlife resources in each State              to provide a more complete and robust                 intent of this provision is not to place
                                                  where the species that is the subject of                petition, petitioners should include as               an unnecessary burden on petitioners,
                                                  the petition occurs, at least 30 days                   much of the types of information listed               but rather to encourage petitioners to
                                                  prior to petition submission. Copies of                 in paragraph (d) as possible, to the                  avoid presenting in a petition only
                                                  the letter or electronic communication                  extent that it is relevant to the type of             information that supports the claims in
                                                  from the petitioner notifying the State                 petition being filed.                                 the petition. This is particularly true for
                                                  agency of the petitioner’s intent to file                  The informational elements for                     information publicly available from
                                                  a petition with either Service must be                  listing, delisting, and reclassification              affected States or Tribes, who often have
                                                  included with the petition when it is                   petitions in § 424.14(d)(1) through (d)(3)            important and relevant species data and
                                                  submitted; such copies are considered a                 are rooted in the substance of current                information, as well as special status
                                                  required part of the petition.                          paragraphs (b)(2)(ii) and (iii). These                and concerns with respect to
                                                     Please note that any decision to                     elements clarify in the regulations the               implementation of the Act. Fostering
                                                  provide the protections of the Act to a                 key considerations that are relevant                  greater inclusion of such data will help
                                                  species in an expedited manner under                    when the Services are determining                     ensure that any petition submitted to
                                                  the Act’s section 4(b)(7) (i.e., emergency              whether or not the petition presents                  the Services is based on reliable and
                                                  listing) is at the discretion and                       ‘‘substantial scientific or commercial                unbiased information and does not
                                                  determination of the Services upon a                    information indicating that the                       consist simply of selected data. We find
                                                  review of the best available scientific                 petitioned action may be warranted,’’                 that, to further the purposes of the Act,
                                                  information. In any case, because the                   which is the standard for making a                    petitioners should be forthcoming as to
                                                  Services retain discretion to consider a                positive 90-day finding as described in               the known, relevant facts so that the
                                                  petition that has only substantially                    section 4(b)(3)(A) of the Act, 16 U.S.C.              Services have an accurate basis from
                                                  complied with the requirements for                      1533(b)(3)(A).                                        which to evaluate the merits of the
                                                  filing petitions, they retain discretion to                Section 424.14(d)(3) refers to                     petition. Fostering a more transparent
                                                  consider such petitions in appropriate                  inclusion in a petition of a description              and informed petition process will
                                                  circumstances, such as where it appears                 of the magnitude and immediacy of                     ensure that the Services’ resources are
                                                  to the Services that expedited listing                  threats. This type of information                     directed productively and not diverted
                                                  may be warranted. The Services also                     regarding the severity of threats on the              to matters that only superficially appear
                                                  have discretion to simply treat them as                 species or its habitat is generally needed            meritorious.
                                                  petitions seeking the species listing on                in conducting status reviews, and is                     Section 424.14(d) does not include
                                                  a non-emergency basis.                                  therefore relevant to determining                     the language in current paragraph (b)(2)
                                                     The Services apply § 424.14(c) to                    whether the petition presents                         that describes information a petitioner
                                                  identify those requests that contain all                substantial information indicating that               may include for consideration in
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                  the elements of a petition, so that                     the petitioned action may be warranted.               designating critical habitat in
                                                  consideration of the request will be an                 In addition, this information may assist              conjunction with a listing or
                                                  efficient and wise use of agency                        FWS in assessing the listing priority                 reclassification. We have deleted these
                                                  resources. A request that fails to meet                 number of species if FWS subsequently                 two sentences because, at the initial
                                                  these elements may be screened out                      makes a warranted-but-precluded                       stage, the Services focus their evaluation
                                                  from further consideration, as discussed                finding under FWS’ September 21,                      of the information to make a finding on
                                                  below, because a request cannot meet                    1983, guidance, which requires                        whether the petition presents
                                                  the statutory standard for demonstrating                assessing, in part, the magnitude and                 substantial information indicating that


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                                                  66478            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  the species may warrant listing,                        provide information on which physical                 incomplete, in order to ensure that
                                                  delisting, or reclassification. If the                  or biological features are essential                  agency resources are not diverted from
                                                  Services find that the petition presents                unless the relevant areas were occupied               higher priorities. Although this
                                                  substantial information that listing may                at the time of listing and the petitioners            authority is implied in the current
                                                  be warranted and proceeds to initiating                 contend that some features recognized                 regulations, making the point explicit in
                                                  a status review, the Services will seek                 at the time of designation as essential               these revised regulations provides
                                                  information concerning critical habitat                 are not, or that features not recognized              additional notice to petitioners and will
                                                  at that time.                                           in the designation as essential should                result in better-quality petitions and
                                                                                                          be.                                                   more efficient and effective (in terms of
                                                  Information To Be Included in Petitions                    Also, paragraphs (e)(3) and (e)(4) of              species conservation) use of agency
                                                  To Revise Critical Habitat—Paragraph                    § 424.14 detail the informational needs               resources.
                                                  (e)                                                     the Services will have in considering                    The Services retain discretion to
                                                     Section 424.14(e) sets forth the kinds               whether the petition presents                         determine whether a request constitutes
                                                  of information a petitioner should                      substantial information indicating that it            a petition and to process that petition
                                                  include in a petition to revise a critical              may be warranted to add to, or remove                 where the Services determine there has
                                                  habitat designation. The Service’s                      from, the critical habitat designation                been substantial compliance with the
                                                  determination as to whether the petition                specific areas occupied by the species at             relevant requirements. The Services
                                                  provides ‘‘substantial scientific                       the timing of listing. Further, we clarify            need to maintain some discretion in
                                                  information indicating that the revision                that ‘‘features’’ specifically refers to the          order to apply common-sense principles
                                                  may be warranted’’ (16 U.S.C.                           ‘‘physical or biological features,’’ as               in accepting or rejecting petitions.
                                                  1533(b)(3)(D)(i)) will depend in part on                described in our recent revision to 50                Petitions will not likely be rejected for
                                                  the degree to which the petition                        CFR 424.12 (81 FR 7414; February 11,                  minor omissions of the requirements set
                                                  includes this type of information.                      2016). Further, to use the same language              forth at § 424.14(c). The Services also
                                                     The items set out at new § 424.14(e)                 as the revised 50 CFR 424.12, we                      recognize that not all elements will be
                                                  are an expanded and reworded version                    replace the clause ‘‘(including features              as crucial for particular kinds of
                                                  of the substance of current paragraph                   that allow the area to support the                    petitions (e.g., petitions to delist a
                                                  (c)(2). Section 424.14(e)(1) advises that,              species periodically, over time)’’ with               species due to recovery need not
                                                  to help justify a revision to critical                  ‘‘(including characteristics that support             provide information on the validity of
                                                  habitat, it is important to demonstrate                 ephemeral or dynamic habitat                          the entity; currently-listed species can
                                                  that the existing designation includes                  conditions).’’                                        be assumed to be valid entities as the
                                                  areas that should not be included or                       Section 424.14(e)(5) describes the                 Services routinely review such matters
                                                  does not include areas that should be                   particular informational needs                        for listed species under our
                                                  included. The petition should discuss                   associated with evaluating habitat that               jurisdiction), and maintain discretion
                                                  the benefits of designating additional                  was unoccupied at the time of listing—                regarding acceptance of petitions
                                                  areas, or the reasons to remove areas                   that is, information that fulfills the                accordingly.
                                                  from an existing designation.                           statutory requirement that any specific                  We would apply such discretion
                                                  Additionally, including maps with                       areas designated are ‘‘essential for the              judiciously. If most of the cited source
                                                  sufficient detail to clearly identify the               conservation of the species.’’ See section            materials have been provided, the
                                                  particular area(s) being recommended                    3(5)(A)(ii) of the Act, 16 U.S.C.                     Services may accept the petition and
                                                  for inclusion or exclusion will be useful               1532(5)(A)(ii).                                       may evaluate the petition without
                                                  to the Services in making a petition                       Section 424.14(e)(6) mirrors the                   considering those claims for which the
                                                  finding.                                                revised § 424.14(d)(5), stating that a                source materials have not been
                                                     New § 424.14(e)(2), (e)(3), and (e)(4)               petitioner should provide a complete,                 provided. Thus, even if the petition is
                                                  are drawn from the substance of current                 balanced presentation of facts pertaining             accepted, the absence of cited source
                                                  paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and (ii), which have               to the species’ potential critical habitat,           materials may make it more likely to
                                                  been reorganized and clarified. Sections                which would include any information                   result in a finding that the petition does
                                                  424.14(e)(2), (e)(3), and (e)(4) clarify that           the petitioner is aware of that                       not present substantial information. To
                                                  several distinct pieces of information                  contradicts claims in the petition. This              avoid rejection of the petition or an
                                                  are helpful in analyzing whether any                    provision recognizes that, in availing                increased likelihood of a ‘‘not
                                                  area of habitat should be designated,                   themselves of the petition process,                   substantial’’ finding, we encourage the
                                                  beginning with a description of the                     petitioners seek to direct the Services’              petitioner to include all cited materials
                                                  ‘‘physical or biological features’’ that are            focus and resources to particular                     with the petition, as this is an important
                                                  essential for the conservation of the                   species.                                              step in substantiating the petitioner’s
                                                  species and which may require special                                                                         claims. It should not present a hardship
                                                  management. If a petitioner believes that               Responses to Petitions—Paragraph (f)                  to provide the source material that the
                                                  the already-identified physical or                        Section 424.14(f) sets out the possible             petitioner used in preparing the
                                                  biological features in an existing critical             responses the Services may make to                    petitioned request.
                                                  habitat designation have been                           requests. Section 424.14(f)(1) clarifies                 Section 424.14(f)(1) states that the
                                                  incorrectly identified, the petition                    that a request that fails to satisfy the              Services will determine whether or not
                                                  should provide information supporting                   mandatory elements set forth in                       a request contains all of the requisite
                                                  the recognition of a different set of                   paragraph (c) will generally be returned              information for qualifying as a petition
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                                                  features and explain how the different                  by the Services with an explanation of                ‘‘within a reasonable timeframe.’’
                                                  set of features would lead to                           the reason for the rejection, but without             Although this does not establish a
                                                  identification of different areas as                    a determination on the merits of the                  specific timeframe, the Act already
                                                  qualifying for inclusion in a designation               request. In light of the volume of                    prescribes a number of binding,
                                                  of occupied critical habitat. (See also                 petitions received by the Services, it is             enforceable deadlines for making
                                                  our response to comment 47). In other                   critical that we have the option to                   petition findings, and we do not intend
                                                  words, petitioners requesting revisions                 identify in a reasonable timeframe those              to create a new one with this provision.
                                                  to critical habitat designations need not               requests that on their faces are                      Our goal is to minimize the amount of


