A7 THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, MARcH 15, 2019 US eases land restrictions meant to protect sage grouse Gov. Brown backs ‘shift’ to active conservation By MATTHEW BROWN Associated Press BILLINGS, Mont. — The Trump administration today finalized changes to sweeping federal land use plans for Western States to ease energy industry restric- tions in a way officials say will protect a struggling bird species. The changes by the U.S. Bureau of Land Man- agement will guide future efforts to conserve greater sage grouse, ground-dwell- ing birds that range across portions of 11 Western states. Environmentalists have said the widely-antici- pated move will undermine protections for the chick- en-sized bird. They would allow more oil and gas drill- ing and other activities on grouse habitat. But the administration secured key backing from Democratic and Republican governors in affected states. Oregon Gov. Kate Brown, a Democrat, said in a statement that the changes marked “a shift away from planning toward active con- servation and landscape management.” The birds are known for an elaborate mating ritual in which males puff out a yellow air sac in their chest as they strut around breed- ing grounds known as leks. Their numbers have plum- meted due to energy devel- opment, disease and other factors. Opponents are expected to challenge the changes in court. Brian Rutledge with the Audubon Society said AP Photo/David Zalubowski Male greater sage grouse perform their mating ritual on a lake near Walden, Colo. the revisions will make it harder to stop the long-term decline of sage grouse by giving oil and gas compa- nies access to crucial grouse habitat. “It’s a free for all, based on prioritizing fossil fuel extraction over any other use of the federal landscape,” Rutledge said. U.S. Bureau of Land Management Acting Direc- tor Brian Steed said the changes address concerns aired by state officials that previous policies governing millions of acres of federal land were too restrictive. Those policies were largely enacted under former President Barack Obama. They were memorialized in a 2015 partnership between Western states and the fed- eral government. Steed said the broad revi- sions to the Obama-era plans were meant to move beyond what he called a “one-size-fits-all” approach under the old rules. He said the changes give more flex- ibility to land managers and states concerned about bal- ancing economic develop- ment with protections for the bird. “Our intent was not to throw out the plans, but to make them better respond to the needs on the ground,” Steed said. “We’re doing that in a very careful way to ensure that the bird’s protec- tions are still in effect.” The birds once num- bered in the millions but the most recent estimates from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service places the popula- tion at between 200,000 to 500,000. The 2015 plans capped years of negotiations and were intended to prevent grouse from being listed as a threatened or endangered species. Such a designation could have brought severe lim- itations on grazing, energy development and other activities across the bird’s range, which covers some 270,000 square miles. Under President Don- ald Trump, Interior Depart- ment officials have vowed to lift obstacles to drilling. Grouse protections have long been viewed by the energy industry as an obsta- cle to development. FAA’s close ties to Boeing company Senate votes against Trump questioned after 2 deadly crashes border emergency By TOM KRISHER, DAVID KOENIG and DEE-ANN DURBIN Associated Press For more than six decades, the Federal Aviation Administration has relied on employees of airplane man- ufacturers to do govern- ment-required safety inspec- tions as planes are being designed or assembled. But critics say the system, dubbed the “designee pro- gram,” is too cozy as com- pany employees do work for an agency charged with keeping the skies safe while being paid by an industry that the FAA is regulating. “There is a potential con- flict of interest,” said Todd Curtis, a former Boeing Co. safety engineer and creator of airsafe.com, a website that focuses on airline safety. “They (the FAA) don’t have the money to do all of the oversight. It’s a question of being practical.” The FAA’s oversight duties are coming under greater scrutiny after deadly crashes involving Boe- ing 737 Max jets operated by airlines in Ethiopia and Indonesia, killing a total of 346 people. The U.S. was nearly alone in allowing the planes to keep flying until it relented on Wednesday after getting satellite evidence showing the crashes may be linked. The FAA concedes that it doesn’t have resources to keep up with a growing avi- ation industry, and experts say it lacks the personnel to inspect every compo- nent, especially those made in other countries. But the agency says the program’s results speak for themselves. The U.S. has the safest skies in the world. Until April of By LISA MASCARO, ALAN FRAM and CATHERINE LUCEY Associated Press AP Photo/Achmad Ibrahim An engine is recovered in November from a Boeing 737 MAX 8 jet that plunged into the Java Sea, killing all of its passengers. last year, U.S. passenger air- lines had not had a fatality since 2009, while carrying several billion passengers. But safety experts say it’s time to look into the agen- cy’s relationship with Boe- ing, based in Chicago. The FAA’s ties to the company were revealed when Boe- ing and the agency released similar messages shortly after the Indonesian air- liner crashed in October and again this week, when the FAA announced that Boeing would upgrade the Max’s flight-control software, said Mary Schiavo, a former Transportation Department inspector general. With the messages, the FAA “revealed that they were just parroting what Boeing told them,” she said. The agency needs more people with technical skills to adequately monitor a com- pany that makes machines as sophisticated as today’s jets, she said, contending that it didn’t understand the Max’s flight-control computer program. “The FAA readily states they don’t understand the 4 million lines of code and the 150 computers,” Schi- avo said. “What they do is see that Boeing followed the process, they checked the FAA boxes. The pub- lic thinks the FAA has more involvement.” Indeed, the agency’s own website says that employ- ees of manufacturers can approve design changes and aircraft repairs. “Using des- ignees for routine certifica- tion tasks allows the FAA to focus its limited resources on safety critical certification issues,” it says. Congress will exam- ine the relationship between Boeing and the FAA. U.S. Rep. Peter