Issues | Solutions | BSC Journal | Join Us | Contact | Shop | Home

4.29.2008

News about Fire Suppression meeting, Hamilton

State fire panel discusses solutions in Hamilton
By JOHN CRAMER of the Missoulian

HAMILTON - Montana's Fire Suppression Interim Committee kicked off its statewide road tour Monday at ground zero in the West's growing dilemma on how to reduce large-scale wildfires at a time when more people are building homes in fire-prone forests.

The Bitterroot National Forest, which the U.S. Forest Service considers America's most threatened national forest because of the population explosion in the Bitterroot Valley's "wildland-urban interface," served as a backdrop for the state legislative committee's first public forum.

Link to full article.


Montana’s wood infrastructure hurting
by PERRY BACKUS - Ravalli Republic


State legislators gathered in Hamilton Monday in hopes of hearing ideas on how better to address the wildfires that have raged across Montana since 2000 - the year the Bitterroot burned.

The Legislature’s Fire Suppression Interim Committee learned the answers won’t be easy.

Link to full article.


Forest Supervisor discusses fire strategies
by JOEL GALLOB - Ravalli Republic

One-quarter of the Bitterroot National Forest’s 1.6 million acres have burned since 2000, Forest Supervisor Dave Bull told a meeting of the state Legislature’s Interim Committee on Fire Suppression Monday.

“How come we’ve been so lucky that hundreds of homes have not burned yet?” State Senator John Cobb R-Augusta, asked. “Is it just a matter of time?”

“It is a matter of time,” replied Bull. “People move here and most of them do not have a clue they are living in a fire-dependent ecosystem. They like the setting, they like seeing the turkey and deer.”

Link to full article.

To comment on this post via email, click here.

4.26.2008

Alternative sources may be possible

Letter to the Editor
Repost from The Missoulian

A column on the Missoulian Opinion page of April 17 states, “The corn ethanol craze, encouraged by state and federal policies needs to be reined in ... Otherwise it will continue to drive up food prices.”

While the use of ethanol as a component of motor fuels helps achieve renewable energy objectives, perhaps an alternate source of ethanol should be considered. One authority claims that one British Thermal Unit of fossil fuel produces a marginal 1.3 BTU of corn-derived ethanol. On the other hand, one BTU of fossil fuel will produce 17 BTUs of cellulosic ethanol derived from wood fiber.

If this disparity in energy balance is real, it appears to represent a good opportunity for our timber industry to provide cellulosic feed stocks for ethanol production. This could help mitigate the adverse effects of corn-derived ethanol on the country and world food supply at the same time.

Ted R. Burton, Missoula

Labels:

To comment on this post via email, click here.

4.24.2008

Support BSC through our Amazon Store

It's an easy, yet valuable, way to support our efforts: When you are ready to buy something online, check our Amazon Affiliates store. Simply type in the item you want to shop for (today I bought a coffeemaker) and choose a section of the store (I chose Home and Garden), then hit the Go button and check out the great selection to choose from. Click on any item to read reviews, or get more information to help you make an informed purchase.

It's not just a good idea to raise funds. It's completely secure because it uses the same encrypted checkout system as Amazon.com, plus when you purchase items it puts a few percent of the sales price in the Big Sky Coalition coffers. And it won't cost you an extra dime!

Support better forest management, cleaner air, a healthier environment simply by shopping at our Amazon store?

We're working for you, and my new coffeemaker will brew great coffee to help keep me alert and sharp (I'm a BSC volunteer too) through those long winter days. It is still winter isn't it?

To comment on this post via email, click here.

4.23.2008

Beetles feast on trees in Bitterroot

By JOHN CRAMER of the Missoulian

HAMILTON - The mountain pine beetle gets most of the blame for killing vast swaths of evergreens across the West.

But there's another tree-munching insect that's causing trouble in the Bitterroot Valley by taking advantage of the growing number of new residents who mistakenly thin their pine stands in the spring.


Link to full Missoulian article.

To comment on this post via email, click here.

4.22.2008

Lawmakers Bringing Fire Suppression Debate to Hamilton

For immediate release

Contact: Sen. Rick Laible, Meeting Chairman, 406-821-0990
Leanne Heisel, Legislative Research Analyst, 406-444-3593

A legislative committee will meet in Hamilton April 28-29 to discuss issues surrounding the state's wildfire suppression efforts. The public is invited to attend and will have an opportunity to comment.

The Fire Suppression Interim Committee will meet beginning at 10 a.m. April 28 in the Tammany Conference Room of the Bitterroot River Inn, 139 Bitterroot Plaza Drive. Public comment is scheduled for about 3:45 p.m. The meeting is set to end at 5:30 p.m. but will run longer if more time for public comment is needed.

The committee is especially interested in hearing public reaction to several draft documents it has produced in recent months. The documents are available on the committee's Web site at www.leg.mt.gov/fire. Click on "Materials and Committee Recommendations to Review Prior to Participating in Public Hearings."

"The committee has been meeting in Helena for almost a year now to talk about reducing the costs of fire suppression and the impacts on our local communities," said Sen. Rick Laible, R-Darby, who will chair the Hamilton meeting. "This hearing will be the first 'road show' to a region significantly impacted by fires. Local citizens will have a chance to hear testimony from the various agencies involved in fire suppression and ask questions of experts in the field of fire suppression and forest health."

