Forest Jobs and Recreation Act
Tester Makes Some Changes to Wilderness Bill, Refuses Others
In response to feedback, Sen. Tester aims to make changes that improve his bill, and its chance of passage.By Amy Linn, 2-05-10
Sen. Jon Tester today announced that he hopes to make revisions to his Forest Jobs and Recreation Act, legislation that has drawn widespread support, criticism and suggestions from Montanans—some of which Tester said he’d insert into the legislation.
The Senator, speaking at a small press conference in Missoula, said the proposed 21 changes—some involving simple word clarifications and others more meaty—were brought to his attention by a wide variety of individuals and organizations, from the Montana Wood Products Association and the University of Montana School of Forestry to environmental groups and the Montana AFL-CIO.
The revisions would help prevent legal logjams, give more support to the timber industry, and require earlier monitoring of forest health, Tester said. Some of the changes, for example, would extend the mandated time period for the “timber and restoration” portion of the bill, which calls for 10,000 acres of timber to be cut annually. The current legislation (S. 1470) allows the timber directives to last 15 years or until 100,000 acres are affected, whichever comes later. Tester’s revision calls for the timber directives to continue for the life of the bill, with monitoring at regular intervals.
The revisions would also:
-- Require disputes to go through mediation instead of going directly to court, potentially saving time, money and timber jobs.
-- Require judges to consider the “balance of harm” when deciding whether to issue a legal injunction to stop forest projects. With this language inserted, judges would have to weigh both the potential short-term harm of a project and the potential long-term harm of a shut-down’s economic impacts. (Tester said he’s also considering adding a provision that would limit the length of legal injunctions, “so that they don’t go on until the timber in question isn’t valuable any more.")
-- Reduce from 5 years to 3 years the amount of time before Congress receives a monitoring report that assesses how the bill has affected timber management, fire risk reduction and restoration.
-- Mandate that restoration work be monitored and a report issued every three years.
-- Require that local workers and businesses get preferred status for jobs and contracts.
-- Include grazing in the ‘findings’ section of the bill, which currently focuses “too much” on timber, recreation and wilderness, Tester said. “Grazing is always going to be allowed in wilderness,” he added.
The Democratic Senator said he hoped to get the new provisions into the markup of the bill, introduced in July and currently in the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, chaired by Sen. Jeff Bingaman (D-NM).
Some changes, Tester said, were suggested, considered—and firmly rejected. These included ideas offered by Montana Rep. Denny Rehberg (R-Mont.), who has proposed a “phase-in” or “trigger” for the bill’s wilderness designations, so that they wouldn’t all happen simultaneously, but could take effect after a timber harvest.
Tester today said a phase-in would make the bill dead on arrival—an opinion he said was seconded by Bingaman. “The chairman told me if the phase-in language is in the bill, the bill would die,” Tester said. “The trigger language is really a poison pill.” Arguments that wilderness should only be designated after timber is harvested “are arguments from the past,” Tester added. “We’ve got to put the past behind us.”
To read the proposed changes to the Forest Jobs and Recreation Act in their entirety, click here. For extensive coverage from NewWest, click here.
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Unless the wilderness is contingent upon satisfaction for "everyone else" -- including loggers, grazers, miners, local governments and the modern-recreating public, and imposes accountability upon the promised litigants, it's just moving the goalposts to other areas.
Guess Tester is not only short on brains, he's going to be short next election.
It should read, it focuses too much on timber and wilderness. Recreation is the big loser in this bill. 150 miles of trials would be closed under this bill, from what I've read. If it's a recreation bill then trails miles should be increased. There should be new trails, new loops, and increased access.
The wilderness is guaranteed, the logging will be shut down in the courts and the recreation community just loses more access.
This is really just a wilderness bill, where only the wilderness advocates win. The rest of us lose in this bill.
Drop the bill Tester.
It's already dead.
Fact is, a REAL forest jobs and recreation bill wouldn't need a DIME in subsidy. Well managed forests are an asset, not a liability.
The local mill closures have been happening in Montana ever since NAFTA took effect, and brought cheap subsidized lumber to compete in our markets. The vast majority of the wood I have nailed up to buildings is from Canada. And even my logging and carpenter buddies in Georgia, another big US lumber producing state, say they see mostly Canadian lumber.
so lets go after the real cause of all this and put a tariff on Canadian wood products once and for all. Let's get Montanans back to work, not Canadians!!!!
If there is anything "REAL" about making a sustainable profit from logging in Montana it's federal subsidies.
This was demonstrated in the 1980's Plans by Forest Service FORPLAN computer analysis of (PNV) present net values on every national forest in Montana. In each and every instance, the alternative that logged the fewest federal acres, and recommended the most roadless acres for wilderness designation, produced the highest long-term economic (PNV) values.
I welcome a side-by-side CBO analysis comparing NREPA (HR 980) to Tester's "jobs" bill. Ain't gonna' happen because we both know how bad it will look for industry and its shills.
Let Montana DNRC or the counties buy it with one last subsidy...favorable bonding along the lines of Max's gift to your corporate buddies at TNC and Plum Creek. Because neither of those can print money, they'll only offer to buy at FMV. Whatever is left, you can have for your pyromaniac pleasuring when you are Deputy Under Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Wildlands Service.
No deal. You're delusional. There's no such thing as "one last subsidy."
Tester should remove the mandates like he was advised by Washington and local economists.