Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Groups blast logging plan aimed at reducing fires

- By Keith Ridler

BOISE, IDAHO » Conservati­on groups are blasting a Trump administra­tion decision officials said will reduce wildfires by streamlini­ng environmen­tal reviews of timber salvage projects.

WildEarth Guardians, Western Watersheds Project and seven other groups say the rules approved Thursday fast-track projects to benefit logging, grazing and mining while eliminatin­g public comments. The new rules also speed the cutting down of pinyon-juniper woodlands in the U.S. West.

The Trump administra­tion said the streamline­d reviews on land administer­ed by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management will reduce wildfire threats while increasing job opportunit­ies. The administra­tion also said the new rules will help protect sagebrush habitat needed by imperiled sage grouse and other wildlife.

Categorica­l exclusions

Specifical­ly, the administra­tion finalized what are called categorica­l exclusions to the National Environmen­tal Policy Act. That’s a 1970 law that typically requires federal agencies to study potential environmen­tal effects of proposed actions before starting work.

“After yet another difficult fire season, it is measures like this that will help (the Bureau of Land Management) better protect human life and property by aggressive­ly addressing dead and dying timber and pinyon-juniper encroachme­nt, and I hope to see it used immediatel­y to reduce fuel loads before next summer,” Kate MacGregor, deputy secretary of the U.S. Department of the Interior, said in a statement.

But the environmen­tal groups said the change would mean little oversight by the public on giant projects.

“These are scorchedea­rth policies with no place in what is supposed to be open, transparen­t, and science-based management of 245 million acres of public land,” said Kya Marienfeld, Wildlands Attorney with the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance.

The National Interagenc­y Fire Center in Boise, Idaho, said that nearly 15,000 square miles have burned in the U.S. this year, about 4,700 square miles more than the 10-year average.

The bureau administer­s 380,000 square miles of land in the U. S. West, where deadly fires have forced evacuation­s and damaged homes. In California, over 6,250 square miles or 16,000 square kilometers burned this year, more than double the previous record for the most land burned in a single year in the state — roughly the size of Connecticu­t. Deadly Northwest fires burned hundreds of homes.

Blaze causes disputed

Experts say there is a link between climate change and bigger wildfires, but

President Donald Trump has blamed poor forest management.

The new policy also includes categorica­l exclusions allowing the cutting of pinyon-juniper forests. Federal agencies say the trees are encroachin­g on sagebrush habitat and need to be removed. The bureau has already cleared large areas of such forests in several states, and plans call for more cutting of trees.

The bureau’s “notion that there will be no significan­t environmen­tal impacts from clearcutti­ng thousands of acres across the West is absurd on its face,” said Scott Lake of the Center for Biological Diversity. “This is nothing more than an eleventh-hour attempt by the outgoing administra­tion to shut the public out of public land management.”

The new rules can be reversed, but changes would need to go through a public comment process.

Experts say that pinyon pine and junipers, which are native species, have been expanding the amount of area they cover for de

cades, creating woodlands and eliminatin­g understory species such as sagebrush. Studies in some areas have found the expansion dates back more than a century.

Experts attribute the expansion to fire suppressio­n, domestic livestock grazing and climate change. But studies also indicate that pinyon-juniper forests have expanded and receded based on climate for thousands of years.

 ?? KEITH RIDLER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A juniper tree was cut down in southweste­rn Idaho on Aug. 15, 2019. Conservati­on groups are blasting a Trump administra­tion decision streamlini­ng environmen­tal reviews of timber salvage projects and cutting down pinyon-juniper woodlands on millions of acres in the U.S. West.
KEITH RIDLER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A juniper tree was cut down in southweste­rn Idaho on Aug. 15, 2019. Conservati­on groups are blasting a Trump administra­tion decision streamlini­ng environmen­tal reviews of timber salvage projects and cutting down pinyon-juniper woodlands on millions of acres in the U.S. West.

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