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                      66479

                                                  time it will take the Services to review                Because the Act requires that the 90-day              to do so in the foreseeable future, nor
                                                  a request and determine whether it                      finding evaluate whether the petition                 did it indicate a population decline. The
                                                  qualifies as a petition. We anticipate                  presents substantial information to                   court rejected a merits challenge to that
                                                  that the determination can be made                      indicate that the petitioned action may               petition finding, and found that
                                                  within weeks of receiving the request.                  be warranted, the submission of new                   information as to the rarity of a species,
                                                     The revision to § 424.14(f)(2) confirms              information intended to supplement a                  without more information, is not
                                                  that a request that complies with the                   petition is in effect a new petition. It is           ‘‘substantial information’’ that listing
                                                  mandatory requirements will be                          thus reasonable and necessary to reset                the species may be warranted.
                                                  acknowledged (as required under                         the timeframes when new information                      In § 424.14(h)(1)(ii), we have added a
                                                  current 424.14(a)); however, we have                    intended to supplement the petition is                new sentence to clarify that the Services
                                                  removed the requirement to provide the                  received. The final regulation thus                   are not required to consider any
                                                  acknowledgement in writing within 30                    strikes a balance that is fair to                     supporting materials cited by the
                                                  days of the receipt of the petition. We                 petitioners by giving them the choice to              petitioner if the cited documents, or
                                                  make this revision to allow the Services                determine the consequences of                         relevant excerpts or quotations from the
                                                  greater flexibility in the means and                    submitting new information.                           cited documents, are not provided in
                                                  timing of communicating with the                           This provision will ensure the                     accordance with paragraph (c)(6) of this
                                                  petitioner its determination of whether                 Services have adequate time to consider               section. Additionally, we clarify that the
                                                  the petition complies with the                          the supplemental information relevant                 Services may consider information
                                                  mandatory requirements. This revision                   to a petition and that the process is not             provided in a petition in the context of
                                                  also reflects the fact that, in light of                interrupted by receipt of new                         other information that is readily
                                                  current electronic means of                             information that may fundamentally                    available at the time it makes a 90-day
                                                  communication, it is more efficient for                 change the evaluation. Also, by                       finding. For purposes of § 424.14(h)(1),
                                                  petitioners to refer to the Services’                   providing clear notice of this process,               the Services recognize that the statute
                                                  online lists of active petitions, which                 the Services are encouraging petitioners              places the obligation squarely on the
                                                  are accessible to the public at http://                 to assemble all the information                       petitioner to present the requisite level
                                                  ecos.fws.gov/ecp/report/table/petitions-                necessary to support the petition prior               of information to meet the ‘‘substantial
                                                  received.html and http://                               to sending it to the Services for                     information’’ test, and that the Services
                                                  www.nmfs.noaa.gov, or on individual                     consideration, further enhancing the                  should not seek to supplement
                                                  species profile pages accessed by                       efficiency of the petition process.                   petitions. (See the Columbian sharp-
                                                  searching for the species at https://                                                                         tailed grouse case (WildEarth Guardians
                                                                                                          Findings on a Petition To List, Delist, or
                                                  www.ecos.fws.gov and http://                                                                                  v. U.S. Secretary of the Interior, No.
                                                                                                          Reclassify—Paragraph (h)
                                                  www.nmfs.noaa.gov. We find that                                                                               4:08–CV–00508–EJL–LMB (D. Idaho
                                                  continuing the practice of sending                         Section 424.14(h) explains the kinds               Mar. 28, 2011)), which provided, among
                                                  confirmations via formal letter no longer               of findings the Services may make on a                other things, that the petitioner has the
                                                  provides the most effective or efficient                petition to list, delist, or reclassify a             burden of providing substantial
                                                  means of communicating to all                           species, and the standards to be applied              information.) In order for the Services to
                                                  interested parties regarding the status of              in that process. Section 424.14(h)(1) is              find that a petition presents substantial
                                                  petitions.                                              drawn largely from current paragraph                  information indicating that the
                                                                                                          (b)(1), with some revisions. Most                     petitioned action may be warranted, the
                                                  Supplemental Information—Paragraph                      significantly, § 424.14(h)(1)(i) clarifies            petition should itself present that
                                                  (g)                                                     the substantial-information standard for              information. The Services need not
                                                     We clarify in § 424.14(g) that a                     90-day findings by defining it as                     resort to supplemental information to
                                                  petitioner submitting supplemental                      credible scientific and commercial                    bolster, plug gaps in, or otherwise
                                                  information later in time from their                    information that would lead a                         supplement a petition that is inadequate
                                                  original petition has the option to                     reasonable person conducting an                       on its face.
                                                  specify whether or not the information                  impartial scientific review to conclude                  However, in determining whether a
                                                  being submitted is intended to be part                  that the action proposed in the petition              petition is substantial or not, the
                                                  of the petition. Specifying that the                    may be warranted. Thus it makes clear                 Services must determine whether the
                                                  supplemental information is intended to                 that conclusory statements made in a                  claims are credible. Therefore, it is
                                                  be part of the petition will have the                   petition without the support of credible              appropriate for the Services to consider
                                                  consequence that the Services will be                   scientific or commercial information are              readily available information that
                                                  obligated to consider it in the course of               not ‘‘substantial information.’’ For                  provides context in which to evaluate
                                                  reaching a finding on the petition. It                  example, a petition that states only that             whether or not the information that a
                                                  will also, however, have the related                    a species is rare, and thus should be                 petition presents is timely and up-to-
                                                  consequence that the timeframes under                   listed, without other credible                        date, and whether it is reliable or
                                                  section 4 of the Act for when findings                  information regarding its status and                  representative of the available
                                                  are due will be reset and begin to run                  threats, likely does not provide                      information on that species, in making
                                                  anew from the time the supplemental                     substantial information. As                           its determination as to whether the
                                                  information is received. In contrast, if                demonstrated by the Scott’s riffle beetle             petition presents substantial
                                                  the petitioner does not specify that the                case (WildEarth Guardians v. Salazar,                 information.
                                                  information is intended to be part of the               No. 10–cv–00091–WYD (D. Colo. Sept.                      The precise range of information
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                                                  petition, the Services will treat the                   14, 2011)), the inclusion of this                     considered will vary with
                                                  supplemental information as they                        statement clarifies, but does not alter,              circumstances. In a discussion of
                                                  would any readily available information                 the Services’ standard for evaluating 90-             judicial review of the Secretary’s 90-day
                                                  from any source. As we have explained,                  day findings. In that case, FWS made a                findings on petitions, a House
                                                  the Services have discretion to consider                negative 90-day finding, because the                  Conference report states that, when
                                                  such information as appropriate to place                petition did not present any information              courts review such a decision, the
                                                  the petition in context, but are not                    of any potential threat currently                     ‘‘object of [the judicial] review is to
                                                  required to consider such information.                  affecting the species or reasonably likely            determine whether the Secretary’s


