President on the Healthy Forests Initiative
Redmond, Oregon
3:23 P.M. PDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Please be seated. Thank
you. You know you're in a pretty good country when
you see a lot of cowboy hats out in the crowd --
(laughter and applause) -- and when you got horses
guarding the perimeter. (Applause.)
Thank you for your hospitality. It is like home,
except the temperature seems to be a little cooler,
a little more hospitable. But thanks for your
hospitality. I'm thrilled to be in Deschutes County,
Oregon. (Applause.) I've been planning to come for a
while. I'm sad that I had to come to see another
forest fire.
We just toured two fires that are burning in the
area. It's hard to describe to our fellow citizen
what it means to see a fire like we saw. It's the
holocaust, it's devastating. We saw the big flames
jumping from treetop to treetop, which reminds me
about the brave men and women, what they have to
face when they go in to fight the fires. I first
want to start by thanking those who put their lives
at risk to protect our communities, to protect our
people, to protect our national treasures, the U.S.
forests. I appreciate our firefighters. (Applause.)
All those firefighters know something that I've come
to realize, that we can thin our forests, that we
can use common-sense policy to make the fires burn
less hot and protect our forests. (Applause.)
And that's what I want to talk about here. Before
I do so, I want to thank Secretary Ann Veneman,
Secretary Gale Norton for doing a fine job on behalf
of all Americans. I want you to notice that these
two ladies are from the West. (Applause.) I
appreciate Dale Bosworth, who's the Chief of the
U.S. Forest Service. I also want to thank Leslie
Weldon -- where are you, Leslie? Where? Oh, hi,
Leslie. Thank you. (Applause.) Leslie is the forest
supervisor of the Deschutes National Forest. She was
our tour guide. She is a dedicated professional,
just like the people she works with from the U.S.
Forest Service. I want to thank those who work for
the U.S. Forest Service, for the BLM, for serving
your nation in the communities in which you life. I
appreciate the hard work you put in. I appreciate
your dedication to the preservation and conservation
of one of the greatest assets the United States has,
which is our land and or forests. (Applause.)
I appreciate your Governor, Governor Kulongoski,
who came with me today. I'm honored that he is here.
It should say loud and clear to everybody that
preserving and protecting our forests is not a
political issue, it is not a partisan issue, it is a
practical issue that we must come together and
solve. (Applause.) So I'm very honored that the
Governor is here.
I'm also honored to be with two members of the
legislative branch of our government in Washington,
D.C. -- a great United States Senator, Gordon Smith,
and a great Congressman, Greg Walden. (Applause.) I
appreciate being able to work with these two fine
men. You've just got to know they represent your
interests well. They're constantly talking about the
people of Oregon. Every time I'm around them they
bring you up. (Applause.) They say, let's have some
common-sense policy in Washington, D.C., to help
people help themselves in our state. That's all we
want. We just want the federal government to respond
in a responsible way. And that's what we're here to
talk about, how best to be able to do that.
I don't know if you know this, but today are the
Waldens' 21st anniversary. Congratulations to you
both. (Applause.) Eileen must be a patient soul.
(Laughter.) Kind of like Laura. We both married
above ourselves, Congressman. (Laughter.)
Laura sends her love and her best, by the way.
She's still in Texas and wasn't able to travel
today, but I wish she could come and see how
beautiful this country is. See, we both grew up in
the desert of west Texas. This is really a beautiful
part of the world.
I appreciate the mayors who are here today --
Mayor Unger of Redmond, Mayor Teater of Bend, Mayor
Allen, Mayor Uffelman, Mayor Elliott. I thank the
mayors and the local authorities who have taken time
to come and give me a chance to visit with you. I
appreciate your service to your communities. I think
mayor is a little tougher than being President
because you've got to make sure the pot holes are
all full and the garbage is collected. (Laughter.)
I appreciate Garland Brunoe who is the Chairman
of the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs, and
I want to thank all the tribal members who are here
with us today, as well. (Applause.)
