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Also in flames: Smokey Bear approach
Christian Science Monitor ^ | Thursday, June 27, 2002 | By Brad Knickerbocker | Staff Writer of The Christian Science Monitor

Posted on 06/27/2002 3:41:03 AM PDT by JohnHuang2

ASHLAND, ORE. - The 20 major fires that have consumed more than 2.5 million acres in nine states raise deep questions about how to prevent and fight such conflagrations.

How to reverse nearly 100 years of history during which the basic Smokey Bear approach of full suppression has choked forests with flammable material? How to accommodate the inexorable movement of new homeowners into the "wildland-urban interface," where shake roofs and shade trees are fuel to a hungry fire?

Such questions are inevitably controversial. They involve balancing the more natural "let-it-burn" approach with the "active forest management" (i.e., more logging) favored by President Bush and the timber industry. They include delegating authority and responsibility for firefighting among federal agencies, state and local governments, and private property owners.

And as massive fires rage out of control in Colorado and Arizona this week, they reflect the political heat of environmental protection: How to overcome what US Forest Service chief Dale Bosworth calls the "analysis paralysis" of environmental regulation and lawsuits that he says has prevented aggressive fire prevention.

On one thing experts and advocates agree: trying to snuff out all fires before they can spread has not been the best thing for nature – or even for development, particularly the retirement and vacation homes that have crept into forest areas. "For decades we've been suppressing wildfires that used to naturally thin many of our forests," says Gov. John Kitzhaber (D) of Oregon. "The unfortunate result, however, has been to raise the potential for dangerously large and intense wildfires."

Historically, ground-level natural fires regularly cleared out the dense undergrowth and crowded smaller trees that can cause catastrophic "crown fires" to leap from one tall evergreen to the next. But according to the Intermountain Forest Association (an industry group in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho), ponderosa pine forests in many parts of the West now have 10 times as many trees per acre as they did a century ago.

There's also agreement that strategically-set fires need to be part of preventing massive blazes like the ones that have forced thousands of people to evacuate their homes this week.

In recent years, the US Forest Service and other government agencies have started restoration programs involving prescribed burns as well as forest thinning. But it's a controversial policy. In a few instances, the fires have gotten out of control and destroyed private property.

Heading off wildfires today involves a mix of low- and high-tech: With financial help from a federal program, Deb Wilson and her husband, Ed Green, have been chopping the manzanita and buck brush away from their home in Wildcat Canyon outside Ashland, Ore. An hour or two away, Laura Glasscock is spending her summer alone, scanning the horizon for smoke from a remote lookout tower in the Cascade Mountains.

Meanwhile, sophisticated detectors are recording the thousands of lightening strikes that cause most wildfires, and a process called the "Wildfire Automated Biomass Burning Algorithm" is helping spot and map fires from satellites more than 20,000 miles above Earth.

It's all serious business, particularly given the state of much of the nation's forest land. Fire suppression, the woody debris left behind by loggers, and the impact of cattle grazing on federal rangeland have damaged watersheds and ecosystems, leaving them more prone to ignition. According to the General Accounting Office, about one-third of the 192 million-acre national forest system is in severe fire danger.

"In many areas, this will require active forest management efforts to thin our forests of excessive natural fuels and restore native vegetation to our forests and rangelands," President Bush said at a recent meeting of western governors. Forest Service chief Dale Bosworth says much of the delay is due to bureaucratic red tape and legal challenges.

"We find ourselves too often unable to do the work that we know needs to be done, the work that Congress and the public expect us to do, because of unnecessary and unproductive process," Mr. Bosworth told a House Resources Committee hearing last week.

Environmentalists respond that supporting federal laws having to do with forest management, clean water, and species protection is a legitimate use of time. They note a GAO report last year showing that of 1,671 Forest Service hazardous fuels reduction projects in 2001, only 20 had been appealed and none had been litigated.

"The bottom line is that the Bush administration is doing industry's bidding by attacking environmental safeguards to make it easier for the timber industry to destroy our public land legacy," says Doug Heiken of the Oregon Natural Resources Council.

Such arguments are as much about economics as they are about natural resources and the environment that produces them. Selling timber from national forestland consistently results in red ink for Uncle Sam – the "below-cost timber sales" that have cost the federal government billions of dollars over the years. Critics say that's because the price paid by timber companies doesn't reflect true costs, including the cost of building the thousands of miles of dirt roads that spiderweb forests.

Such roads have other purposes: ready access for firefighters. They also provide access to hunters, campers, and others who may – on purpose or by accident – be the cause of fires.

But that's just one part of the economic dilemma. Zoning laws to make new development more fire-safe add to new building costs. The thinning of smaller, noncommercial trees and salvage logging to restore previously burned areas would have to be subsidized in order to attract companies that could do that kind of work. Small subsidies to help the owners of existing homes clear their immediate areas of brush and other fuel have become available in recent years.