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                                                  66480            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  action was arbitrary or capricious in                   databases, the Integrated Taxonomic                   the Services in the prior determination
                                                  light of the scientific and commercial                  Identification System (ITIS), the                     or that the petitioner is presenting a
                                                  information available concerning the                    International Union for the                           different interpretation or analysis of
                                                  petitioned action’’ [emphasis added]                    Conservation of Nature (IUCN), the                    that data.
                                                  (H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 97¥835, at 20,                     Intergovernmental Panel on Climate                       These revisions are not meant to
                                                  reprinted in 1982 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2860,                    Change (IPCC), stock assessments, and                 imply that the Service’s finding on a
                                                  2862). By requiring courts to evaluate                  fishery management plans (this list is                petition addressing the same species as
                                                  the Secretary’s substantial information                 not all-inclusive).                                   a prior determination would necessarily
                                                  findings in light of information                           The information the Services may use               be negative. For example, the more time
                                                  ‘‘available,’’ this statement suggests that             may not only be stored in the traditional             that has elapsed from the completion of
                                                  the drafters anticipated that the                       hard copy format in files, but may also               the prior review, the greater the
                                                  Secretary could evaluate petitions in the               be electronic data files as well, or stored           potential that substantial new
                                                  context of scientific and commercial                    on Web sites created by the Services or               information has become available. As
                                                  information available to the Services,                  other Web sites routinely accessed by                 another example, the Services may have
                                                  and not limited arbitrarily to the subset               the Services. As noted, the range of                  concluded a 5-year status review in
                                                  of available information that is                        information considered readily available              which we find that a listed species no
                                                  presented in the petitions. In these                    will vary with circumstances, but could               longer warrants listing, but we have not
                                                  regulatory amendments, the Services                     include the information physically held               as yet initiated a rulemaking to delist
                                                  have crafted a balanced approach that                   by any office within the Services                     the species (in other words, have not yet
                                                  will ensure that the Services may take                  (including, for example, NMFS Science                 undertaken a final agency action). If we
                                                  into account the information readily                    Centers and FWS Field Offices), and                   receive a petition to delist that species,
                                                  available to us as context for the                      may also include information stored                   in which the petitioner provides no new
                                                  information provided in a petition,                     electronically in databases routinely                 or additional information than was
                                                  without opening the door to the type of                 consulted by the Services in the                      considered in the 5-year status review,
                                                  wide-ranging survey more appropriate                    ordinary course of their work. For                    we would likely still find that the
                                                  for a status review.                                    example, it would be appropriate to                   petition presents substantial
                                                                                                          consult online databases such as ITIS                 information that the petitioned action
                                                     Although the Services are mindful
                                                                                                          (http://www.itis.gov), a database of                  may be warranted.
                                                  that, at the stage of formulating an                    scientifically credible taxonomic                        Paragraph (h)(2) is substantially the
                                                  initial finding, they should not engage                 nomenclature information maintained                   same as current paragraph (b)(3). Among
                                                  in outside research or an effort to                     in part by the Services.                              other changes, we added new language
                                                  comprehensively compile the best                           Section 424.14(h)(1)(iii) addresses                clarifying the standard for making
                                                  available information, they must be able                situations in which the Services have                 expeditious-progress determinations in
                                                  to place the information presented in                   already made a finding on or conducted                warranted-but-precluded findings,
                                                  the petition in context. The Act                        a review of the listing status of a                   including (in paragraph (h)(2)(iii)(B)) a
                                                  contemplates a two-step process in                      species, and, after such finding or                   clear acknowledgement that such
                                                  reviewing a petition. The 12-month                      review, receive a petition seeking to list,           determinations are to be made in light
                                                  finding is meant to be the more in-depth                delist, or reclassify that species. Such              of resources available, after complying
                                                  determination and follows a status                      prior reviews constitute information                  with nondiscretionary duties, court
                                                  review, while the 90-day finding is                     readily available to the Services and                 orders, and court-approved settlement
                                                  meant to be a quicker evaluation of a                   provide important context for                         agreements to take actions under section
                                                  more limited set of information.                        evaluation of petitions. Although the                 4 of the Act. In this rule, we are
                                                  However, based on our experience in                     substantial-information standard applies              redesignating current paragraph (b)(4) as
                                                  administering the Act, the Services                     to all petitions under section 4(b)(3)(A)             paragraph (h)(3), although we have
                                                  conclude that evaluating the                            of the Act, the standard’s application is             removed the reference in the current
                                                  information presented in the petition in                influenced by the context in which the                language that ‘‘no further finding of
                                                  a vacuum can lead to inaccurately                       finding is being made. The context of a               substantial information will be
                                                  supported decisions and misdirection of                 finding after a status review and                     required,’’ as it merely repeats statutory
                                                  resources away from higher priorities. It               determination is quite different from                 language.
                                                  would be difficult for the Services to                  that before any status review has been                   In § 424.14(h)(2), we replace the
                                                  bring informed expertise to their                       completed. Further, prior reviews                     conditional clause ‘‘If a positive finding
                                                  evaluation of the facts and claims                      represent a significant expenditure of                is made’’ (as we used in our proposed
                                                  alleged in a petition without                           the Services’ resources, and it would be              rule published on May 21, 2015 (80 FR
                                                  considering the petition in the context                 inefficient and unnecessary to require                29286)) with ‘‘If the Services find that
                                                  of other information of the sort that the               the Services to revisit issues for which              the petition presents substantial
                                                  Services have readily available and                     a determination has already been made,                information indicating that the
                                                  would routinely consult in the course of                unless there is a basis for                           petitioned action may be warranted,’’
                                                  their work. It is reasonable for the                    reconsideration. In the case of prior                 for clarity, and to avoid introducing an
                                                  Services to be able to examine the                      reviews that led to final agency actions              additional, undefined term. We also add
                                                  information and claims included in a                    (such as final listings, 12-month not                 clarity in § 424.14(h)(2), by adding the
                                                  petition in light of readily available                  warranted findings, and 90-day not-                   phrase, ‘‘At the conclusion of the status
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                                                  scientific information prior to                         substantial findings), a petition                     review,’’ before the reference to the
                                                  committing limited Federal resources to                 generally would not be found to provide               obligation of the Services to make a 12-
                                                  the significant expense of a status                     substantial information unless the                    month finding.
                                                  review. Some examples of readily                        petition provides new information or a
                                                  available information that the Services                 new analysis or interpretation not                    Findings on a Petition To Revise Critical
                                                  may use include information sent to the                 previously considered in the final                    Habitat—Paragraph (i)
                                                  Services by State wildlife agencies or                  agency action. By ‘‘new’’ we mean that                   Paragraph (i) explains the kinds of
                                                  other parties, State fish and wildlife                  the information was not considered by                 findings that the Services may make on


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                        66481

