Bush
plan to streamline forest rules about ready
By
MATTHEW DALY, Associated Press
September
10, 2003
WASHINGTON - Managers of the nation's 155
national forests are getting more leeway to approve logging and other
commercial projects with less formal environmental review under a Bush
administration plan on track to be in place by the end of the year.
A final
draft of the new forest management rules obtained by The Associated Press drew
immediate fire from environmentalists. They accused the administration of
bowing to the timber and paper industries and weakening standards for
protecting endangered or threatened species.
The new
rules will be reviewed by the White House's Office of Management and Budget
before going into effect this fall.
The
plan would overhaul application of the landmark 1976 National Forest Management
Act, which sets the basic rules for management of nation's 190 million acres of
forests and grasslands and protects forest wildlife.
The
final rules would leave intact some of the most controversial proposals from an
earlier version released last November. Like that version, the final plan would
give regional managers of the Forest Service more discretion to approve
logging, drilling and mining operations without having to conduct formal
scientific investigations known as environmental impact statements.
Such
analyses, which outline the impact of a proposed activity on plant and animal
life, can take years to complete. The new rules envision a more flexible
approach that could be completed in months.
Forest
Service officials said the new rules are designed to make forest planning more
responsive to changing conditions by eliminating unnecessary paperwork and
relying on assessments by local and regional managers.
"What
we like most about this rule is it engages the public better than we have done
in the past by promoting early involvement, making the plans easier to
understand and getting them done in less than seven years," said Sally
Collins, associate chief of the Forest Service.
Collins
said the Forest Service could cut costs by as much as 30 percent under the new
approach.
She and
other officials argued the plan maintains and even strengthens environmental
protections, while increasing flexibility for forest managers.
But
environmentalists denounced the proposal as a giveaway to business interests,
which want to increase commercial activity in national forests.
Environmentalists
said they were especially troubled that the plan would relax a requirement that
the government protect fish and wildlife in national forests so the species do
not become threatened or endangered. Instead, the rules assert an overarching
goal to "maintain healthy, diverse and resilient native ecosystems and
maintain species native to National Forest System land."
The
plan would direct forest managers to identify threats to wildlife, contribute
to recovery of threatened or endangered species, and provide ecological
conditions that help prevent species from becoming listed as threatened or
endangered.
"If
you don't require managers to retain the current population of species then
they are not going to do it," said Sean Cosgrove of the Sierra Club.
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