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Bush eases on logging; environmentalists
afire
By Matthew Daly
Associated Press Writer
August 22, 2002
WASHINGTON — Responding to the rash of devastating wildfires that have swept the
West this summer, President Bush is easing restrictions on logging in national
forests.
At stake in Utah is 8.18 million acres of national forest lands.
"This isn't about biology or science," said Denise Boggs, executive director of
Utah Environmental Congress. "It's about politics and paybacks to the industry.
What Bush wants to do is open up old growth trees to logging, and if you look at
every major fire in the West, the fires are in the areas already logged and
eroded."
Environmentalists are being blamed in part for the fires because they block
Forest Service projects intended to clear brush and remove undergrowth. Yet none
of the fires burning in Utah are in areas where environmental appeals have
delayed thinning.
Bush, on the eve of a visit to a fire site Thursday in Oregon, proposed
Wednesday some changes to environmental laws to make it easier for timber
companies to get approval to thin out federal forests and remove fire-prone dead
trees and undergrowth.
"Needless red tape and lawsuits delay effective implementation of forest health
projects," said a White House fact sheet on the initiative. "This year's crisis
compels more timely decisions, greater efficiency and better results to reduce
catastrophic wildfire threats to communities and the environment."
But environmentalists said the administration was gutting safeguards that have
protected the national forests for decades. "Our fear is that this is a backdoor
way to open more land to commercial logging," said Allen Mattison, a spokesman
for the Sierra Club.
Under Bush's plan, timber companies not only could thin forests of brush but cut
trees — including some more than a century old — that are now protected,
Mattison said.
An administration official acknowledged that large, commercially desirable trees
with high fire risks could be felled as part of what the official called Bush's
"more active management" of forest growth.
The plan streamlines the government's process for reviewing environmental
effects of proposed logging projects, changes the standards by which those
proposals are approved and allows government agencies to negotiate contracts
giving timber companies and other entities the right to sell the wood products
they harvest in exchange for doing the work of thinning trees and removing dead
wood.
Administration officials said forest management changes are needed to reduce the
fire risks. This summer, wildfires have burned more than 6 million acres from
Alaska to New Mexico, or twice as much timber as in an average summer, said the
U.S. Forest Service. Federal spending to combat wildfires could reach $1.5
billion this year.
Interior Secretary Gale Norton, characterizing Western forests as "a tinder box
waiting for a spark," said much of the blame can be traced to "nearly a century
of well-intentioned but misguided management" of federal forests including the
policies of putting out fires as soon as they start and restricting removal of
underbrush, fallen logs and dead timbers.
This has left forests "crowded . . . with thick undergrowth (that) makes forests
susceptible to disease, drought and severe wildfires," she wrote in an op-ed
article published Wednesday in USA Today.
Environmentalists acknowledged that decades of quickly extinguishing fires
contributed to the fire problem. But they insisted that actions by
environmentalists to protect forests played no part in the fire hazard.
They cited a recent report by the General Accounting Office, the investigative
agency of Congress, that said that less than 1 percent of the government's
attempts to thin forests were challenged by outside groups including
environmentalists.
The environmentalists accused the administration of using this summer's fires to
help the timber industry, which contributed heavily to Bush's 2000 presidential
campaign, gain greater access to federal forests.
Another key part of Bush's plan would make it harder for environmental groups
and others to challenge government logging plans.
"We're very concerned they will use the fires to further an agenda they've had
for a long time — and that is to change key environmental laws" that serve to
protect the forests from logging, said Linda Lance, a Wilderness Society vice
president.
"We're all stuck on fires right now, but the Bush administration is talking
about changes in environmental law on the books for 30 years," said Susan Ash, a
forest ecologist with the Oregon Natural Resources Council, an environmental
group.
Chris West, a vice president of the American Forest Resource Council, a timber
industry group, said in light of this summer's fires the government has no
choice but to act.
"We've burned up half a million acres of Oregon's forests. It's high time the
federal government began to seriously address concerns about the health of
Western forests," he said.
But environmentalists said any action should be directed at protecting
communities from wildfires. They called for creation of "community protection
zones" that would allow thinning in areas near homes and other property but
would leave more remote areas of the forests alone.
A number of environmental groups, including the Sierra Club and Wilderness
Society, proposed a five-year, $10 billion plan that would make money available
for fireproofing homes in forest areas and focus programs for thinning forests
and removing brush to lands closest to homes.
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