                                                  a petition to revise critical habitat.                  Morrill v. Lujan, 802 F. Supp. 424 (S.D.                 Although the Services have discretion
                                                  Paragraph (i)(1) is essentially the same                Ala. 1992) (revisions to critical habitat             to determine how to proceed with a
                                                  as current paragraph (c)(1), and                        are discretionary); see also Barnhart v.              petition to revise critical habitat, the
                                                  describes the standard applicable to the                Sigman Coal Co., Inc., 122 S. Ct. 941,                Services think that certain factors
                                                  Service’s finding at the 90-day stage.                  951 (2002) (noting that ‘‘it is a general             regarding conservation and recovery of
                                                  Please refer to the discussion of the                   principle of statutory construction that              the species at issue are likely to be
                                                  ‘‘substantial information’’ standard                    when ‘Congress includes particular                    relevant and potentially important to
                                                  discussed in the description of                         language in one section of a statute but              most such determinations. Such factors
                                                  § 424.14(h)(1), above. Paragraph (i)(2)                 omits it in another section of the same               may include, but are not limited to: The
                                                  specifically acknowledges, consistent                   Act, it is generally presumed that                    status of the existing critical habitat for
                                                  with the statute, that a 12-month                       Congress acts intentionally and                       which revisions are sought (e.g., when
                                                  determination on a petition that                        purposely in the disparate inclusion or               it was designated, the extent of the
                                                  presents substantial information                        exclusion’’’) (citing Russello v. United              species’ range included in the
                                                  indicating that a revision to critical                  States, 464 U.S. 16, 23 (1983)); Federal              designation); the effectiveness or
                                                  habitat may be warranted may, but need                  Election Commission v. National Rifle                 potential of the existing critical habitat
                                                  not, take a form similar to one of the                  Ass’n of America, 254 F.3d 173, 194                   to contribute to the conservation of the
                                                  findings called for at the 12-month stage               (D.C. Cir. 2001) (same).                              listed species at issue; the potential
                                                  in the review of a petition to list, delist,               Further, the legislative history for the           conservation benefit of the petitioned
                                                  or reclassify species. Section 4(a)(3)(A)               1982 amendments that added the                        revision to the listed species relative to
                                                  of the Act establishes a mandatory duty                 petition provisions to the Act confirms               the existing designation; whether there
                                                  to designate critical habitat for listed                that Congress intended to grant                       are other, higher-priority conservation
                                                  species to the maximum extent prudent                   discretion to the Services in                         actions that need to be completed under
                                                  and determinable at the time of listing,                determining how to respond to petitions               the Act, particularly for the species that
                                                  but provides with respect to subsequent                 to revise critical habitat. After                     is the subject of the petitioned revision;
                                                  revision of such habitat only that the                  discussing at length the detailed listing             the availability of personnel, funding,
                                                  Services ‘‘may, from time-to-time                       petition provisions and their intended                and contractual or other resources
                                                  thereafter as appropriate, revise such                  meaning, Congress said of the critical                required to complete the requested
                                                  designation’’ [emphasis added] (16                      habitat petition requirements, ‘‘Petitions            revision; and the precedent that
                                                  U.S.C. 1533(a)(3)(A)(ii)).                              to revise critical habitat designations               accepting the petition might set for
                                                                                                          may be treated differently’’ (H.R. Rep.               subsequent requested revisions.
                                                     The Services’ broad discretion to                    No. 97–835, at 22 (1982), reprinted in                   At § 424.14(i)(2), compared to our
                                                  decide when it is appropriate to revise                 1982 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2860, 2862).                        revised proposal of the rule (81 FR
                                                  critical habitat is evident in the                         The Services may find in particular                23448; April 21, 2016), we add the
                                                  differences between the Act’s provisions                situations that terminology similar to                introductory clause, ‘‘If the Services
                                                  discussing petitions to revise critical                 that used in the listing-petition                     find that the petition presents
                                                  habitat, on the one hand, and the far                   provisions is useful for explaining their             substantial information that the
                                                  more prescriptive provisions regarding                  determination at the 12-month stage of                requested revision may be warranted,’’
                                                  the possible findings that can be made                  how they intend to proceed on a                       for clarity.
                                                  at the 12-month stage on petitions to                   petition to revise critical habitat. For
                                                  list, delist, or reclassify species, on the             example, the Services have, at times,                 Petitions To Initially Designate Critical
                                                  other. Section 4(b)(3)(B) of the Act                    used the term ‘‘warranted’’ to indicate               Habitat and Petitions for 4(d), 4(e), and
                                                  includes three detailed and exclusive                   that requested revisions of critical                  10(j) Rules—Paragraph (j)
                                                  options for 12-month findings on                        habitat would satisfy the definition of                 Paragraph (j) is substantially the same
                                                  petitions to list, delist, or reclassify                critical habitat in section 3 of the Act.             as current paragraph (d), which refers to
                                                  species. In contrast, section 4(b)(3)(D)(ii)            However, use of the listing-petition                  petitions to ‘‘designate critical habitat or
                                                  requires only that, within 12 months of                 terms in a determination of how the                   adopt special rules.’’ In this regulation,
                                                  receipt of a petition to revise critical                Services intend to proceed on a petition              for clarity, we expressly refer to the
                                                  habitat that has been found to present                  to revise critical habitat would not mean             types of petitions that are covered,
                                                  substantial information that the                        that the associated listing-petition                  which are those requesting that the
                                                  petitioned revision may be warranted,                   procedures and timelines apply or are                 Services initially designate critical
                                                  the Secretaries (acting through the                     required to be followed with respect to               habitat or adopt rules under sections
                                                  Services) determine how they intend ‘‘to                the petition. For example, if the Services            4(d), 4(e), or 10(j) of the Act.
                                                  proceed with the requested revision’’                   find that a petitioned revision of critical
                                                  and promptly publish notice of such                                                                           Withdrawn Petitions—Paragraph (k)
                                                                                                          habitat is, in effect, ‘‘warranted,’’ in that
                                                  intention in the Federal Register. The                  the areas would meet the definition of                  Paragraph (k) describes the process for
                                                  differences in these subsections                        ‘‘critical habitat,’’ that finding would              a petitioner to withdraw a petition, and
                                                  indicates that the statute does not                     not require the Services to publish a                 the Services’ discretion to discontinue
                                                  mandate that the 12-month finding                       proposed rule to implement the revision               action on the withdrawn petition.
                                                  procedures for petitions to list, delist, or            in any particular timeframe. Similarly, a             Although the Services may discontinue
                                                  reclassify species be followed in                       finding on a petition to revise critical              work on a 90-day or 12-month finding
                                                  determining how to proceed with                         habitat that uses the phrase ‘‘warranted              for a petition that is withdrawn, in the
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                                                  petitions to revise critical habitat. See               but precluded,’’ or a functionally similar            case of a petition to list a species, the
                                                  Sierra Club v. U.S. Fish and Wildlife                   phrase, to describe the Secretary’s                   Services may use their own process to
                                                  Service, 930 F. Supp. 2d 198 (D.D.C.                    intention would not trigger the                       evaluate whether the species may
                                                  2013) (leatherback sea turtle) (12-month                requirements of section 4(b)(3)(B)(iii) or            warrant listing and whether it should
                                                  determinations on petitions to revise are               section 4(b)(3)(C) (establishing                      become a candidate for listing. In the
                                                  committed to the agency’s discretion by                 requirements to make particular                       case of the withdrawal of a petition to
                                                  law, and thus unreviewable under the                    findings, to implement a monitoring                   delist, uplist or downlist a species, the
                                                  Administrative Procedure Act); and                      system, etc.).                                        Services may use the 5-year review


