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WNIJ's summary of news items around our state.

Illinois Endangered Species Board Itself Threatened

Illinois Endangered Species Protection Board

A state board that's charged with protecting rare flora and fauna has fallen victim to the state's budget woes. Gov. Bruce Rauner 's administration says funding for staff has been eliminated. 

An email from the then-Director of the Illinois Endangered Species Boardearlier this month was sudden and direct. "Funding is being eliminated" and won't be reinstated "any time in the foreseeable future,” it read. The email had been sent one of her last days on the job.

It leaves the nine-person volunteer board without any staff.

Board member Lenore Beyer-Clow says the state hasn't shared any information about how the board is to do its work without that support.

"I have grave concerns that ... the tasks at hand ... will be dramatically reduced if not eliminated and that we might -- this might end up with less protection of important plants and animals within our state," Beyer-Clow said.

Beyer-Clow, who works with the Open Lands organization says the research involved with deciding which species should go on and off the protected lists requires expertise. She says she realizes that money is tight, but she says preserving plants and animals on the verge of extinction in the area is important.

"I think that there is a connection here that we don't always see, when we're talking about a very -- you know, one species of insect -- that really impacts the greater good. That we all need to be really aware of the fact that this is really where we live, and we all need to recognize that that value has larger implications," Beyer-Clow said. "Each species is part of a larger ecosystem and we're all part of that ecosystem as well. So when you begin to see certain things impact different plant life, it goes toward bigger issues. It goes towards water quality. It goes toward concerns about habitat."

Other board members say they're waiting to learn more about the Rauner administration's plans before making any judgments. The Republican governor owns property in Wyoming and Montana, and has been described as a conservationist.

Rauner’s critics say moves like this one hurt the outdoors.

Illinois spent nearly $240,000 on the board last year. That’s less than half paid for the director's salary.

In response to specific questions about what prompted the cut and what plans are going forward, a spokesman with Gov. Bruce Rauner's administration would only say that the state supports the board's work and that it will continue without dedicated staff.

About 251 plants, 19 species of fish and 24 birds are on Illinois's endangered species list.

Amanda Vinicky moved to Chicago Tonight on WTTW-TV PBS in 2017.
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