Congressmen request hearing on forest safety
Jan. 13, 2004
A congressional
hearing on public health and community safety
concerns has been requested by two Northern
California congressmen.
Wally Herger, whose
district includes Siskiyou County, and John
Doolittle, whose district includes Modoc County,
sent a letter to House Resources Committee
Chairman Richard Pombo formally requesting a
hearing in relationship to the U.S. Forest
Service's Sierra Nevada Forest Plan Amendment
and proposed modifications.
The plan amendment
covers 11.5 million acres of federal forests in
California's Sierra Nevada mountains. Although
the Warner Mountains i n Modoc County are part
of the Cascades, they are included in the
region.
Herger, Doolittle
and a group of bipartisan California congressmen
sent a letter to Regional Forester Jack
Blackwell last November claiming the plan does
do enough to "protect lives and and property
from wildfires like those that ravaged southern
California."
"The situation
facing our forests is nothing short of a public
health and safety emergency," said Herger, who
wants a congressional hearing "for better
transparency and public comment."
"Such a forum could
more effectively illustrate the benefits of
common sense, environmentally sensitive thinning
and other active management throughout our most
fire prone areas," he added.
In his comments
Doolittle said, "Our forests and communities are
in desperate need of a common sense approach
that allows for flexibility and real forest
health management rather than more radical
regulations. The plan amendment falls alarmingly
short of addressing the rising threat of
wildfires facing our forests."
- By Lee Juillerat |