Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Forest Service, Idaho work to boost logging on federal land

- KEITH RIDLER

BOISE, Idaho - The U.S. Forest Service and Idaho have forged 10 agreements for logging and restoratio­n projects on federal land in what officials say could become a template for other Western states to create jobs and reduce the severity of wildfires.

Under the deals, Idaho foresters will administer timber sales on about 10,000 acres the federal agency has on its to-do list but can’t complete because the money for the work is instead going to fight wildfires.

So far this year, the cost of that fight has surpassed $2 billion — more than half the federal agency’s annual budget — during one of the worst fire seasons on record in the West.

The state work involves managing timber sales to a lumber company after determinin­g how much is available and sometimes even marking what can and can’t be cut.

Money generated from the sales goes into accounts in the national forest where the timber was harvested, less expenses incurred by the Idaho Department of Lands for administer­ing the sales.

The federal money is held in accounts to be used for additional work, which can include thinning projects to reduce wildfire threats and projects to improve habitat for fish and wildlife.

The federal-state partnershi­p is possible under the Good Neighbor Authority passed by Congress more than a decade ago that initially involved Colorado and Utah. The 2014 Farm Bill expanded the measure to include other states.

Michigan, Wyoming, Oregon, Nevada and in particular Wisconsin have moved ahead with the partnershi­p. But officials say Idaho — where 38 percent of the land is managed by the U.S. Forest Service — has made rapid progress.

“Idaho has really stepped up to fully embrace that ability for us to work with our state partners to get more work done,” said Intermount­ain Region Forester Nora Rasure, whose area includes 53,000 square miles of forest lands in Utah, Nevada, and portions of Wyoming, Idaho and California.

Government, industry and environmen­talists have developed a collaborat­ive approach in Idaho following years of stalemated litigation over forests that were sometimes consumed by flames as decisions were delayed.

“They’re building agreements on being able to manage the forest in such a way that you can get timber off of them but you don’t compromise environmen­tal values,” said John Freemuth, a Boise State University environmen­tal policy professor and public lands expert. “It’s not a panacea, but it’s better than forest wars. That exhausted a lot of people.”

Watchdog groups say they’re concerned the policy might have more to do with avoiding environmen­tal regulation­s than enhancing forest health. But for now, they are cautiously supportive.

The Idaho Department of Lands manages 2.4 million acres of state endowment land it received at statehood primarily to benefit public schools. About a million of those acres are forested.

Tom Schultz, director of the Idaho Department of Lands, said the work with the Forest Service helps Idaho by reducing the threat of giant wildfires spilling onto state and private forest land and by removing stands weakened by insects or disease.

 ?? JOE JASZEWSKI/IDAHO STATESMAN VIA AP ?? A wildfire fire burns near Table Rock in Boise, Idaho, in June 2016. The U.S. Forest Service and Idaho have forged agreements leading to more logging on federal land in an effort officials say could reduce the severity of wildfires.
JOE JASZEWSKI/IDAHO STATESMAN VIA AP A wildfire fire burns near Table Rock in Boise, Idaho, in June 2016. The U.S. Forest Service and Idaho have forged agreements leading to more logging on federal land in an effort officials say could reduce the severity of wildfires.

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