California Fire News
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Forest Service Chief Dismisses Importance of Environmental Review Posted: 08 Dec 2007 11:41 AM CST Source: Yuba Net By: Sierra Club Published: Dec 7, 2007 at 08:29 In response to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling this week against Forest Service rules that had exempted logging projects from environmental review, the Forest Service Chief Gail Kimball today made statements in the Associated Press implying that the overturned rule had been necessary to protect homes in California from wildfire. The truth is that the Ninth Circuit's decision won't stop a single good project that is designed to reduce the risk of damage to communities. Appropriate, environmentally sound removal of small diameter trees and brush and prescribed burning will sail through environmental review and will not delay the right kind of community protection work. Inappropriate, environmentally destructive logging far removed from communities under the facade of "fuels reduction" does nothing to mitigate fire risk - it only lines the coffers of the timber industry and devastates wildlife habitat and watersheds. It should not be exempt from environmental review. Environmental review and public participation are vital to make sure our communities are safe. In 2003, the Forest Service issued a sweeping nationwide policy exempting from environmental review any logging project less than 1000 acres that was in the so-called "urban/wildland interface." Sierra Club has supported many projects adjacent to communities that are focused on brush removal and prescribed fire. The Bush administration has instead prioritized logging thousands of acres, in many cases far from inhabited areas, without any public input and without any assessment of potential environmental harm. One example is management of the El Dorado National Forest--rather than permitting very small projects that truly would not have significant impacts, the Forest Service planned project after project, many adjacent to one another, of around 980 acres in order to exempt them from environmental analysis. Most were not focused on brush removal and prescribed burns as the article states, but on logging large trees. To allow such exemptions wherever they wanted, the Forest Service cynically decided that large percentages, in some cases nearly all, of the national forests were "wildland/urban interface." Sierra Club and Sierra Forest Legacy (formerly named Sierra Nevada Forest Protection Campaign) filed a suit in October 2004 challenging the Bush Administration's "Healthy Forest Initiative" rule that eliminated a 30-year-old Forest Service practice of analyzing the environmental effects of timber sales up to 1,000 acres and prescribed burns up to 4,500 acres before allowing such projects to proceed. This week's ruling from the Ninth Circuit said the U.S. Forest Service erred because it: Exempted from the National Environmental Policy Act a huge class of logging classified as "fuels reduction" first, and then later gathered the environmental impact data; Failed to assess the cumulative effects of logging 1.2 million acres per year nationwide; Failed to assess highly controversial and uncertain risks of impacts; and Failed to put more specific constraints on what can be logged. Related article: Source Sierra Club Victory in Ninth Circuit Deals Blow to Bush Administration's So-Called "Healthy Forests" Initiative Court Rules That Administration Cannot Ignore Environmental Laws to Log Forests
San Francisco, California--In the case of Sierra Club v. Bosworth, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the U.S. Forest Service erred when it conducted logging projects nationwide without prior analysis of their effects on the environment. Sierra Club and Sierra Forest Legacy (formerly named Sierra Nevada Forest Protection Campaign) filed the suit in October 2004 challenging the Bush Administration's "Healthy Forest Initiative" rule that eliminated a 30-year-old Forest Service practice of analyzing the environmental effects of timber sales up to 1,000 acres and prescribed burns up to 4,500 acres before allowing such projects to proceed. Today's ruling from the Ninth Circuit said the U.S. Forest Service erred because it: · Exempted from the National Environmental Policy Act a huge class of logging classified as "fuels reduction" first, and then later gathered the environmental impact data · Failed to assess the cumulative effects of logging 1.2 million acres per year nationwide · Failed to assess highly controversial and uncertain risks of impacts · Failed to put more specific constraints on what can be logged Statement of Eric Huber, Senior Staff Attorney, Sierra Club
"This victory is a blow to the Bush Administration's cynical "Healthy Forests" initiative and will help protect millions of acres of national forest each year from destructive and unnecessary logging projects. This ruling will help ensure that vast swaths of our national forests are not logged without environmental reviews under the guise of forest management or fuel suppression. The Sierra Club supports forest management practices that actually seek to protect communities and our precious wild forests and minimize the risk of wildfires, but this case is just one more example of the Bush administration's disastrous overreach on environmental issues. The courts have once again had to tell the administration that it simply cannot ignore laws--environmental and otherwise--simply because it finds them inconvenient." Statement of Craig Thomas, Executive Director of Sierra Forest Legacy "In California, since the adoption of the Bush Administration rule, we have witnessed the gross abuse of discretion and ramp-up of logging with limited environmental review that we feared. Logging without environmental safeguards damages our forests and the public's trust in Forest Service management."
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