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February 26, 2004 <br />The Honorable Charles H. Taylor, Chairman <br />The Honorable Norman D. Dicks, Ranking Member <br />Subcommittee on Interior and Related Agencies <br />House Appropriations Committee <br />United States House of Representatives <br />B -308 Rayburn House Office Building <br />Washington, D.C. 20515 -6023 <br />RE: Platte River Recovery Project <br />Dear Chairman Taylor and Representative Dicks: <br />I am writing to request your support and assistance in insuring continued funding for the U.S. <br />Fish and Wildlife Service's (FWS) participation in the development of a Federal/State basin -wide <br />recovery implementation program (Program) for endangered species in central Nebraska. We <br />respectfully request support and action by the Subcommittee to provide the appropriation of <br />$982,000 in "recovery" funds (Ecological Services Activity; Endangered Species Subactivity; <br />Recovery Element; Platte River Recovery Project) to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) for <br />fiscal year 2005 to allow FWS to continue its necessary participation. This is the same level of <br />funding appropriated to the FWS in fiscal year 2004 for this project and insures that the Platte River <br />is not de- emphasized in the FWS budget at a critical time in the Program's development. Congress <br />has appropriated funding in this FWS line item each year since 1998. <br />In 1997, the States of Nebraska, Wyoming and Colorado and the U.S. Department of the <br />Interior signed a Cooperative Agreement for Platte River Research and Other Efforts Relating to <br />Endangered Species Along the Central Platte River, Nebraska (Cooperative Agreement). The <br />signatories agreed to pursue a basin -wide, cooperative approach to address habitat needs of four <br />threatened and endangered species - the whooping crane, piping plover, least tern and pallid <br />sturgeon. The signatories to the Cooperative Agreement realize a comprehensive, cooperative <br />approach for addressing the Endangered Species Act (ESA) issues in the Central and Lower Platte <br />River Basin region is the most equitable and effective means to resolving endangered species <br />conflicts. This cooperative approach also provides greater certainty that the Platte River will <br />continue as a water source for irrigators, wildlife, and for the many people who reside in the Basin. <br />The Department of the Interior has prepared a draft environmental impact statement (DEIS) <br />dated December 2003 to analyze the impacts of the proposed Program. The National Academies of <br />Science (NAS) is currently conducting a review of the scientific aspects of the processes and <br />