Today, when I landed, I had the honor of meeting
a fellow named Curtis Hardy. Curtis is sitting right
there. The interesting thing about Curtis is he's
volunteered 5,000 hours over the last 10 years to
the Deschutes National Forest. I asked Leslie if he
was doing any good. (Laughter.) She said,
absolutely. She says, it's people like Curtis Hardy*
that make her job easier.
It's very important for people to know that they
can take time out of their lives, that they care
about their beautiful surroundings, and make a
positive, significant difference. Curtis is doing
that. Curtis, thank you for setting such a good
example and I appreciate your service. (Applause.)
Ann was right, I was here a year ago.
Unfortunately, when I came a year ago, I witnessed
the effects of fires. I saw the Biscuit fire and the
Squires Peak fire. Both of them are devastating
forest fires. They destroyed buildings and homes,
changed lives, destroyed natural resources.
The Biscuit fire alone scorched nearly
half-a-million acres, cost more than $150 million
and burned down over a dozen homes. You know, any
time our community has faced the devastation of
wildfire, it really does test the character of the
people. For those whose lives have been deeply
affected, and probably will be affected by this
fire, we send our sympathies and we wish God's
blessings on their families.
The federal government can help. We will give
grants, FEMA grants, all the SBA loans, the
different things that happen when there's an
emergency. I can assure you Gordon and Greg will be
all over us to make sure we appropriate the proper
to spend. (Applause.)
But the government has got to do more than just
spend money. We'll spend it, but we've got to effect
wise policy, it seems like to me. I mean, how often
-- we write checks a lot on fire- fighting, and
we'll continue to do that. But it seems like to me
we ought to put a strategy in place to reduce the
amount of money that we have to spend on emergency
basis by managing our forests in a better, more
common-sensical way. (Applause.)
The forest policy, the conditions of our forests
didn't happen overnight. The experts who know
something about forests will tell you that the
condition, the overgrown and unhealthy condition of
a lot of our forestland happened over a century.
It's taken a while for this situation to evolve. It
may interest you to know that today there's 190
million acres of forests and woodlands around the
country which are vulnerable to catastrophic fire
because of brush and small trees that have been
collecting for literally decades. A problem that has
taken a long time to develop is going to take a long
time to solve. So what we're going to talk about
today is the beginnings of a solution. But we've got
to get after it now. We have a problem in Oregon and
around our country that we must start solving.
You see, the undergrowth issue, the problem of
too much undergrowth creates the conditions for
unbelievably hot fires. These forest firefighters
will tell you that these hot fires that literally
explode the big trees can be somewhat mitigated by
clearing out the undergrowth. And by the way, the
undergrowth chokes off nutrients from older trees.
It makes our forests more succeptable to disease. We
got a problem. It's time to deal with the problem.
And that's what we're going to talk about.
Before I talk about the solutions, I do want
people to understand that if you are concerned about
the endangered species, then you need to be
concerned about catastrophic fire. Fires destroy the
animals which, obviously, live amidst the raging
fire. If your concerned about old growth, large
stands of timber, then you better be worried about
the conditions that create devastating fires. The
worst thing that can happen to old stands of timber
is these fires. They destroy the big trees. They're
so explosive in nature that hardly any tree can
survive.
We saw that with our own eyes, choppering in
here. Thinning underbrush makes sense, makes sense
to save our species, it makes sense -- of animals --
it makes sense to save the big stands of trees.
You know, what I'm telling you about a strategy
to deal with our forests to make them healthy is not
something that was invented in Washington, D.C. It's
the collective wisdom of scientists, wildlife
biologists, forestry professionals, and as
importantly, the men and women who risk their life
on an annual basis to fight fires. That's who I've
been listening to. (Applause.)
Our administration is taking their advice.
