|
Bush's Forest Plan Signals
Return to 'Logging Without Laws'
By Matthew Koehler, Native Forest Network
Just like their energy plan, the Bush Administration's forest
plan - dubbed the "Healthy Forests Initiative" -
was written to benefit their friends in the resource extractive
industries. In fact, the Bush Administration and some in Congress
are cynically using the wildfires in their never-ending quest
to cut more trees in America's national forests.
We've all heard the standard line from the pro-logging camp.
They blame the fires on environmentalists and America's pesky
environmental laws which, they claim, have gotten in the way
of "responsible" forest management on national forests.
Problem is, the facts don't back up their conclusion.
For starters, during the past decade only 19% of the acres
burned by wildfires have even been on national forest lands.
Most of the fires have burned on private, state and tribal
land. And science has been telling us for years that a century
of commercial logging has increased - not decreased - fire
risk and severity.
Consider a 1996 report to Congress which found, "Timber
harvest, through its effects on forest structure, local microclimate,
and fuels accumulation, has increased fire severity more than
any other recent human activity."
Or the Dept. of Agriculture's report following the 2000 wildfires
which stated, "The removal of large, merchantable trees
from forests does not reduce fire risk and may, in fact, increase
such risk." The reported warned that the Forest Service's
fire policy "should not rely on commercial logging or
new road building to reduce fire risks."
What about the often repeated claim that fuel-reduction projects
are being stalled by appeals and lawsuits? The General Accounting
Office (GAO) recently investigated all Forest Service fuel-reduction
projects for fiscal year 2001 and found that of the 1,671
projects, zero had been litigated and only 1% of the projects
had been appealed."
Given the facts, proposals to suspend America's environmental
laws and eliminate the public's right to appeal Forest Service
logging projects should be viewed as nothing less than a transparent
attempt to increase commercial logging in our national forests
- which has been the Bush Administration's stated goal since
day one.
Even some members of Congress have jumped on the "logging
without laws" bandwagon by introducing legislation that
would permanently suspend America's environmental laws and
ban public appeals and judicial review of logging projects
on national forests.
One current bill - called the National Forest Fire Prevention
Act - is even broader than the infamous 1995 Salvage Rider,
which the Washington Post called, "arguably the worst
piece of public lands legislation ever."
Under the Salvage Rider - with environmental laws suspended
and meaningful pubic participation banned - enough trees were
cut from our national forests to fill log trucks lined up
for over 6,800 miles! Under the guise of improving "forest
health" ancient old-growth forests and roadless areas
fell to the chainsaw. Unfortunately, if the Bush Administration
gets their way, our public forests will suffer the same consequences,
only this time under the guise of "fuel-reduction."
While the environmental community is rightfully opposed to
the "logging without laws" approach favored by the
Bush Administration and their friends in the logging industry,
we continue to support a common sense, scientifically based
approach to protect homes from fire and restore the ecological
integrity of America's national forests.
The Forest Service's own experts have found that a home's
ability to survive a fire depends almost entirely on its location,
its condition and its surroundings within 200 feet. In short,
experts tell us that wildfire protection begins at home, not
with more logging on our national forests.
When it comes to restoring our national forests, we support
putting local people to work undoing the damage caused by
a century of logging, roadbuilding, grazing, fire suppression,
and more recently, ATV use. For example, the same bulldozer
operator who helped build over 400,000 miles of roads on our
national forests, can be put to work removing roads that create
ecological problems or a safety hazard.
In fact, the environmental community has worked together
with forest practitioners and community forestry groups to
draft a set of Restoration Principles to promote ecological
forest restoration and guide the implementation of sound restoration
policies and projects on national forests.
Ultimately, the management of America's national forests
is up to us - the American people. Ask yourself, should we
listen to those who are proposing to suspend our environmental
laws and limit public participation? Or should we move forward
with a common sense, scientifically based approach that will
protect communities from fire and put local people to work
restoring our national forests? The choice is ours.
|