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                                                  66482            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  process or the annual candidate review                  significant economic impact on a                      is, this rule is not a ‘‘significant
                                                  to further evaluate the status of the                   substantial number of small entities.                 regulatory action’’’ under the Unfunded
                                                  species, or elect to consider the issue at              Pursuant to section 605(b), the Chief                 Mandates Reform Act. This rule will
                                                  any time.                                               Counsel for Regulation, Department of                 impose no obligations on State, local, or
                                                                                                          Commerce, certified to the Chief                      tribal governments.
                                                  Required Determinations                                 Counsel for Advocacy, Small Business
                                                                                                                                                                Takings (E.O. 12630)
                                                  Regulatory Planning and Review                          Administration that this final rule, if
                                                  (Executive Orders 12866 and 13563)                      promulgated, will not have a significant                In accordance with E.O. 12630, this
                                                                                                          economic impact on a substantial                      rule will not have significant takings
                                                     Executive Order (E.O.) 12866 provides                                                                      implications. This rule will not pertain
                                                                                                          number of small entities. The Director of
                                                  that the Office of Management and                                                                             to ‘‘taking’’ of private property interests,
                                                                                                          the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service also
                                                  Budget’s Office of Information and                                                                            nor will it directly affect private
                                                                                                          certifies that this rule will not have a
                                                  Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) will review                                                                         property. A takings implication
                                                                                                          significant economic impact on a
                                                  all significant rules. The OIRA has                                                                           assessment is not required because this
                                                                                                          substantial number of small entities.
                                                  determined that this rule is not                                                                              rule (1) will not effectively compel a
                                                                                                          The following discussion explains our
                                                  significant.                                                                                                  property owner to suffer a physical
                                                                                                          rationale.
                                                     E.O. 13563 reaffirms the principles of                  This rule will revise and clarify the              invasion of property and (2) will not
                                                  E.O. 12866 while calling for                            regulations governing documentation                   deny all economically beneficial or
                                                  improvements in the nation’s regulatory                 needed by the Services in order to                    productive use of the land or aquatic
                                                  system to promote predictability, to                    effectively and efficiently evaluate                  resources. This rule will substantially
                                                  reduce uncertainty, and to use the best,                petitions under the Act. While some of                advance a legitimate government
                                                  most innovative, and least burdensome                   the changes may require petitioners to                interest (conservation and recovery of
                                                  tools for achieving regulatory ends. The                expend some time (such as notifying                   endangered and threatened species) and
                                                  executive order directs agencies to                     State(s)) and effort (providing complete              will not present a barrier to all
                                                  consider regulatory approaches that                     petitions), we do not expect this will                reasonable and expected beneficial use
                                                  reduce burdens and maintain flexibility                 prove to be a hardship, economically or               of private property.
                                                  and freedom of choice for the public                    otherwise. Further, following a review
                                                  where these approaches are relevant,                    of entities that have petitioned the                  Federalism (E.O. 13132)
                                                  feasible, and consistent with regulatory                Services, we find that most are                         In accordance with E.O. 13132, we
                                                  objectives. E.O. 13563 emphasizes                       individuals or organizations that are not             have considered whether this rule will
                                                  further that regulations must be based                  considered small business entities. And               have significant Federalism effects and
                                                  on the best available science and that                  while small entities may choose to                    have determined that a federalism
                                                  the rulemaking process must allow for                   petition the Services, any economic                   summary impact statement is not
                                                  public participation and an open                        effects would be minimal because any                  required. This rule pertains only to the
                                                  exchange of ideas. We have developed                    increase in costs (such as notification to            petition process under the Endangered
                                                  this rule in a manner consistent with                   States or electronic filing of the petition           Species Act, and will not have
                                                  these requirements. This rule is                        versus hardcopy should they choose)                   substantial direct effects on the States,
                                                  consistent with E.O. 13563, and in                      will be nominal, i.e., not a significant              on the relationship between the Federal
                                                  particular with the requirement of                      economic impact. As a result, we have                 Government and the States, or on the
                                                  retrospective analysis of existing rules,               determined that these revised                         distribution of power and
                                                  designed ‘‘to make the agency’s                         regulations will not result in a                      responsibilities among the various
                                                  regulatory program more effective or                    significant economic impact on a                      levels of government.
                                                  less burdensome in achieving the                        substantial number of small entities.
                                                  regulatory objectives.’’                                                                                      Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
                                                                                                          Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (2                         This rule does not unduly burden the
                                                  Regulatory Flexibility Act                              U.S.C. 1501 et seq.)                                  judicial system and meets the applicable
                                                    Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act                     In accordance with the Unfunded                    standards provided in sections 3(a) and
                                                  (as amended by the Small Business                       Mandates Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1501 et                 3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988. This
                                                  Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act                     seq.):                                                rule will clarify the petition process
                                                  (SBREFA) of 1996; 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.),                   (a) On the basis of information                    under the Endangered Species Act.
                                                  whenever a Federal agency is required                   contained in the Regulatory Flexibility
                                                  to publish a notice of rulemaking for                   Act section above, this rule will not                 Government-to-Government
                                                  any proposed or final rule, it must                     ‘‘significantly or uniquely’’ affect small            Relationship With Tribes
                                                  prepare, and make available for public                  governments. We have determined and                     In accordance with Executive Order
                                                  comment, a regulatory flexibility                       certify pursuant to the Unfunded                      13175 (‘‘Consultation and Coordination
                                                  analysis that describes the effect of the               Mandates Reform Act, 2 U.S.C. 1502,                   with Indian Tribal Governments,’’
                                                  rule on small entities (i.e., small                     that this rule will not impose a cost of              November 6, 2000), the Department of
                                                  businesses, small organizations, and                    $100 million or more in any given year                the Interior Manual at 512 DM 2, the
                                                  small government jurisdictions).                        on local or State governments or private              Department of Commerce (DOC) Tribal
                                                  However, no regulatory flexibility                      entities. A Small Government Agency                   Consultation and Coordination Policy
                                                  analysis is required if the head of an                  Plan is not required. As explained                    (May 21, 2013), DOC Departmental
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                                                  agency, or his designee, certifies that the             above, small governments will not be                  Administrative Order (DAO) 218–8, and
                                                  rule will not have a significant                        affected because the rule will not place              NOAA Administrative Order (NAO)
                                                  economic impact on a substantial                        additional mandates on any city,                      218–8 (April 2012), we have considered
                                                  number of small entities. SBREFA                        county, or other local municipalities.                possible effects of this final rule on
                                                  amended the Regulatory Flexibility Act                     (b) This rule will not produce a                   federally recognized Indian Tribes.
                                                  to require Federal agencies to provide a                Federal mandate on State, local, or tribal            Following an exchange of information
                                                  statement of the factual basis for                      governments or the private sector of                  with tribal representatives, we have
                                                  certifying that a rule will not have a                  $100 million or greater in any year; that             determined that this rule, which


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                                                                       Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                                                        66483

                                                  clarifies the general process for                                           collection requirements associated with                                   of petitions received by both Services
                                                  submission and review of petitions,                                         this rule and assigned OMB Control                                        combined to be 50 (25 for FWS and 25
                                                  does not have ‘‘tribal implications’’ as                                    Number 1018–0165, which expires                                           for NMFS). Because each petition will
                                                  defined in Executive Order 13175. This                                      September 30, 2019.                                                       be limited to a single species under the
                                                  rule will assist petitioners in providing                                     Any interested person may submit a                                      regulations, the average number of
                                                  complete petitions and enhance the                                          written petition to the Services                                          species included in petitions over the
                                                  efficiency and effectiveness of the                                         requesting to add a species to the Lists                                  past 5 years may be more accurate than
                                                  petition process to support species                                         of Endangered or Threatened Wildlife                                      the average number of petitions as a
                                                  conservation. We will continue to                                           and Plants (Lists), remove a species                                      gauge of the number of petitions we are
                                                  collaborate with Tribes on issues related                                   from the Lists, change the listed status                                  likely to receive going forward. This
                                                  to federally listed species and their                                       of a species, or revise the boundary of                                   estimate of the number of petitions the
                                                  habitats and work with them as we                                           an area designated as critical habitat.                                   Services will receive in the future may
                                                  implement the provisions of the Act.                                        OMB has approved the following                                            be generous. We estimate that there will
                                                  See Joint Secretarial Order 3206                                            information collection:                                                   be a need for a petitioner to notify an
                                                  (‘‘American Indian Tribal Rights,                                             Petitions. § 424.14(c) of this rule                                     average of 10 States per petition. Many
                                                  Federal-Tribal Trust Responsibilities,                                      specifies the information that must be                                    species are narrow endemics and may
                                                  and the Endangered Species Act,’’ June                                      included in petitions.                                                    only occur in one State, but others are
                                                  5, 1997).                                                                     Notification of States. § 424.14(b)                                     wide-ranging and may occur in many
                                                                                                                              requires that petitioners must notify                                     States. However, we are erring on the
                                                  Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA)
                                                                                                                              applicable States of their intention to                                   side of over-estimating the potential
                                                    This final rule contains information                                      submit a petition to list, delist, or                                     number of States petitioners will need
                                                  collections for which the Office of                                         change the status of a species, or to                                     to notify on average.
                                                  Management and Budget (OMB)                                                 revise critical habitat. This notification                                   OMB Control No: 1018–0165.
                                                  approval is required under the                                              must be made at least 30 days prior to                                       Title: Petitions, 50 CFR 424.14.
                                                  Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44                                         submission of the petition. Copies of the                                    Service Form Number(s): None.
                                                  U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). We (National                                          notification letters must be included                                        Description of Respondents:
                                                  Marine Fisheries Service and U.S. Fish                                      with the petition.                                                        Individuals, businesses, or
                                                  and Wildlife Service, Services) may not                                       The burden table below includes                                         organizations.
                                                  conduct or sponsor, and a person is not                                     information for both NMFS and FWS.                                           Respondent’s Obligation: Required to
                                                  required to respond to, a collection of                                     Based on the average number of species                                    obtain or retain a benefit.
                                                  information unless it displays a                                            per year over the past 5 years regarding                                     Estimated Annual Number of
                                                  currently valid OMB control number.                                         which FWS and NMFS were petitioned,                                       Respondents: 50.
                                                  OMB has approved the information                                            we estimate the average annual number                                        Frequency of Collection: On occasion.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                          Completion
                                                                                                                                                                                                       Total annual         time per               Total annual
                                                                                                           Activity/requirement                                                                         responses          response                burden hours
                                                                                                                                                                                                                             (hours)