Congress needs to take their advice. Congress needs
to listen to the -- (applause.) So, having listened,
and realized that we've got a problem, I've proposed
a healthy forest initiative. And I proposed it right
here in Oregon one year ago. At my direction, the
Secretary of the Interior and the Secretary of
Agriculture and the Chairman of the Council on
Environmental Quality, Connaughton, who is here with
us today, on my staff -- these three -- that's why
they're here, by the way. I want you to look at
them. They are responsible for putting this
initiative into place.
Their job is to cut through bureaucratic red tape
to complete urgently needed thinning projects. That
was the first task I gave them. We're going to focus
on areas where thinning is the most critical, where
the damage can be most severe by -- caused by fires.
We're working with the Western Governors Association
to determine projects of the highest priority in
each state. In other words, we're setting
priorities, and we're getting after it. (Applause.)
We are speeding up the process of environmental
assessments and consolations required by law. Look,
we want people to have input. If somebody has got a
different point of view, we need to hear it. This is
America. We expect to hear people's different points
of view in this country. But we want people to
understand that we're talking about the health of
our forests, and if there's a high priority, we need
to get after it before the forests burn and people
lose life. (Applause.)
We're expediting the administrative appeals
process so that disputes over thinning projects are
resolved more quickly. We want to hear people. We
want them to have a point of view. We want to save
our forests, too. That's what we want to do here in
America. We want to deal with the problem. Nobody's
to blame. The problem has existed for years. Now let
us be the ones who start solving the problem. And
that's what I'm going to ask Congress to do when
they come back.
Our approach relies on the experience and
judgment and hard work of local people. Metolius
Conservation Area is such an example. Leslie was
describing it to me. The Friends of Metolius, a
conservation group, came to the forest service with
an interesting idea. What I'm about to tell you is
called a collaborative effort to do some
common-sense things in our forests to protect them
and protect the communities around the forests.
So these good folks came and said, look, why
don't we set up some sample plots in the Deschutes
Forest to be treated with thinning and burning and
mowing, and to leave some of the plots untreated, so
people can see the difference between a treated plot
and an untreated plot, to kind of break through the
myths, the mythology, the propaganda of what it
means to protect our forests.
And the Forest Service agreed, and they worked
together, and they shared costs, and thousands have
now come and have seen good forest management
practices in place. They've seen what is possible to
do. And I want to thank the folks for working hard
in a collaborative way, to share your wisdom and
your hard work, to help educate our fellow citizens
about the realities of what we're talking about when
it comes to maintaining a healthy forest.
Bill Anthony is not with us today -- I think he's
fighting the fires -- deserves a lot of credit for
this program, as does Leslie. They're in the
process, by the way, of treating 12,500 acres --
additional 12,500 acres. I want to thank the Friends
of Metolius, I want to thank the local citizenry
here, for doing what is right.
Ranger Bill says community participation has been
critical to the success of the project, and that's
the kind of initiatives we like and want. We want
initiatives where the federal government works
closely with the state government, with community
groups, conservation groups, local people, in order
to do what is right for our country and our states.
You see, there's too much confrontation when it
comes to environmental policy. There's too much
zero-sum thinking. What we need is cooperation, not
confrontation. (Applause.)
I appreciate the stewardship contracting programs
that will be going on. I hope you do, as well. You
see, the thinning projects that are going to go
forward should help some of these local communities
that hurt. And by the way, I fully understand
Oregon's unemployment issue. It's the highest in the
nation. I'm sorry it's the way it is. There are some
things we can do to help people. So we want people
working. We want people to have food on the table.
(Applause.)
Stewardship contracting -- what that means is is
that private organizations or businesses will be
able to do the necessary thinning, and they'll be
able to remove small trees and undergrowth, and
they'll be able to keep part of what they remove as
partial payment. That seems to make sense to me.
First of all, somebody's working. It seems like
the taxpayers come out okay. After all, if you're
able to keep some of the thinning, which protects
our forests, as part of the payment, it's a -- takes
a little load off the taxpayer. The local
community's tax base will get better when somebody
spends the money they make from thinning the
projects, and the forests are more healthy.
