HR-8919-119
Referred to the House Committee on Natural Resources.
Sponsored by Donald Beyer (D-VA)
What it does
This bill would void a March 31, 2026 decision by the Endangered Species Committee (ESC) that exempted certain Gulf of America oil and gas activities from requirements of the Endangered Species Act (ESA). It would prohibit any federal funds from being spent to implement that decision, bar the ESC from issuing any new exemption for those same activities for three years, and restore the ESA requirements that were in place before the exemption was granted.
Who benefits
Species listed as threatened or endangered in the Gulf of America region that would regain ESA protections. Environmental and conservation organizations that opposed the exemption. Commercial and recreational fishing industries whose livelihoods depend on healthy Gulf ecosystems. Coastal communities in Gulf states whose tourism and fishing economies are tied to marine biodiversity. Future generations who may benefit from preserved species populations.
Who is hurt
Oil and gas companies operating in the Gulf of America that received or expected to benefit from the ESC exemption, and that may now face reinstated ESA compliance costs or operational restrictions. Workers employed by those companies on affected projects. Energy consumers who could see indirect effects if production costs rise. Gulf-state economies that depend on oil and gas revenue. Federal agencies that invested resources in the ESC process that would be nullified.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the ESC — sometimes called the "God Squad" — is an extraordinary mechanism meant to be used only in rare, compelling circumstances, and that granting a blanket exemption for broad commercial oil and gas activities undermines the core purpose of the ESA. They contend that the March 2026 decision sets a dangerous precedent that could erode protections for listed species across the country, and that Congress has both the authority and the responsibility to override an executive-branch decision that conflicts with the statute's conservation mandate.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the ESC process is itself a lawful, congressionally created safety valve within the ESA, and that nullifying its decision by statute overrides a deliberative, multi-agency review that weighed economic and energy security interests. They contend that the three-year moratorium on reissuance goes further than simply restoring the status quo — it strips the executive branch of a tool Congress explicitly provided, potentially harming domestic energy production and the workers and communities that depend on it.