President
Introduces Wildfires Plan
Copyright 2002 by The
Associated Press (via ClariNet)
|
RUCH, OR,
22-AUG-2002: President George W. Bush is greeted by firefighters David
Goodnough (C) and Jerald Hanson, as he tours the Squires Mountain fire site
in Ruch, Oregon, August 22, 2002. Bush unveiled the "Healthy Forests
Initiative," a plan aimed at curbing wildfires by easing regulations on
industry efforts to thin fire-prone dead trees and underbrush in national
forests. Drought and heat have contributed to a disastrous US wildfire season
in which some six million acres, twice the annual average, have burned, and
driven tens of thousands of people from their homes. [Photo by Luke Frazza,
copyright 2002 by AFP and ClariNet] |
CENTRAL POINT, Ore. (AP) --
Embarking on a three-day Western swing expected to haul in more than $5 million
for Republican politicians, President Bush took a stand Thursday on one of the
region's thorniest issues by arguing that more logging in national forests
would help prevent devastating wildfires.
"The forest policy of
our government is misguided policy," said Bush, standing in casual clothes
on a stage surrounded by potted trees, told a cheering crowd at a fairgrounds
barn. "We need to make our forests healthy by using some common sense. We
need to understand you let kindling build up and there's a lightning strike,
you're going to get yourself a big fire," he said.
It makes sense to clear
brush, he said: "We just haven't done it and we're now paying the
price."
Bush traveled from his Texas
ranch to southwestern Oregon, near the California state line, for a briefing on
local fires that have ravaged the area. On the way in, Air Force One passed low
over the 471,000-acre Biscuit fire to give the president a view of the thick
smoke from the state's largest blaze in modern history. Even when the president
landed, the stink from yet another fire -- the Tiller blaze 45 miles to the
north -- hung in the air.
The president was then
ferried to the still-smoldering Squires Peak fire, for what his advisers billed
as a firsthand look at the dramatic difference made by the kind of policies the
president advocates.
Against that backdrop, Bush
was formally announcing at a nearby fairgrounds a plan to make it easier for
timber companies to cut wood from fire-prone national forests. Several Western
governors who have been pushing for just such changes came out for the event.
The proposals first outlined
Wednesday prompted howls from environmentalists worried they would gut
safeguards that have protected old-growth trees. But the Bush administration
said changes are necessary to clear a decades-long buildup of highly flammable
materials and lessen the risk of catastrophic burns.
Protesters gathered on the
mountain road leading to Squires Peak. "More forest, less Bush," read
one sign.
"This is the second
fire site I've been to this summer and it's the same story," said Bush,
surrounded by dead, blackened trees and his cowboy boots covered with ash.
"Had we properly managed our forests, the devastation caused would not
have been nearly as severe and it's a crying shame. ... What the critics need
to do is come stand where I stand."
Talking with firefighters
still working on piles of embers, Bush said, "You guys see what good
practices mean, what bad practices mean firsthand. We're trying to bring common
sense to forest policy."
Firefighter Cody Goodnough
replied, "That will make our job easier."
In remarks to local and
federal officials on the mountaintop, Bush criticized the past century's policy
of nearly complete fire suppression as shortsighted and dangerous.
Bush was rounding out his
appearances in Oregon -- a state he barely lost to Democrat Al Gore in the 2000
election -- with a fund-raising roundtable and dinner in Portland. Added to the
state GOP's $600,000 take was $300,000 for Republican Sen. Gordon Smith, one of
the Democrats' top targets, who was spending much of the day with Bush.
On Friday, Bush goes to
California to headline three events expected to give Republican gubernatorial
candidate Bill Simon's campaign a much-needed $3 million boost. Another $1
million would go to the California Republican party.
The White House tried to put
to rest rumors in California that Bush wanted to limit public appearances with
Simon. The president will "proudly stand with Simon," Bush spokesman
Ari Fleischer said.
This year's wildfires across
the West have renewed the perennial debate between conservationists who prefer
thinning only near property that has brush and small trees and logging
interests who argue that decreasing fire risks requires cutting some larger
trees in deeper woods.
Wildfires have burned nearly
6 million acres this summer from Alaska to New Mexico. Federal spending to
combat wildfires could top $1.5 billion this year.
Nationwide, 190 million
acres considered at high risk, and Bush's proposals would apply only to those
areas.
A 2000 national fire plan
already supports increased controlled burns and forest thinning, but Bush was
urging even more aggressive efforts