Stewardship contracting makes sense. It's an
integral part of our plan. (Applause.)
I'll give you a quick report. The healthy forest
initiative is producing results. Last year we
treated 2.25 million acres of overgrown forests. By
the end of the fiscal year in September, we will
have treated more than 2.6 million acres of forest
and rangeland. We're slowly but surely getting after
it, as we say in Crawford, Texas. We're beginning to
deal with the problem that we've -- that will help
make the country, by solving the problem, a better
place.
This year alone, we'll spend more than $43
million of forest treatment projects here in the
state of Oregon. And as we go forward with the
healthy forest initiative, if we can ever get it
authorized by Congress, I look forward to working
with the appropriators, working with Gordon and
Greg, to get the projects funded. We just don't want
the initiative authorized, we want the initiative
funded so we can solve the problem. (Applause.)
But the initiative I've laid out is one step.
Congress needs to act. People ought to understand up
there in Washington that -- or over there in
Washington, way over there in Washington --
(laughter) -- that current law makes it too
difficult to expedite the thinning of forests
because it allows for the litigation process to
delay progress and projects for years and years.
(Applause.) That's a problem. And those delays, the
endless litigation delays, endanger the health of
our forests and the safety of too many of our
communities. (Applause.)
So I've asked Congress to fix the problem. Gordon
and Greg are working hard to fix the problem. The
law, called the Healthy Forest Restoration Act,
would bring government communities together to
select high-priority projects relevant to local
needs. In other words, it's part of the
prioritization of what I just described to you
earlier.
It would also direct courts to consider the
long-term threats to forest health that could result
if any projects are delayed. In other words, it
says, we have a national goal to protect our -- one
of our finest assets, and that is our forests. And
therefore, you -- Mr. Judge, make sure you
understand that a healthy forest is a part of your
consideration when you're listening to these
appeals.
The legislation makes forest health the priority,
a high priority, when courts are forced to resolve
disputes. And it places reasonable time limits on
litigation after the public has had an opportunity
to comment and a decision has been made. Congress
must move forward with this bill. It's a good,
common-sense piece of legislation that will make our
forests more healthy, that will protect old-growth
stands, that will make it more likely endangered
species will exist, that will protect our
communities, that will make it easier for people to
enjoy living on the edges of our national forests.
The House of Representatives passed the bill --
and I appreciate your good work, Greg. The
Agriculture Committee has agreed on a bill.
(Applause.) The Agriculture Committee agreed on a
bill, and when the Senate returns, they need to pass
the healthy forest Legislation and get it to my
desk. (Applause.)
The administration is also working to help
communities in this region by implementing the 1994
Northwest Forest Plan. This plan was designed to
protect wildlife and to support a viable woods
products industry in the Northwest. It was designed,
obviously, before I arrived in Washington. It's a
good plan. It makes a lot of sense. It was a plan
forged by conservationists, industry professionals,
government officials, who came together to decide on
a reasonable target for sustainable timber
harvesting on a small portion of our forests. The
plan calls for harvesting of about a billion board
foot of timber per year. It will strengthen our
communities, it will help rural America, it will
help our homebuilders. It makes sense. It was a
promise made to the people of the Northwest; it's a
promise I intend to work with the federal government
to keep. (Applause.)
Good forest policy can be the difference between
lives surrounded by natural beauty or natural
disaster. And we're watching a natural disaster
unfold right here in this part of the world. And we
can do a better job protecting our assets. We can do
a better job protecting people in the communities.
Now it's time for people who represent different
parts of the country to come together to see the
devastation that takes place out West on an annual
basis, and allow these good people out West to
manage their assets in a way that will not only be
able to say, we've done a job well-done for future
generations, but we're protecting something that we
hold dear, and that is the forestlands of America.
