November 16, 2020

Another In-Lieu Fee Program Fails to Perform

Environmentalists and others are pointing to an audit of the nonprofit Western Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies (WAFWA), a five-state In-Lieu Fee (ILF) program whose stated mission is protection for the lesser prairie chicken, saying the conservation program was not properly managed and money was wasted.

Among other issues, the nonprofit spent money on a building in Idaho to house staff and wrongfully paid staff salaries from the program’s endowment fund, according to the audit.

The audit focused on WAFWA and its administration of the Range-wide Oil and Gas Candidate Conservation Agreement With Assurances program. It also evaluated the management of a species recovery foundation, overseen by WAFWA, that has raised approximately $60 million that was to be used, among other things, to pay private landowners who are willing to place parcels into conservation easements critical to the lesser prairie chicken.

“The audit’s conclusions make clear WAFWA grossly mismanaged efforts to save the lesser prairie chicken from extinction,” Noah Greenwald with the Center for Biological Diversity said in a statement. “Given these revelations, there’s no question these magnificent dancing birds need the Endangered Species Act’s protections to have any hope of survival.”

>Learn More about the inherent risks of ILF programs in this report from Duke University

You may also like

The Risk of Advance Credits

The Risk of Advance Credits
{"email":"Email address invalid","url":"Website address invalid","required":"Required field missing"}

Subscribe to our newsletter now!