AN ALERT FOR NATIONAL FOREST OWNERS

Planning for Ecological Sustainability


By Dick Artley, Guest Writer, 4-07-07

 
 

Every existing forest plan in the nation today was written using the direction contained in the 1982 Forest Service planning regulations. These plans were quite good.  They were real plans that told the District Rangers and Forest Supervisors how to manage and how not to manage the public land owned by every American.

The 1982 regulations were written with the input of a committee of scientists, and under these regulations, it was mandatory that all forest plans contain the following important items:

1) They were implemented using an EIS, which legally guaranteed different alternatives and public involvement.
2) They contained an evaluation of roadless areas.
3) They contained a monitoring and evaluation program, which allowed adaptive management.
4) They contained (must do) standards for natural resource protection.
5) They required every Forest Service action to protect species viability.

The Clinton administration realized that the 1982 regulations needed an update, so in 1997 the USDA secretary appointed a new Committee of Scientists’. The committee issued its forest planning report on March 15, 1999. The Clinton forest planning regulations relied heavily on the ideas and language of the Committee of Scientists’ report.

The Clinton regulations established ecological sustainability as the key objective guiding management actions for the national forests. This was a significant departure from the agency’s historical emphasis on “multiple use.” The final regulations were issued by the USDA on November 9, 2000.

The Bush administration suspended the Clinton regulations in May 2001, and in November 2002 issued a new proposed rule that would reverse of number of positive changes embodied in the Clinton regulations.

The new Bush rule (drawn up by Mark Rey) contained none of the 5 key items shown above. It alsos emphasizes sustainability, but it prioritizes economic and social sustainability, rather than ecological sustainability.

Until a week ago, nearly every national forest in America was revising their forest plan … using the Bush rule.

On March 30, Judge Phyllis J. Hamilton of Federal District Court in San Francisco ruled that the Bush planning rule was illegal. Judge Hamilton issued an injunction forbidding the Forest Service from using the Bush rule to make decisions about the national forests and grasslands.

So now we have over 100 forest plan revisions halted and waiting for a new rule.

Please write to Abigail Kimbell, the Chief of the Forest Service and ask her to re-issue the Clinton forest planning regulations. Ask her to finish the forest plan revisions the correct way, so the end product will be meaningful and useful …and most of all, direct the Forest Service to protect the resources on public land.

It will be tragic if she cuts and pastes the Bush rule and reissues it, hoping that it might be legal. Her is her email address, akimbell@fs.fed.us

Editor’s Note: Dick Artley is retired USFS forest planner living in Idaho.



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Comments

By Rael Nidess, M.D., 4-07-07
By Ann FSplanner, 4-08-07
By Marion, 4-09-07
By Phil, 4-09-07
By Andy Stahl, 4-10-07
By Brodie Farquhar, 4-10-07
By Matthew Koehler, 4-11-07
By Ann FSPlanner, 4-11-07
By Phil, 4-11-07
By Phil, 4-11-07
By Andy Stahl, 4-12-07
By Ann FSplanner, 4-12-07

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