Posted on 11/22/2003 9:05:20 PM PST by maui_hawaii
In California, where overzealous environmentalism often trumps common sense, our forests are suffering from rampant disease and destruction. In just a matter of days, more than 600,000 acres of Southern Californias forests were reduced to mere kindling in part because of overgrown forests that have been infected by the largest bark-beetle infestation in the last 50 years. After decades of mismanagement, the thinning of these forests remains largely unpracticed within our state, leaving forests that historically contained just 30 to 40 trees per acre, now filled with 300 to 400 trees per acre. As the events of last week demonstrated, the gross mismanagement of our states forests has literally created a perfect storm for wildfires.
The record blazes destroyed thousands of homes and killed 20 people and counting.
While Southern California is just beginning to assess the damage from the recent destruction, Northern California has learned firsthand the aftermath of such catastrophic fires. Just two years ago, the Star Fire in the Eldorado and Tahoe national forests destroyed more than 16,800 acres of public and private land in my congressional district alone. Unfortunately, like those in Southern California, our Northern California forests remain one escaped campfire short of exploding into yet another massive blaze aided by hazardous fuels and overly dense forests.
Our current forest policies have allowed 190 million acres of federal land to remain at a dangerously high risk of catastrophic wildfire, insect infestation and disease. As a result, last year alone, American taxpayers spent more than $1.6 billion fighting record-setting blazes attributable to overgrown forests.
Furthermore, lengthy bureaucratic processes have added to this smoldering danger, as they have kept the U.S. Forest Service (USFS) from being able to fully manage our forests. Just recently, the USFS testified that while treatment of an important project was held up in a three-year, 800-step decision-making process, a record-setting wildfire eviscerated large swaths of landscape and caused enormous damage to the natural environment as well as to a number of communities.
Despite the plea from the National Volunteer Fire Council to reduce the threats from catastrophic wildfire, insect infestations and disease, federal land managers can only treat about 2.5 million acres out of 190 million each year because of these often unnecessary bureaucratic processes. It is clear that if nothing is done to resolve these management issues immediately, the entire state of California and vast Western areas will continue to face the threat of catastrophic wildfire year in and year out.
Sadly, while Southern California burns, the U.S. Senate delays consideration on a critical piece of legislation that would help resolve Californias situation. The Healthy Forests Restoration Act, which passed the U.S. House of Representatives earlier this year, addresses this crisis by offering balanced, science-based solutions to ensure that more acres, homes and, most important, lives are saved. This bill allows forests to be purposefully thinned, making them less susceptible to devastating fires like the ones we have been experiencing so recently.
Furthermore, it is guided by the belief that excessive bureaucratic procedures can be streamlined without unduly infringing on public participation. Forest management projects would still be subject to rigorous environmental analysis as well as administrative challenges and lawsuits. The difference is, these multiple processes would be completed in a matter of months, rather than years.
The Healthy Forests Restoration Act would also combat emerging forest health problems by emphasizing local control and giving forest managers most familiar with the vulnerabilities of a specific area the lead in managing that ecosystem.
As we watched the hillsides of California burn out of control, it became all too apparent that we can no longer afford to let poor policy fuel Californias wildfires.
Our forests and communities are in desperate need of comprehensive legislation that will reduce hazardous fuels, treat existing health threats, conserve wildlife habitat and develop new techniques to fight forest pests and disease. By allowing another fire season to approach without the Healthy Forests Restoration Act, we leave billions of dollars, hundreds of thousands of acres of land and priceless lives in peril.
Doolittle has served in the House since 1991. As secretary of the House Republican Conference, he is an elected member of the House Republican leadership. Doolittle represents Californias 4th Congressional District and serves on the Appropriations Committee, its Energy and Water and D.C. subcommittees, and the House Administration Committee.
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federal land managers can only treat about 2.5 million acres out of 190 million each year because of these often unnecessary bureaucratic processes.
Simple solution: Sell the land unconstitutionaly obtained and held back to private individuals who have a real incentive to keep and maintain it. The proceeds from this land sale will do wonders for paying down the Fe'ral Government's deficit, and we get rid of many of the retards and clods who make up the "800 step decision process". Let those who have real skill find work for these private land holders and let the flotsam and jetsam find work among the illegal aliens.
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