All of this adds to the cost of fighting fire. Still, it's less than the costs of the huge fires that claim some 3 million acres every summer, many of which arethe indirect result of official policies.

How do Americans feel about the fundamental values at stake? Conflicted, it seems. Most see loss of habitat and endangered species as their biggest concern about wildfires (54 percent) – even more so than loss of homes or private property (45 percent). But at the same time, according to a recent survey of public opinion in six Western states conducted by "Wildland Firefighter" magazine, a large majority (73 percent) favor mechanical thinning of forests (i.e., logging) over leaving forests to Mother Nature.

It is through this thicket of opinion and outlook on wildfires that political leaders now must navigate.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:
Thursday, June 27, 2002

Quote of the Day by RooRoobird14

1 posted on 06/27/2002 3:41:03 AM PDT by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2
I do not purport to be an expert (or even knowledgeable) but when we first moved to the area of the Rodeo fire (yes, we are part of the "refugees") we were advised to thin the trees to prevent fire, to prevent disease and to allow the trees to grow without too much competition. Why is it the right thing for us to do but not the forest service? There has been a lot of talk about how the folks in Show Low rejected a controlled burn. Does anyone remember the last truly "successful" controlled burn which devastated Los Alamos?
2 posted on 06/27/2002 5:44:22 AM PDT by AZFolks
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To: Free the USA; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Libertarianize the GOP; freefly; expose; .30Carbine; 4Freedom; ..
Sorry about your loss, AZFolks. Ping

AZ Madfly
3 posted on 06/27/2002 7:57:34 AM PDT by madfly
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To: madfly
BTTT!!!!!
4 posted on 06/27/2002 8:52:29 AM PDT by E.G.C.
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To: madfly
bttt
5 posted on 06/27/2002 9:04:53 AM PDT by mafree
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To: JohnHuang2
"The bottom line is that the Bush administration is doing industry's bidding by attacking environmental safeguards to make it easier for the timber industry to destroy our public land legacy," says Doug Heiken of the Oregon Natural Resources Council.

I guess this guy won't believe his lying eyes. Out of control fires burning over 2.5 million acres are doing more to "destroy our public land legacy" than a bunch of loggers (who plant replacement trees for those that they harvest).

6 posted on 06/27/2002 9:27:03 AM PDT by hattend
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To: JohnHuang2
On one thing experts and advocates agree: trying to snuff out all fires before they can spread has not been the best thing for nature – or even for development, particularly the retirement and vacation homes that have crept into forest areas. "For decades we've been suppressing wildfires that used to naturally thin many of our forests," says Gov. John Kitzhaber (D) of Oregon. "The unfortunate result, however, has been to raise the potential for dangerously large and intense wildfires."

Spin detector < on >

"Let the forests burn", says Kitzhaber. "Better than the loggers getting them."

Spin detector < off >

7 posted on 06/27/2002 9:30:35 AM PDT by hattend
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To: madfly
Thanks for the heads up!
8 posted on 06/27/2002 12:52:12 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: madfly
Thanks for the ping, madfly. I hope that all of the AZFolks are as mad as most of us are at the federal leviathan that has allowed this to happen.

Critics say that's because the price paid by timber companies doesn't reflect true costs, including the cost of building the thousands of miles of dirt roads that spiderweb forests.

The timber companies build their own roads to get at the timber; the idiots in DC decided that those roads must meet 'basic federal guidelines', and the deep-pocketed taxpayers were ripped off again by the perfumed princes of profligate partisanship. Unfortunately, this attitude has been going on for decades, and it will take firm action on our part and more decades to reverse the watermelon agendas that are infecting the US via Agenda 21.

My sincere condolences for your loss, AZFolks.

9 posted on 06/27/2002 1:44:48 PM PDT by brityank
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To: brityank
perfumed princes of profligate partisanship

Great copy! great copy!

Perfumed princes of profligate partisanship is a really great phrase. Really better than "nattering nabobs...."

Or my favorite for Congress: "Congers".

10 posted on 06/27/2002 1:55:14 PM PDT by Ole Okie
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To: Ole Okie; RJayneJ
perfumed princes of profligate partisanship ®

I hereby grant any FReeper free use. :^)

11 posted on 06/28/2002 4:31:09 AM PDT by brityank
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To: JohnHuang2
Can anybody explain why, with all of our sophisticated technology, we can't just stop the fires as soon as they start? In the old days, the firewatchers would call one in, they'd hike up, and shovel it out before things got out of control. Now we treat forest fires like an invasion of Iraq, consuming so much time in planning and management that the fires grow to uncontrollable levels before anybody even gets there. (Unless there are local property owners to defend themselves.)
12 posted on 06/28/2002 6:46:56 AM PDT by Iconoclast2
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To: brityank
Thanks for the heads up! };^D)
13 posted on 06/28/2002 12:25:43 PM PDT by RJayneJ
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