                                                  Petitioner—prepare and submit petitions ....................................................................................                                   50                       120             6,000
                                                  Petitioner—notify States ..............................................................................................................                       500                         1               500

                                                        Total ......................................................................................................................................            550     ........................          6,500



                                                     Total Annual Nonhour Cost Burden:                                        retained our estimate of 120 hours. All                                   (NAOs) 216–6A and 216–6. Our analysis
                                                  $1,000.00, based on $20 per petition (for                                   comments on the rule are addressed in                                     includes evaluating whether this action
                                                  materials, printing, postage, data                                          the preamble above.                                                       is administrative, legal, technical, or
                                                  equipment maintenance, etc).                                                  The public may comment, at any                                          procedural in nature and, therefore, a
                                                     During the proposed rule stage, we                                       time, on any aspect of the information                                    categorical exclusion applies.
                                                  solicited comments for a period of 30                                       collection requirements in this rule and                                     Following a review of the changes to
                                                  days on the information collection                                          may submit any comments to the                                            the regulations at 50 CFR 424.14 and
                                                  requirements. We received one                                               Information Collection Clearance                                          our requirements under NEPA, we find
                                                  comment.                                                                    Officer, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,                                  that the categorical exclusion found at
                                                     Comment: The commenter agreed that                                       MS: BPHC, 5275 Leesburg Pike, Falls                                       43 CFR 46.210(i) applies to these
                                                  most petitions can be prepared in                                           Church, VA 22041–3803 (mail); or                                          regulation changes. At 43 CFR 46.210(i),
                                                  approximately 120 hours, but more                                           hope_grey@fws.gov (email).                                                the Department of the Interior has found
                                                  complex petitions can take much more                                                                                                                  that the following category of actions
                                                                                                                              National Environmental Policy Act
                                                  time to assemble the information within                                                                                                               would not individually or cumulatively
                                                  the petition.                                                                 We have analyzed this regulation in                                     have a significant effect on the human
                                                     Response: We agree that in some                                          accordance with the criteria of the                                       environment and are, therefore,
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                                                  cases, time to prepare a petition                                           National Environmental Policy Act                                         categorically excluded from the
                                                  submission may be considerably greater                                      (NEPA; 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), the                                       requirement for completion of an
                                                  than our estimate, while in other cases,                                    Department of the Interior regulations                                    environmental assessment or
                                                  it may be less. We believe 120 hours is                                     on Implementation of the National                                         environmental impact statement:
                                                  a reasonable estimate for the average                                       Environmental Policy Act (43 CFR                                          ‘‘Policies, directives, regulations, and
                                                  petition, acknowledging that there could                                    46.10–46.450), the Department of the                                      guidelines: That are of an
                                                  be a small proportion of submissions                                        Interior Manual (516 DM 1–6 and 8),                                       administrative, financial, legal,
                                                  that require more or less time. We have                                     and NOAA Administrative Orders                                            technical, or procedural nature.’’


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                                                  66484            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                     NAO 216–6 contains a substantially                   section 4 of the Act to provide greater               PART 424—LISTING ENDANGERED
                                                  identical exclusion for ‘‘policy                        clarity to petitioners on information that            AND THREATENED SPECIES AND
                                                  directives, regulations and guidelines of               is likely to improve efficiency and                   DESIGNATING CRITICAL HABITAT
                                                  an administrative, financial, legal,                    accuracy in processing petitions, the
                                                  technical or procedural nature’’                        effects of these proposed changes would               ■ 1. The authority citation for part 424
                                                  (§ 6.03c.3(i)).                                         not ‘‘have significant impacts on species             continues to read as follows:
                                                     At the time DOI’s categorical                        listed, or proposed to be listed, on the                  Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.
                                                  exclusion was promulgated, there was                    List of Endangered or Threatened
                                                  no preamble language that would assist                                                                        ■   2. Add § 424.03 to read as follows:
                                                                                                          Species or have significant impacts on
                                                  in interpreting what kinds of actions fall              designated Critical Habitat for these                 § 424.03 Has the Office of Management
                                                  within the categorical exclusion.                       species,’’ as nothing in the revised                  and Budget approved the collection of
                                                  However, in 2008, the preamble for a                    regulations is expected to determine or               information?
                                                  language correction to this categorical                 change the outcome of any status review                  The Office of Management and Budget
                                                  exclusion gave as an example of an                      of a species or any decision on a                     reviewed and approved the information
                                                  action that would fall within the                                                                             collection requirements contained in
                                                                                                          petition to revise critical habitat.
                                                  exclusion the issuance of guidance to                                                                         subpart B and assigned OMB Control
                                                                                                          Furthermore, the revised regulations do
                                                  applicants for transferring funds                                                                             No. 1018–0165. We use the information
                                                                                                          not ‘‘[e]stablish a precedent for future
                                                  electronically to the Federal                                                                                 to evaluate and make decisions on
                                                                                                          action or represent a decision in
                                                  Government. In addition, an example of                                                                        petitions. We may not conduct or
                                                  a recent Federal Register notice                        principle about future actions with
                                                                                                          potentially significant environmental                 sponsor and you are not required to
                                                  invoking this categorical exclusion was
                                                                                                          effects’’ (43 CFR 46.215(e)). None of the             respond to a collection of information
                                                  a final rule that established the timing
                                                                                                          extraordinary circumstances in 43 CFR                 unless it displays a currently valid OMB
                                                  requirements for the submission of a
                                                                                                          46.215(a) through (l) apply to the                    control number. You may send
                                                  Site Assessment Plan or General
                                                                                                          revised regulations.                                  comments on the information collection
                                                  Activities Plan for a renewable energy
                                                                                                                                                                requirements to the Information
                                                  project on the Outer Continental Shelf                     Nor would the final regulations trigger
                                                                                                                                                                Collection Clearance Officer, U.S. Fish
                                                  (78 FR 12676; February 26, 2013). These                 any of the extraordinary circumstances
                                                                                                                                                                and Wildlife Service, at the address
                                                  regulations fell within the categorical                 of NAO 216–6. This rule does not
                                                                                                                                                                listed at 50 CFR 2.1(b).
                                                  exclusion because they affected the                     involve a geographic area with unique
                                                  process inherent to an agency action                    characteristics, is not the subject of                ■ 3. Revise § 424.14 to read as follows:
                                                  rather than the agency action itself, or                public controversy based on potential                 § 424.14    Petitions.
                                                  clarified, rather than changed, the                     environmental consequences, will not
                                                  substance of the agencies’ analyses or                                                                           (a) Ability to petition. Any interested
                                                                                                          result in uncertain environmental
                                                  outcomes of their decisions.                                                                                  person may submit a written petition to
                                                                                                          impacts or unique or unknown risks,
                                                     The changes to the petition                                                                                the Services requesting that one of the
                                                                                                          does not establish a precedent or                     actions described in § 424.10 be taken
                                                  regulations are similar to these                        decision in principle about future
                                                  examples of actions that are                                                                                  for a species.
                                                                                                          proposals, will not have significant                     (b) Notification of intent to file
                                                  fundamentally administrative,                           cumulative impacts, and will not have
                                                  technical, and procedural in nature. The                                                                      petition. For a petition to list, delist, or
                                                                                                          any adverse effects upon endangered or                reclassify a species, or for petitions to
                                                  changes to the regulations at 50 CFR                    threatened species or their habitats
                                                  424.14 clarify the procedures for                                                                             revise critical habitat, petitioners must
                                                                                                          (§ 5.05c).                                            provide notice to the State agency
                                                  submitting and evaluating petitions
                                                  under Section 4 of the Act. In addition,                   We completed an Environmental                      responsible for the management and
                                                  the regulation revisions provide                        Action Statement for the Categorical                  conservation of fish, plant, or wildlife
                                                  transparency for the practices and                      Exclusion for the revised regulations in              resources in each State where the
                                                  interpretations that the Services have                  50 CFR 424.14.                                        species that is the subject of the petition
                                                  adopted and applied as a result of case                                                                       occurs. This notification must be made
                                                                                                          Energy Supply, Distribution or Use (E.O.
                                                  law or pragmatic considerations. The                                                                          at least 30 days prior to submission of
                                                                                                          13211)                                                the petition. This notification
                                                  Services also make minor wording and
                                                  formatting revisions throughout the                        Executive Order 13211 requires                     requirement shall not apply to any
                                                  regulations to reflect plain-language                   agencies to prepare Statements of                     petition submitted pertaining to a
                                                  standards. The regulation revision as a                 Energy Effects when undertaking certain               species that does not occur within the
                                                  whole carries out the requirements of                   actions. This rule is not expected to                 United States.
                                                  Executive Order 13563 because, in this                  affect energy supplies, distribution, or                 (c) Requirements for petitions. A
                                                  rule, the Services have analyzed existing               use. Therefore, this action is not a                  petition must clearly identify itself as
                                                  rules retrospectively ‘‘to make the                     significant energy action, and no                     such, be dated, and contain the
                                                  agencies’ regulatory program more                       Statement of Energy Effects is required.              following information:
                                                  effective or less burdensome in                                                                                  (1) The name, signature, address,
                                                  achieving the regulatory objectives.’’                  List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 424                   telephone number, if any, and the
                                                     We also considered whether any                                                                             association, institution, or business
                                                  ‘‘extraordinary circumstances’’ apply to                  Administrative practice and                         affiliation, if any, of the petitioner;
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                                                  this situation, such that the DOI                       procedure, Endangered and threatened                     (2) The scientific name and any
                                                  categorical exclusion would not apply.                  species.                                              common name of a species of fish or
                                                  See 43 CFR 46.215 (‘‘Categorical                        Regulation Promulgation                               wildlife or plants that is the subject of
                                                  Exclusions: Extraordinary                                                                                     the petition. Only one species may be
                                                  Circumstances’’). We determined that                      Accordingly, we amend part 424,                     the subject of a petition, which may
                                                  no extraordinary circumstances apply.                   subchapter A of chapter IV, title 50 of               include, by hierarchical extension based
                                                  Although the final regulations would                    the Code of Federal Regulations, as set               on taxonomy and the Act, any
                                                  revise the implementing regulations for                 forth below:                                          subspecies or variety, or (for vertebrates)