A. DeFazio, D-Oregon, chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, said he would hold hearings on the FAA’s process for approving the planes. The agency’s practice of delegating certification pro- cesses has come under scru- tiny before. In a 1993 report, the Government Account- ability Office warned that the FAA was falling behind the industry in technical competence because of lack of training and delegation of tasks to the manufactur- ers. The report said 95 per- cent of certification work for the Boeing 747-400 jetliner was delegated to the manu- facturer in 1989. By compar- ison, 70 to 75 percent of that work was done by the FAA in the early 1980s, the report said. WASHINGTON — In a stunning rebuke, a dozen defecting Republicans joined Senate Democrats to block the national emer- gency that President Don- ald Trump declared so he could build his border wall with Mexico. The rejection capped a week of confron- tation with the White House as both parties in Congress strained to exert their power in new ways. The 59-41 tally Thurs- day, following the Sen- ate’s vote a day earlier to end U.S. involvement in the war in Yemen, promised to force Trump into the first vetoes of his presidency. Trump had warned against both actions. Moments after Thursday’s vote, the presi- dent tweeted a single word of warning: “VETO!” Two years into the Trump era, a defect- ing dozen Republicans, pushed along by Demo- crats, showed a willing- ness to take that political risk. Twelve GOP senators, including the party’s 2012 presidential nominee, Mitt Romney of Utah, joined the dissent over the emergency declaration order that would enable the president to seize for the wall billions of dol- lars Congress intended elsewhere. “The Senate’s wak- ing up a little bit to our responsibilities,” said Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., who said the chamber had become “a little lazy” as an equal branch of govern- ment. “I think the value of these last few weeks is to remind the Senate of our constitutional place.” Many senators said the vote was not necessarily a rejection of the president or the wall, but protections against future presidents — namely a Democrat who might want to declare an emergency on climate change, gun control or any number of other issues. “This is constitutional question, it’s a question about the balance of power that is core to our constitu- tion,” Romney said. “This is not about the president,” he added. “The president can certainly express his views as he has and individual senators can express theirs.” Thursday’s vote was the first direct challenge to the 1976 National Emergen- cies Act, just as Wednes- day’s on Yemen was the first time Congress invoked the decades-old War Powers Act to try to rein in a pres- ident. Seven Republicans joined Democrats in halting U.S. backing for the Saudi Arabia-led coalition in the aftermath of the kingdom’s role in the killing of journal- ist Jamal Khashoggi. Even though there’s not likely to be enough numbers to over- ride a veto, the votes never- theless sent a message from Capitol Hill. “Today’s votes cap a week of something the American people hav- en’t seen enough of in the last two years,” said Sen- ate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, “both parties in the United States Con- gress standing up to Donald Trump.” Utti: No sophomore jinx season for Seaside star continued from Page A8 game. So Hawes made it clear Utti has what it takes for the game when he recalled that in the state play- offs, “her senior year, in our first-round game, she was undercut and landed on her chin and braced herself with her right wrist. First 40 sec- onds of the game. I went out on the court, and thought, oh my, this is how it ends. She was bleeding all over. “We literally patched her together and sent her back out, and she comes over and says her wrist is hurt,” he said. “She hadn’t even noticed because of her sliced chin. She said she couldn’t shoot from more than a foot because it hurt too much and I said, ‘just get to the rim.’ And, of course, she did. She played the final games with a broken wrist. Tough, tough young woman.” In Fresno State’s quarter- final matchup with UNLV, Utti drew the short straw and was assigned to guard a cou- Jeff Ter Har Maddi Utti during a 2017 state playoff game at Molalla, when she split her chin and broke her wrist in a fall, then led Seaside to victory. ple of very tall senior girls — 6-4 Katie Powell and 6-2 Paris Strawth. It was a tough assign- ment that caused her to draw two early fouls, earning her a seat on the bench for some of the first half. After the intermission the team adjusted, shut down the big girls and Utti contin- ued to contribute to the vic- tory. The play-by-play sheet provided at the conclusion of the game shows “steal by Utti, good layup by Utti, assist by Utti, rebound by Utti.” Armed with press cre- dentials, I attended the post- game news conference. Utti was one of the two athletes that head coach Jamie White brought to the session. After a warm greeting, I let Utti know I was very impressed with her and the team’s play. My first ques- tion was what message she had for folks back home. “Tell everyone I appreci- ate their support, they have all been so good to me.” Turning to coach White, I asked how the team shut down UNLV’s tall players, in particular Powell, who had 14 points in the first half and three in the second. Said White, “we focused on getting her out of the game and with her long reach, quick movements and tenacious defense, Maddi had a tremen- dous impact on keeping the ball out of Powell’s hands or disrupting her shots.” Utti had an impressive season, starting in all 31 games and averaging just over 32 minutes. She shot 56.4 percent from two-point range and 50 percent from beyond the arc. At the free throw line she was 52 of 63. Total points for the season were 380. She gathered 77 offensive and 150 defensive rebounds, 68 assists, 59 steals and 33 blocked shots. For her efforts, she earned honorable mention on the all-Moun- tain West team and first team all-Mountain West defense. Prior to the start of the UNLV game, Marci Utti, with a glow of pride in her daughter, had mentioned these two all-Mountain West team honors. “It was hard work that got her to Fresno State, earned her a starting position and then these honors. She is not done yet.” Indeed there will be more to come from Maddi Utti, and we on the North Coast can be very proud that one of our own is representing Sea- side High and the communi- ties in such fine fashion. Neil Branson is a former teacher, cross country and track coach at Seaside High School