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©2004 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
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Walden
holds forest hearing in Sisters Take
fast action in salvaging fire-killed and fire-damaged timber and streamline
the federal review process.
That was the message given
by speakers at an August 18 congressional hearing held by Rep. Greg Walden
at Sisters High School.
Walden conducted the hearing
of the Subcommittee on Forests and Forest Health, which he chairs. About
100 people packed the SHS Lecture/Drama Room to hear testimony from seven
speakers from the Forest Service, the Confederated Tribes of the Warm
Springs Reservation, Oregon State University College of Forestry, county
and city government and the Sisters Area Chamber of Commerce.
With an agenda entitled "In
the Aftermath of Catastrophic Events: Restoring and Protecting Communities,
Water, Wildlife and Forests," the hearing was held just a day before the
one-year anniversary of the start of the B&B Complex Fire. It was also
during the same week when no bids were received for a salvage sale for
the 2002 Eyerly Fire.
Walden showed great interest
in how the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation move quickly
to salvage fire-killed timber. Robert Brunoe, general manager of natural
resources for the tribes, explained that they maintain a strong outreach
program with tribal members before fires burn and involve members in their
planning process, thereby avoiding appeals.
This involvement results in
the entire process of preparing a salvage sale lasting from only 120 to
180 days, he said.
Federal timber sales can take
years to develop.
Brunoe added that their process
still protects all forest resources and that their forest has been certified
as a Sustainable Forest by an international organization that evaluates
public and private forests. In follow-up questions, Walden asked Brunoe
when planning started to salvage the 2004 Log Springs Fire and got the
answer "last week."
Walden then asked "Is that
fire completely out?" and was told "not yet."
"We listen to the land and
it will tell us what needs to be done," Brunoe said. "We take what has
been given to us by the Creator and work in harmony with it."
The Warm Springs approach
was clearly intriguing to Walden.
"What I want to learn more
about is how tribal governments are able to move as rapidly as they are
and still maintain this environmentally certified forest status," Walden
said at the conclusion of the two-hour hearing. "They have obviously figured
out how to do this in a way that they meet the highest standards in the
country for environmental stewardship of their forests. They don't have
to wait three years after a fire to go in and take action."
Brunoe agreed to provide Walden
with details of the tribal forest plan.
The hearing opened with testimony
from Forest Service representatives including Regional Forester Linda
Goodman, in charge of national forests in Oregon and Washington, and Leslie
Weldon, forest supervisor for the Deschutes National Forest. They outlined
the processes that agency must follow in preparing salvage sales. In response
to Walden's questions, they stated that while delays sometimes are created
by lack of personnel and resources, most delays come from the process
itself.
Professor Paul Adams of the
OSU College of Forestry testified that he sees five concerns in minimizing
delays in salvage sales.
He said that people must recognize
that individual philosophical beliefs sometimes overshadow scientific
evidence and that federal managers are hindered by policies they must
follow.
Other concerns are to strengthen
applied research to learn more as work is being done, make preliminary
plans for potential salvage in high-risk areas and recognize that both
social and economic concerns must be considered to sustain a forest.
He pointed out the success
of the State of Oregon in reforesting the former Tillamook Burn after
a series of four major fires from 1933 to 1951.
On a personal note, he said
that he is a part-time resident of the Camp Sherman area and was evacuated
when the B&B Fire approached that community.
Doug Robertson, Douglas County
Commissioner for the past 23 years, testified that he is not unhappy with
Forest Service personnel, but he is frustrated with the federal processes.
"When a project plan calls
for salvage on only a small percentage of the fire area, what is going
to happen to the remaining area?" he asked.
He also cited the Tillamook
reforestation project as an example to follow.
Peter Storton spoke representing
the Sisters Area Chamber of Commerce.
He emphasized the economic
impact of major wildfires and highway closures to the tourism economy
of the Sisters area.
"Highway 20 is the life blood
of Sisters and when it is closed by wildfire, the whole community suffers,"
he said.
Storton proposed more federal
programs to aid communities impacted by fires.
Another part-time Camp Sherman
resident who testified was Rick Allen, mayor of Madras and former Jefferson
County Commissioner.
He echoed Storton's comments
on the loss of summer tourism dollars when fires rage. He pointed out
that because it takes time for tourists to return to an area that has
been closed by a fire, the impact lasts much longer than the duration
of the fire.
"Tourists may not return for
several weeks following a fire and we can lose the entire summer season,"
he said.
Following the hearing, Walden
said that he has no specific legislation being drafted, but that he wanted
to hear ideas on how to speed up recovery of forests.
Public testimony on the recovery
issue may be submitted until September 1 by fax at 202-225-0521 or by
emailing ryan.yates@mail.house.gov.
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