May 12, 2003
Radical Environmental Appeals Add Fuel to Forest
Fires
GAO study finds that environmental groups block
projects focused on protecting homes and families
from the horror of wildfire
Washington, DC - Chairman Richard W. Pombo
(R-CA) and members of the House Resources Committee
expressed outrage over the findings of a General
Accounting Office (GAO) study concluding that 52% of
appealable thinning projects proposed near
communities were delayed by environmental
organization appeals in 2001 and 2002.
The report listed 7 environmental groups responsible
for the overwhelming number of administrative
appeals against wildfire prevention efforts, a list
that includes the Sierra Club, the Wilderness
Society, Oregon Natural Resources Council, and
the Forest Conservation Council. Overall, the
report found that 59% of all appealable wildfire
mitigation projects were in fact challenged during
the two year period, principally by environmental
litigators.
Most startling, however, was the fact that
environmental groups are more often than
not challenging even those thinning projects focused
on saving communities from the horrors of
catastrophic wildfire. The finding flies in the
face of environmentalist contentions that they
support thinning where the purpose is to protect
homes and communities.
Not surprising was the fact that most environmental
challenges were thrown out as being without merit.
Of the 180 wildfire mitigation projects appealed
during the studied period, the reviewing officer
"reversed" the decisions of a subordinate officer on
only 19 occasions (10%). This finding affirms
the suspicion of many - namely, that administrative
appeals are often frivolous objections by
organizations with a philosophical bent against
active forest management. Unfortunately, when
the threat of wildfire is imminent or a large-scale
insect outbreak is underway, a months-long delay
during the consideration of an administrative appeal
is just as damaging to the Forest Service as a
defeat on the merits.
Chairman Richard W. Pombo (R-CA) Statement
"This finding is nothing short of appalling,
especially when you think of the catastrophic losses
suffered in last year's horrific fire season alone.
These were not only losses of forest, endangered
species, and wildlife habitat; they were losses of
human life and family property.
Fanatics have often been described as people who
redouble their efforts after losing sight of their
goals. This study's irrefutable statistics prove
that the so-called environmental organizations in
America have come to embody such a definition.
Clearly, these groups are more interested in
preserving a political scare tactic than they are in
conserving our forests and the environment for
future generations.
I hope this study serves as a wake-up call to the
American people that radical environmental rhetoric
serves a political purpose, not an environmental
cause. This Congress is about to debate a bill
that uses sound science, common sense, and 21st
Century technology to bring our forests back to good
health. It will help prevent the catastrophic fires
that devastate our environment and our communities
in a comprehensive, balanced fashion.
As we approach the start of yet another fire season,
I call on these organizations to focus on the goal,
stop appealing projects designed to protect
communities, and help us pass a law that is so
desperately needed."
Congressman Scott McInnis (R-CO) Statement
"After all of the environmental spin about focusing
projects on protecting communities, now we find
that environmental groups are aggressively
challenging community protection projects too.
Actions speak louder than words. If we
can't thin over stocked forests to protect homes,
where, I wonder, can we?"
Congressman Rick Renzi (R-AZ) Statement
"As the dry summer season approaches and fire risks
reach extreme levels, the endless appeals to Forest
Service hazardous fuel reduction projects endanger
residents and their property in rural Arizona.
Local communities, who have been blocked in their
efforts to thin urban interface areas, have even
gone so far as to ask the Governor to declare their
forests Federal disaster areas to bypass the appeals
obstacle. The Healthy Forests Restoration Act will
mitigate these issues and streamline the appeals
process, helping to protect and preserve our
Forests."
Congressman Jim Gibbons (R-NV) Statement
"This GAO report is yet more evidence that we need
sensible forest management policies...although
watching millions of acres of our precious forests
turned into charcoal last year should have been
evidence enough. No one wants to clear cut our
forests. On the contrary, what we want to do is to
protect them from devastating fires. The bottom
line is, as the GAO states, the legal hurdles and
delays caused by radical environmental groups are
endangering our forests as well as our communities,
property, and ecosystems. It is time to pass the
Healthy Forests bill to protect our forests and
communities from wildfire now, before millions
more acres burn."
Congressman Devin Nunes (R-CA) Statement
"This report illustrates how some radical
environmental groups are actually endangering our
treasured forests and delicate ecosystems by
hampering reasonable efforts to reduce the
occurrence of catastrophic wildfires," "We saw
this at work in my own district last year as the
McNally wildfire tore through 150,000 acres of
Sequoia and Inyo National Forests and threatened
several groves of ancient, giant sequoias."
Congressman Ken Calvert (R-CA) Statement
"In 1993 the Winchester fire devastated communities
in my district because of bad rules on managing our
forests. My district now faces similar
circumstances as insect infestation is killing trees
and another dry season is upon us. Now, more than
ever, we need the Healthy Forests Restoration Act of
2003 in order to protect both our forests and
communities."
Congressman Denny Rehberg (R-MT) Statement
"Local forests cannot be managed from a courtroom.
We need to suppress the litigious fires if we want
to protect communities from wildfires."
Congressman Tom Tancredo (R-CO) Statement
"The GAO report confirms what those of us in
Colorado have known for a long time; that the
frivolous appeals of so-called environmental groups
are one of the primary impediments to restoring
the health of our ailing National Forests and
protecting at-risk communities. This study
underscores how cumbersome the current Forest
Services bureaucratic gridlock truly is, and refutes
once and for all the meritless arguments of those
who would have us believe that there is nothing
wrong with the status quo."
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