Agriculture
Secretary Tom Vilsack today announced a new
report, Increasing
the Pace of Restoration and Job Creation on our
National Forests, which outlines a
strategy and series of actions for management on
193 million acres of national forests and
grasslands managed by the U.S. Forest Service.
As part of the
accelerated restoration strategy, $40 million
for 20 forest and watershed restoration projects
have been announced for the upcoming year.
The funding
includes ten new projects under the Collaborative
Forest Landscape Restoration (CFLR) program,
including a new project proposed by the Kootenai
Valley Resource Initiative, continued funding
for the original 10 projects selected under the
CFLR program in 2010, and an additional $4.6
million to support other high priority
restoration projects.
Funding for the KVRI project, the
Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration
Proposal for the Lower Kootenai River Watershed,
will launch a nearly $12.3-million, 10-year
program that will treat 39,430 acres of forest
land and create a total of 144 jobs, including
about 52 full-time jobs, the rest part-time or
seasonal.
Prior to issuing the press release
announcing the 10 new projects to be funded,
Vilsack held a nation-wide conference call with
media and affected agencies, and among those
sitting in in Boundary County were Commissioner
Dan Dinning and Clerk Glenda Poston ... who
weren't given the opportunity to speak or
question, but who hung onto every word,
alternately smiling and grimacing, waiting for
the all-important announcement of who among the
many applicants would be included ...
But the call turned out to be mainly a
press event, and Vilsack, while answering a
multitude of questions from journalists, never
broached the subject of to whom the funding
would go.
Within a few minutes after the call ended,
however, KVRI partners recieved an email
containing the following press release ... one
bearing good news.
This is that release in its entirety,
including their somewhat unfathomable headlines:
U.S. Forest Service Highlights
Expansion of Restoration of National Forests and
Funding For Collaborative Forest Landscape
Restoration Projects
Increasing the Pace of Restoration and Job
Creation On Our National Forests' Charts Course
For Federal Agency; U.S. Forest Service Seeks To
Reduce Major Threats Through Restoration
WASHINGTON – Feb. 2, 2012 --
"Through our partnerships with states,
communities, tribes and others, we are committed
to restoring our forests and bringing jobs to
rural
America,"
said Vilsack. "Whether the threat comes from
wildfire, bark beetles or a changing climate, it
is vital that we step up our efforts to
safeguard our country's natural resources."
Within the context
of the overall restoration program, the strategy
and actions announced today are designed to
expand the number of forest acres treated by 20
percent over the next three years and increase
the pace of active forest management, including
fuels reduction, reforestation, stream
restoration, road decommissioning, replacing and
improving culverts, forest thinning and
harvesting, prescribed fire and a range of other
techniques.
As a result of
these efforts, the Forest Service will be able
to accomplish critical restoration objectives,
including for water, wildlife, forest health and
resilience, and community safety. This effort
will support jobs and stimulate a more vibrant
forest industry that will provide the workers
and the know-how to undertake other restoration
projects. Altogether, the Forest Service
estimates this will increase the amount of
forest products sold in 2014 to 3 billion board
feet, up from 2.4 billion board feet in 2011.
The restoration of
National Forest System lands is critically
needed to address a number of threats to the
health of forest ecosystems, watersheds,
wildlife habitats and forest dependent
communities. Major threats include wildland
fire, climate change, beetle epidemics and
invasive species.
The national
forests and grasslands are the backdrop and
neighbor to many rural and urban communities,
providing a range of values and benefits,
including clean drinking water for millions of
people across the
U.S.,
vital wildlife habitat, a variety of recreation
opportunities, and other multiple uses that
support jobs and economic growth in rural
communities. The Forest Service's restoration
program of work is designed to sustain the
ability of these lands to continue to deliver a
full range of ecosystem services for generations
to come.
These restoration
efforts will further stimulate local economies
by retaining and increasing other forest related
jobs, such as the 1,550 jobs expected to
maintained or generated through implementation
of the CFLR projects, and by supporting
recreation activities and attracting more
tourists to rural areas. Currently, recreation
activities on National Forest System lands
contribute $14.5 billion annually to the
U.S.
economy and support hundreds of thousands of
jobs in local communities.