Before I finish, I do want to talk about another
conservation issue that affects the people of the
West Coast, and that's energy reliability. First, I
thought our government response to the power outage
out East and the Midwest was a good response. You
know, after September the 11th, we came together in
a way to be able to better deal with emergencies
that affected America. The federal government, the
state government, the local governments all work in
a very close way, and the communications was good.
The system survived. The system responded well. We
had a lot of good people who didn't panic and dealt
with the problem in a very professional way. And I
want to thank our citizens out East and up in the
Midwest for doing such a fine job of responding to a
very difficult situation, and being respectful for
their neighbor.
And yesterday, Secretary of Energy Abraham and
the Canadian Minister of Natural Resources met in
Detroit. It's the joint effort to find out what went
wrong. We're going to try to find out as quickly as
we can exactly what caused the rolling blackout.
But this rolling blackout and the problem we've
got here with hydropower, the problem in California
recently, should say loud and clear to members of
the legislative branch of government that we've got
an energy issue that we need to solve in America.
I called together a -- put the task force
together and made 105 recommendations for our
government to look at about a comprehensive national
energy plan, one that encourages conservation, one
that encourages energy efficiency, one that realizes
that we've got to be less dependent on foreign
sources of energy. And part of that was to recognize
that our infrastructure -- the electricity
infrastructure needs to be modernized.
We've taken some action without laws passed by
the legislative branch. For example, there's a
bottleneck that plagued California for years -- in
other words, electricity wasn't able to move as
freely from south to north, north to south, as we
wanted. And we're now permitting line so that that
bottleneck can be removed. And the Department of
Energy is working with the private sector to get the
lines up and running so we can move more
electricity.
And we've been dealing with the shortage of
hydropower. As you know, you've got an issue in
the Klamath Basin and we've been trying to come up
with reasonable policy so that people can farm the
land and fish can live at the same time. (Applause.)
But Congress needs to act. I don't know if you know
this or not, but for many years the reliability of
electricity in America depended on companies
observing voluntary standards to prevent blackouts.
I don't think those standards ought to be voluntary,
I think they ought to be mandatory. And if there's
not reliability back up for electricity, there ought
to be a serious consequence for somebody who misuses
the public trust. And Congress needs to have that in
the law. (Applause.)
We ought to authorize the federal government to
step in as last resort to put up new power lines
where it best serves the national interest. We ought
to make investment -- new investment in a
transmission of electricity easier to make. We've
got some old laws that were passed a long time ago
that make it harder for people to invest in new
electricity lines, new transmission lines. That
doesn't make any sense. If we've got a problem,
let's deal with it.
The law that passed out of the House of
Representatives deals with it. I'm confident -- and
the Senate passed a bill -- in other words, out of
the two bodies, they need to get together. I talked
to Pete Dominici, the Senator from New Mexico. I
talked to Bill Tauzin, the Chairman from Louisiana.
They both agreed on what I've just described to you
as necessary in a new bill, so that we can say we
solved the problem, we're modernizing our
electricity system so the people of America don't
have their lives disrupted like what happened during
the rolling blackout that took place last week.
So we're going to get us a good energy bill. We
need an energy bill, an energy strategy, and we need
the will to implement it. (Applause.)
Let me conclude by telling you that I'm
incredibly proud of our country. You know, we've
been through a lot. We've been through a recession.
You're still in it here in Oregon. We had these
people attack us because of what we stand for. We
love freedom in America, and we're not going to
change. (Applause.) We stood tall and strong. We're
a determined country to not only protect ourselves,
we're determined, as well, to protect ourselves by
spreading freedom throughout the world. We know that
free societies will be peaceful societies. We
believe in America that freedom is not America's
gift to the world, it is God's gift to every single
human being on the face of the Earth. (Applause.)
We've been through some tough times, and these
tough times came to the right nation. Our values are
strong; our people are courageous and strong and
compassionate. I love being the President of the
greatest nation on the face of the Earth.
May God bless you all. (Applause.)
END 3:53 P.M. PDT