Billy,

Trump is only partially right.  For the last 15 or 20 years, forest managers 
have woken up to their decades-old err in trying to automatically put out all 
fires.  Now, forest managers are using prescribed burns to get rid of the fuel 
loads so that when wildfires happen, they burn with much less intensity.  I can 
give an example of a project that I was a part of in Incline Village that 
worked as described.  It isn’t just forest management, it is also the massive 
building of homes in areas that create a MUCH bigger urban/forest interface.

 

Chris 

 

 

 

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On 
Behalf Of Billy Rojas
Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2018 1:41 PM
To: Centroids Discussions <[email protected]>
Cc: Billy Rojas <[email protected]>
Subject: [RC] WSJ ...Trump is a bully, but he’s right about bad forest 
management.

 


California’s Paradise Lost


Trump is a bully, but he’s right about bad forest management.


The problem is also that Trump is so poorly educated that it is embarrassing to 
agree with him

because he sounds like a functional illiterate.  -BR comment

 

 

Wall Street Journal

 

401 
<https://www.wsj.com/articles/californias-paradise-lost-1542068600?mod=hp_opin_pos1#comments_sector>
  Comments

By  

The Editorial Board

Nov. 12, 2018 

 

  <https://images.wsj.net/im-36554?width=620&aspect_ratio=1.5> 

 

 

 

One problem with President Trump’s bullying rhetorical style is that he gives 
his critics reason to ignore him even when he has a point. Consider his weekend 
threat to yank federal funds from California amid its horrific wildfires.

 

 

Three fires are raging across the state, killing at least 31 people and 
scorching more than 200,000 acres, including the town of Paradise in the Sierra 
Nevada foothills. “There is no reason for these massive, deadly and costly 
forest fires in California except that forest management is so poor,” Mr. Trump 
tweeted. “Billions of dollars are given each year, with so many lives lost, all 
because of gross mismanagement of the forests. Remedy now, or no more Fed 
payments!”

 

 

 

Mr. Trump has no empathy gene even if he is right about forestry ills. 
Relentless winds and low air moisture make California’s fires harder to contain 
while development is putting more people in danger. But also fueling the fires 
is an overgrown government bureaucracy that frustrates proper forest management.

 

About 57% of California forestland is owned by the federal government while 
most of the rest is private land regulated by the state. Nearly 130 million 
trees died in California between 2010 and 2017 due to drought and a bark beetle 
infestation. Dense forests put trees at greater risk for parasitic infection 
and enable fires to spread faster. When dead trees fall, they add more 
combustible fuel.

 

Once upon a time the U.S. Forest Service’s mission was to actively manage the 
federal government’s resources. Yet numerous laws over the last 50 years, 
including the Endangered Species Act and National Environmental Policy Act, 
have hampered tree-clearing, controlled burns and timber sales on federal land.

California also restricts timber harvesting and requires myriad permits and 
environmental-impact statements to prune overgrown forests. As the state 
Legislative Analyst’s Office (LAO) dryly noted in April, “project proponents 
seeking to conduct activities to improve the health of California’s forests 
indicate that in some cases, state regulatory requirements can be excessively 
duplicative, lengthy, and costly.”

 

One problem for landowners is disposing of deadwood. Dozens of biomass 
facilities that burn tree parts that can’t be used for lumber have closed due 
to emissions regulations and competition from subsidized renewables and cheap 
natural gas.

 

To burn leaves and tree limbs, landowners must obtain air-quality permits from 
“local air districts, burn permits from local fire agencies, and potentially 
other permits depending on the location, size, and type of burn,” the LAO 
explained. “Permits restrict the size of burn piles and vegetation that can be 
burned, the hours available for burns, and the allowable moisture levels in the 
material.”

 

The LAO recommended that California prune its regulations, facilitate timber 
sales and ease permitting for burning biomass. Environmentalists oppose this, 
but one irony is that destruction from fires imperils species far more than 
does regulated tree-clearing.

 

Thinning forests could also save Californians billions of gallons of water each 
year, according to an April study by the National Science Foundation. The good 
news is that the Trump Administration is expanding timber sales on federal land 
and this year’s harvest will be the biggest in two decades.

 

Restoring California’s forests to health could take years, but the lesson of 
these fires is that the feds and state should drop their political blinders and 
do it.

 

 

 

 

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