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                       66485

                                                  any potential distinct population                       may cause the species to be an                        conservation of the species, or that these
                                                  segments of that species;                               endangered species or threatened                      features do not require special
                                                     (3) A clear indication of the                        species (i.e., the species is currently in            management considerations or
                                                  administrative action the petitioner                    danger of extinction or is likely to                  protection;
                                                  seeks (e.g., listing of a species or                    become so within the foreseeable                         (5) For areas petitioned to be added to
                                                  revision of critical habitat);                          future), and, if so, how high in                      or removed from critical habitat that
                                                     (4) A detailed narrative justifying the              magnitude and how imminent the                        were outside the geographical area
                                                  recommended administrative action that                  threats to the species and its habitat are;           occupied by the species at the time it
                                                  contains an analysis of the information                    (4) Information on adequacy of                     was listed, information indicating why
                                                  presented;                                              regulatory protections and effectiveness              the petitioned areas are or are not
                                                     (5) Literature citations that are                    of conservation activities by States as               essential for the conservation of the
                                                  specific enough for the Services to                     well as other parties, that have been                 species; and
                                                  readily locate the information cited in                 initiated or that are ongoing, that may                  (6) A complete, balanced
                                                  the petition, including page numbers or                 protect the species or its habitat; and               representation of the relevant facts,
                                                  chapters as applicable;                                    (5) A complete, balanced                           including information that may
                                                     (6) Electronic or hard copies of                     representation of the relevant facts,                 contradict claims in the petition.
                                                  supporting materials, to the extent                     including information that may                           (f) Response to petitions. (1) If a
                                                  permitted by U.S. copyright law, or                     contradict claims in the petition.                    request does not meet the requirements
                                                  appropriate excerpts or quotations from                    (e) Information to be included in                  set forth at paragraph (c) of this section,
                                                  those materials (e.g., publications, maps,              petitions to revise critical habitat. The             the Services will generally reject the
                                                  reports, letters from authorities) cited in             Services’ determinations as to whether                request without making a finding, and
                                                  the petition;                                           the petition provides substantial                     will, within a reasonable timeframe,
                                                     (7) For a petition to list, delist, or               scientific information indicating that the            notify the sender and provide an
                                                  reclassify a species, information to                    petitioned action may be warranted will               explanation of the rejection. However,
                                                  establish whether the subject entity is a               depend in part on the degree to which                 the Services retain discretion to process
                                                  ‘‘species’’ as defined in the Act;                      the petition includes the following types             a petition where the Services determine
                                                     (8) For a petition to list a species, or             of information:                                       there has been substantial compliance
                                                  for a petition to delist or reclassify a                   (1) A description and map(s) of areas              with the relevant requirements.
                                                  species in cases where the species’                     that the current designation does not                    (2) If a request does meet the
                                                  range has changed since listing,                        include that should be included, or                   requirements set forth at paragraph (c)
                                                  information on the current and                          includes that should no longer be                     of this section, the Services will
                                                  historical geographic range of the                      included, and a description of the                    acknowledge receipt of the petition by
                                                  species, including the States or                        benefits of designating or not                        posting information on the respective
                                                  countries intersected, in whole or part,                designating these specific areas as                   Service’s Web site.
                                                  by that range; and                                      critical habitat. Petitioners should                     (g) Supplemental information. If the
                                                     (9) For a petition to list, delist or                include sufficient supporting                         petitioner provides supplemental
                                                  reclassify a species, or for petitions to               information to substantiate the                       information before the initial finding is
                                                  revise critical habitat, copies of the                  requested changes, which may include                  made and states that it is part of the
                                                  notification letters or electronic                      GIS data or boundary layers that relate               petition, the new information, along
                                                  communication which petitioners                         to the request, if appropriate;                       with the previously submitted
                                                  provided to the State agency or agencies                   (2) A description of physical or                   information, is treated as a new petition
                                                  responsible for the management and                      biological features essential for the                 that supersedes the original petition,
                                                  conservation of fish, plant, or wildlife                conservation of the species and whether               and the statutory timeframes will begin
                                                  resources in each State where the                       they may require special management                   when such supplemental information is
                                                  species that is the subject of the petition             considerations or protection;                         received.
                                                  currently occurs.                                          (3) For any areas petitioned to be                    (h) Findings on petitions to add or
                                                     (d) Information to be included in                    added to critical habitat within the                  remove a species from the lists, or
                                                  petitions to add or remove species from                 geographical area occupied by the                     change the listed status of a species. (1)
                                                  the lists, or change the listed status of               species at time it was listed, information            To the maximum extent practicable,
                                                  a species. The Service’s determination                  indicating that the specific areas contain            within 90 days of receiving a petition to
                                                  as to whether the petition provides                     one or more of the physical or biological             add a species to the lists, remove a
                                                  substantial scientific or commercial                    features (including characteristics that              species from the lists, or change the
                                                  information indicating that the                         support ephemeral or dynamic habitat                  listed status of a species, the Services
                                                  petitioned action may be warranted will                 conditions) that are essential to the                 will make a finding as to whether the
                                                  depend in part on the degree to which                   conservation of the species and may                   petition presents substantial scientific
                                                  the petition includes the following types               require special management                            or commercial information indicating
                                                  of information:                                         considerations or protection. The                     that the petitioned action may be
                                                     (1) Information on current population                petitioner should also indicate which                 warranted. The Services will publish
                                                  status and trends and estimates of                      specific areas contain which features;                the finding in the Federal Register.
                                                  current population sizes and                               (4) For any areas petitioned for                      (i) For the purposes of this section,
                                                  distributions, both in captivity and the                removal from currently designated                     ‘‘substantial scientific or commercial
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                                                  wild, if available;                                     critical habitat within the geographical              information’’ refers to credible scientific
                                                     (2) Identification of the factors under              area occupied by the species at the time              or commercial information in support of
                                                  section 4(a)(1) of the Act that may affect              it was listed, information indicating that            the petition’s claims such that a
                                                  the species and where these factors are                 the specific areas do not contain the                 reasonable person conducting an
                                                  acting upon the species;                                physical or biological features                       impartial scientific review would
                                                     (3) Whether and to what extent any or                (including characteristics that support               conclude that the action proposed in the
                                                  all of the factors alone or in combination              ephemeral or dynamic habitat                          petition may be warranted. Conclusions
                                                  identified in section 4(a)(1) of the Act                conditions) that are essential to the                 drawn in the petition without the


