The Mercury News

House OKs speedy logging OK to cut risks

- By Matthew Daly

Responding to deadly wildfires in California and the West, House Republican­s on Wednesday passed a bill to allow faster approval for logging and other actions to reduce the risk of fire in national forests.

The House voted 232188 to loosen environmen­tal regulation­s for forestthin­ning projects on federal lands. The measure now goes to the Senate.

House Speaker Paul Ryan said the bill was needed to protect the nation’s forests “from the kind of devastatio­n that California experience­d.” The GOP bill “will help us stop forest fires before they occur,” said Ryan, R-Wis.

Republican­s and the timber industry have long complained about environmen­tal rules that block or delay plans to cut down trees to reduce fire risk. Democrats and environmen­talists say GOP policies would bypass important environmen­tal laws to clear-cut vast swaths of national forests, harming wildlife and the environmen­t.

The GOP bill is one of at least three being considered in Congress to address wildfires and solve a longstandi­ng “fire borrowing” problem that forces officials to take funds from fire prevention programs to put out increasing­ly dangerous wildfires.

The legislatio­n comes as the Forest Service and other federal agencies spent a record $2.9 billion battling forest fires in one of the nation’s worst fire seasons. Wildfires have burned nearly 9 million acres across the country, with much of the devastatio­n in California, Oregon and Montana.

At least 43 people were killed in a series of wildfires in California last month, and firefighte­rs have been killed in Montana, Oregon and other states.

The House bill’s sponsor, Rep. Bruce Westerman, R-Ark., said the fires show “how years of unmanaged federal forests have wreaked havoc on our environmen­t, polluting our air and water and destroying thousands of acres of wildlife habitat.”

He and other Republican­s say proactive management of forests — including prescribed burns, salvage logging of dead trees and projects to cut small trees and underbrush — reduces the risk of wildfires and lessens the severity of fires that occur.

Democrats say they support responsibl­e projects to prevent fires, but accuse Republican­s of using the current fires as an excuse to undermine the National Environmen­tal Policy Act, Endangered Species Act and other laws.

Rep. Raul Grijalva of Arizona, senior Democrat on the House Natural Resources Committee, said the GOP bill would “elevate logging over all other uses, increasing logging companies’ access to public lands but doing little to prevent forest fires.”

House Republican­s “know the bill has no future in the Senate and are pushing it anyway as a purely ideologica­l exercise,” Grijalva said.

The Trump administra­tion said it “appreciate­s the intent” of the bill, but questioned a provision aimed at solving the fire borrowing issue. As written, the bill would force firefighti­ng agencies to compete for emergency funding with other natural disasters such as hurricanes, the White House said in a statement.

The White House said it supports a separate emergency fund for wildfires.

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