http://www.cnn.com/2003/ALLPOLITICS/02/28/bush.forests.ap/index.html

Timber industry benefits from Bush forest policy Administration says
wildfires underscore need for change 

WASHINGTON (AP) -- In just six months President Bush has succeeded in
redirecting the nation's forest policy toward the liking of the timber
industry. 

Endangered species are getting less priority while environmental reviews
and public appeals are being reduced and in some cases eliminated, all
part of the "Healthy Forests" initiative Bush outlined last August for
thinning overgrown woodlands prone to wildfires. 

When Congress balked, Bush went around it with new regulations that could
be implemented without changing law. After the November election, when
his fellow Republicans took control of the Senate and increased their
majority in the House, Congress checked off two more items on the
administration's wish list. 

All but one of five regulatory changes Bush sought are approaching the
finish line. Two shorten or skip environmental reviews, one limits public
appeals and another requires various agencies to coordinate their
endangered species studies. A fifth, still in the works, would reduce
time spent on endangered species reviews. 

On Friday, the administration recommended that Congress create no more
wilderness areas in the 17 million-acre Tongass National Forest in
Alaska, the nation's largest. Ninety-two percent of Tongass already is
off limits to timber production. 

Earlier in February, Congress precluded environmentalists from going to
court to challenge that recommendation. Lawmakers also tucked into a
giant spending bill language allowing logging companies and other
contractors to keep trees they harvest in exchange for reducing
undergrowth, which helps start wildfires. 

The U.S. Forest Service and the Interior Department's Bureau of Land
Management, which together manage more than 450 million acres of
government land, can now issue 10-year contracts for that work with no
limits on the size of trees that can be cut. 

Bush and his aides seized on several years of drought and massive
wildfires in the West to make their case for the changes. Last year, more
than 7 million acres burned and the government spent more than $1.5
billion fighting wildfires -- triple the amount originally budgeted. 

Interior Secretary Gale Norton said 2003 "is shaping up to be a difficult
year" and could be the worst fire season ever; the governors of Nebraska
and Kansas each told her it is the driest year in their states since the
1930s Dust Bowl. 

To environmentalists, the administration's approach to forest management
is less about preventing wildfires than opening up more resource-rich
federal land to timber and mining interests. 

Jim Lyons, a Yale University forestry professor and former Agriculture
Department undersecretary who supervised the Forest Service in the
Clinton administration, said the White House appears intent on returning
to the policy of the mid-1980s, when the Forest Service and the BLM had
free rein to harvest timber. 

"They're cutting the public out of the process, they're using trees to
generate revenue to do this forest health and treatment work they want to
do, and they're eliminating any substantive environmental review from the
process," Lyons said. 

In January, the Forest Service proposed excluding timber sales involving
less than 250 acres and a half-mile of temporary roads from environmental
reviews. Again, the government said it was motivated by the need to
reduce wildfire risks by removing dead and dying trees. 

Michael Klein, a spokesman for the American Forest and Paper Association,
the timber industry's trade group, said the Bush administration's
approach will help nudge the Forest Service toward better management of
the nation's woodlands. 

"It means just not sitting back and letting nature takes it course, but
taking an active hand," he said. 

The administration now wants Congress, in the name of fire prevention, to
exempt up to 10 million more acres of national forests from environmental
reviews and citizen appeals, eliminate administrative appeals for Forest
Service decisions and direct courts to give more weight to the risks of
inaction when thinning projects are challenged. 

Separately, the administration is redrawing forest management plans to
vest more power with local federal officials and rewriting a Clinton-era
regulation that bars most logging on 58.5 million acres of non-wilderness
land. 

"We're making great progress getting the tools lined up ... but the real
test lies ahead," said Agriculture Department undersecretary Mark Rey.
"The proof ... will be what things look like 10 to 15 years from now." 

_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to