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                                                  66486            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 187 / Tuesday, September 27, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  support of credible scientific or                       shall publish in the Federal Register a               (c), (e), and (g) of this section. The
                                                  commercial information will not be                      proposed regulation to implement the                  Services may also consider other
                                                  considered ‘‘substantial information.’’                 action pursuant to § 424.16; or                       information readily available at the time
                                                     (ii) In reaching the initial finding on                 (iii) The petitioned action is                     the determination is made in reaching
                                                  the petition, the Services will consider                warranted, but:                                       its initial finding on the petition. The
                                                  the information referenced at                              (A) The immediate proposal and                     Services are not required to consider
                                                  paragraphs (c), (d), and (g) of this                    timely promulgation of a regulation to                any supporting materials cited by the
                                                  section. The Services may also consider                 implement the petitioned action is                    petitioner if the cited documents are not
                                                  information readily available at the time               precluded because of other pending                    provided in accordance with paragraph
                                                  the determination is made. The Services                 proposals to list, delist, or change the              (b)(6) of this section.
                                                  are not required to consider any                        listed status of species; and
                                                                                                             (B) Expeditious progress is being                     (2) If the Services find that the
                                                  supporting materials cited by the                                                                             petition presents substantial
                                                  petitioner if the cited document is not                 made to list, delist, or change the listed
                                                                                                          status of qualified species, in which                 information that the requested revision
                                                  provided in accordance with paragraph                                                                         may be warranted, the Services will
                                                  (c)(6) of this section.                                 case such finding will be published in
                                                                                                          the Federal Register together with a                  determine, within 12 months of
                                                     (iii) The ‘‘substantial scientific or                                                                      receiving the petition, how to proceed
                                                  commercial information’’ standard must                  description and evaluation of the
                                                                                                          reasons and data on which the finding                 with the requested revision, and will
                                                  be applied in light of any prior reviews                                                                      promptly publish notice of such
                                                  or findings the Services have made on                   is based. The Secretary will make any
                                                                                                          determination of expeditious progress in              intention in the Federal Register. That
                                                  the listing status of the species that is                                                                     notice may, but need not, take a form
                                                  the subject of the petition. Where the                  relation to the amount of funds available
                                                                                                          after complying with nondiscretionary                 similar to one of the findings described
                                                  Services have already conducted a                                                                             under paragraph (h)(2) of this section.
                                                  finding on, or review of, the listing                   duties under section 4 of the Act and
                                                  status of that species (whether in                      court orders and court-approved                          (j) Petitions to designate critical
                                                                                                          settlement agreements to take actions                 habitat or adopt rules under sections
                                                  response to a petition or on the Services’
                                                                                                          pursuant to section 4 of the Act.                     4(d), 4(e), or 10(j) of the Act. The
                                                  own initiative), the Services will
                                                                                                             (3) If a finding is made under                     Services will conduct a review of
                                                  evaluate any petition received thereafter               paragraph (h)(2)(iii) of this section with
                                                  seeking to list, delist, or reclassify that                                                                   petitions to designate critical habitat or
                                                                                                          regard to any petition, the Services will,            to adopt a rule under section 4(d), 4(e),
                                                  species to determine whether a                          within 12 months of such finding, again
                                                  reasonable person conducting an                                                                               or 10(j) of the Act in accordance with
                                                                                                          make one of the findings described in                 the Administrative Procedure Act (5
                                                  impartial scientific review would                       paragraph (h)(2) of this section with
                                                  conclude that the action proposed in the                                                                      U.S.C. 553) and applicable
                                                                                                          regard to such petition.                              Departmental regulations, and take
                                                  petition may be warranted despite the                      (i) Findings on petitions to revise
                                                  previous review or finding. Where the                                                                         appropriate action.
                                                                                                          critical habitat. (1) To the maximum
                                                  prior review resulted in a final agency                 extent practicable, within 90 days of                    (k) Withdrawal of petition. A
                                                  action, a petitioned action generally                   receiving a petition to revise a critical             petitioner may withdraw the petition at
                                                  would not be considered to present                      habitat designation, the Services will                any time during the petition process by
                                                  substantial scientific and commercial                   make a finding as to whether the                      submitting such request in writing. If a
                                                  information indicating that the action                  petition presents substantial scientific              petition is withdrawn, the Services may,
                                                  may be warranted unless the petition                    information indicating that the revision              at their discretion, discontinue action
                                                  provides new information not                            may be warranted. The Services will                   on the petition finding, even if the
                                                  previously considered.                                  publish such finding in the Federal                   Services have already made a 90-day
                                                     (2) If the Services find that a petition             Register.                                             finding that there is substantial
                                                  presents substantial information                           (i) For the purposes of this section,              information indicating that the
                                                  indicating that the petitioned action                   ‘‘substantial scientific information’’                requested action may be warranted.
                                                  may be warranted, the Services will                     refers to credible scientific information               Dated: September 15, 2016.
                                                  commence a review of the status of the                  in support of the petition’s claims such              Michael J. Bean,
                                                  species concerned. At the conclusion of                 that a reasonable person conducting an
                                                  the status review and within 12 months                                                                        Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish
                                                                                                          impartial scientific review would                     and Wildlife and Parks.
                                                  of receipt of the petition, the Services                conclude that the revision proposed in
                                                  will make one of the following findings:                                                                        Dated: September 12, 2016.
                                                                                                          the petition may be warranted.
                                                     (i) The petitioned action is not                     Conclusions drawn in the petition                     Samuel D. Rauch III,
                                                  warranted, in which case the Service                    without the support of credible                       Deputy Assistant Administrator for
                                                  shall publish a finding in the Federal                  scientific information will not be                    Regulatory Programs, National Marine
                                                  Register.                                               considered ‘‘substantial information.’’               Fisheries Service.
                                                     (ii) The petitioned action is                           (ii) The Services will consider the                [FR Doc. 2016–23003 Filed 9–26–16; 8:45 am]
                                                  warranted, in which case the Services                   information referenced at paragraphs                  BILLING CODE 4333–15–P;3510–22–P
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Document Created: 2016-09-27 01:19:26
Document Modified: 2016-09-27 01:19:26
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesThis rule is effective October 27, 2016.
ContactDouglas Krofta, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Division of Conservation and Classification, 5275 Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041-3803; telephone 703/358-2171; facsimile 703/358-1735; or Angela Somma, National Marine Fisheries Service, Office of Protected Resources, 1315 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910; telephone 301/427-8403. If you use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD), call the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 800-877-8339.
FR Citation81 FR 66461 
RIN Number1018-BA53 and 0648-BF06
CFR AssociatedAdministrative Practice and Procedure and Endangered and Threatened Species

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