"Accelerated
restoration efforts demonstrate a shared vision
where environmentalists, forest industry and
local communities are working together to build
healthier forests and contribute to local
economies," said U.S. Forest Service Chief Tom
Tidwell. "The increased restoration work will
benefit the environment and people, with more
resilient ecosystems, improved watersheds and
wildlife habitat, hazardous fuel reduction, and
outputs of forest products. We hope accelerated
restoration activities will bring all of our
partners together, working as allies for forest
conservation."
The Forest Service
will increase restoration activities with a
series of actions,
some of which are already underway. The list
includes: expanding collaborative landscape
partnerships; finalizing and implementing a new
forest Planning
Rule; implementing the Watershed
Condition Framework; improving efficiencies of
the planning process for restoration projects
under the National Environmental Policy Act;
implementing Integrated Resource Restoration
budgeting; implementing the agency bark beetle
strategy; improving the implementation and
efficiencies of timber and stewardship
contracts; and expanding markets for forest
products.
The Forest Service
received 26 proposals for Collaborative Forest
Restoration Grants which were evaluated by a
federal advisory committee. The committee
recommended 13 projects to the USDA for funding
consideration, of which 10 were selected under
the program. Because the remaining three are
high priority restoration projects and exemplify
the intent of the program, the Forest Service is
setting aside another $4.6 million to fund those
projects as well.
Project proposals
included ecological restoration treatments to
reduce wildfire risk, enhance fish and wildlife
habitats, maintain and improve water quality,
use woody biomass and harvest timber. All of the
landscape proposals include matching
contributions from partners, either funds or
in-kind services.
The following
10 new projects are approved for funding in
2012:
Burney-Hat Creek Basins Project, California -
$605,000
Pine-Oak Woodlands Restoration Project, Missouri -
$617,000
Shortleaf-Bluestem Community Project, Arkansas
and Oklahoma -
$342,000
Weiser-Little Salmon Headwaters Project, Idaho -
$2,450,000
Kootenai Valley Resource Initiative, Idaho -
$324,000
Southern Blues Restoration Coalition, Oregon -
$2,500,000
Lakeview Stewardship Project, Oregon -
$3,500,000
Zuni Mountain Project, New Mexico -
$400,000
Grandfather Restoration Project, North Carolina -
$605,000
Amador-Calaveras Consensus Group Cornerstone
Project, California -
$730,000
The following
three projects are considered high priority
restoration and are approved for funding in 2012
outside of the
Collaborative
Forest
Landscape Restoration Act:
Northeast Washington Forest Vision 2020,
Washington -
$968,000
Ozark Highlands Ecosystem Restoration, Arkansas -
$959,000
Longleaf Pine Ecosystem Restoration and
Hazardous Fuels Reduction, De Soto National
Forest, National Forests in Mississippi -
$2,710,000
The following 10 Collaborative Forest Landscape
projects were approved for funding in 2010 and
will continue to receive funding in 2012:
Selway-Middle Fork
Clearwater
Project,
Idaho
Southwestern Crown
of the Continent,
Montana
Colorado
Front Range,
Colorado
Uncompahgre Plateau,
Colorado
4
Forest
Restoration Initiative,
Arizona
Southwest Jemez
Mountains,
New
Mexico
Dinkey Landscape
Restoration Project,
California
Deschutes
Skyline,
Oregon
Tapash Sustainable
Forest
Collaborative,
Washington
Accelerating
Longleaf Pine Restoration,
Florida
Since taking office, President Obama's
Administration has taken historic steps to
improve the lives of rural Americans, put people
back to work and build thriving economies in
rural communities. From proposing the American
Jobs Act to establishing the first-ever White
House Rural Council – chaired by Agriculture
Secretary Tom Vilsack – the President wants the
federal government to be the best possible
partner for rural businesses and entrepreneurs
and for people who want to live, work and raise
their families in rural communities.
|