The agenda for April 28 includes a question and answer session with representatives of the USDA Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, and state Department of Natural Resources and Conservation (DNRC). Also on the agenda are presentations on:

* The Bitterroot National Forest perspective on fire suppression, by Dave Bull, forest supervisor;

* Biomass, by Kristiina Vogt, professor of ecosystem management at the University of Washington College of Forest Resources.

* Fire mitigation in the wildland-urban interface, by Steve Woodruff, deputy director of Western Progress, Northern Region;

* Forest health in the Bitterroot, by Sonny LaSalle, Big Sky Coalition; and

* Fire history and the ecology of Montana forests, by Steve Arno, science writer and former research forester with the USDA Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station in Missoula.

On April 29, the committee will reconvene at the hotel at 9 a.m. Members will depart by bus at 10:30 a.m. to tour Hayes Creek fuel reduction projects, French Basin, and the Middle East Fork of the Bitterroot River.

A complete agenda is available at www.leg.mt.gov/fire.

"The committee's goals are to draft legislation that provides the DNRC with additional tools for fire suppression, create a seamless system of interface between the various fire-fighting agencies, make better use of local contractors, and find ways to influence the federal system of fire suppression, including fuels reduction," Sen. Laible said.

The committee plans to hold similar public hearings in other communities, including Lewistown (May 16), Miles City (May 30), and Seeley Lake, Thompson Falls, and Libby (June 19-20).

Members of the Fire Suppression Interim Committee are Sens. John Cobb, R-Augusta; Kim Hansen, D-Harlem; Rick Laible, R-Darby; Dave Lewis, R-Helena; Gerald Pease, D-Lodge Grass; and Carol Williams, D-Missoula; and Reps. Steve Bolstad, D-Great Falls; Jim Keane, D-Butte; Krayton Kerns, R-Laurel; Rick Ripley, R-Wolf Creek; Chas Vincent, R-Libby; and Bill Wilson, D-Great Falls.

For more information, contact Leanne Heisel, legislative research analyst and committee staffer, at 444-3593 or lheisel@mt.gov.

To comment on this post via email, click here.

4.21.2008

Three Bitterroot thinning projects announced

By PERRY BACKUS of the Ravalli Republic

DARBY - Chuck Oliver doesn't have to look far to be reminded why many in Darby hope the U.S. Forest Service will start thinning national forest lands around town soon.

From the front window of his district ranger's office, Oliver can see the trees blackened by last summer's Tin Cup fire.

Some sound firefighting, a few strategic breaks in the thick timber and a fortunate change in the wind kept the fire from roaring right into Darby. For two days, the fire was the top priority of national firefighting resources.

Link to full article.

To comment on this post via email, click here.

4.16.2008

Congress should treat the "root cause" of catastrophic wildfires

by Sonny LaSalle, Executive Director, Big Sky Coalition

Two bills currently before the U.S. House focus primarily on funding for fire suppression. Funding is an important part of the solution equation, but it is only half the solution. Treating half of the problem is analogous to a patient with intense pain, where the doctor prescribes a strong painkiller without identifying or treating the root cause.

There are three components to the root cause: climate, number of trees, and Forest Service management challenges.

Link to Clark Fork Chronicle article.

To comment on this post via email, click here.

Tester says Forest Service budget ‘trashed’

The budget for the U.S. Forest Service was "totally trashed" by Pres. Bush’s proposed budget for 2008, said Montana Sen. Jon Tester. "I think he fully realized that we will restore the money in that budget," said Tester.

Link to Ravalli Republic article.

To comment on this post via email, click here.

4.15.2008

New Technology Foresees Trees, not Grain, in the Tank


photo: AP

Crop-based biofuels like rapeseed oil and corn-derived ethanol are ecologically problematic and threaten food supplies. Now a Germany company says it has the solution: an advanced fuel made from wood and other non-food biomass.

Link to Spiegel article.

To comment on this post via email, click here.

4.10.2008

Audio of House Testimony

Here's an audio link to today's testimony in Washington, D. C. concerning H.R. 5541, the Federal Land Assistance, Management and Enhancement Act (FLAME) and H.R. 5648, the Emergency Wildland Fire Response Act of 2008.

(Total time of audio: 65 minutes)

To download this audio file, right click and save to your computer for replay. (45MB)

To comment on this post via email, click here.

4.09.2008

Big Sky Coalition Goes To Washington D.C. with message

Coalition director goes to Washington
by PERRY BACKUS - Ravalli Republic


Sonny LaSalle wants Congress to do more than just throw money at the volatile wildfire situation facing Montana and the West.

The executive director of the Bitterroot Valley’s Big Sky Coalition believes large-scale thinning to reduce fuels on national forest lands should be part of the answer.

LaSalle will offer his vision today in testimony to the House Natural Resources Committee in Washington D.C.

Read full Ravalli Republic article, April 10


Copy of STATEMENT

Veto “Sonny” LaSalle

BIG SKY COALITION

Retired, USDA Forest Service (1964-1997)

Forest Supervisor (1986-1997)

BEFORE THE HOUSE NATURAL RESOURCES COMMITTEE

April 10, 2008

CONCERNING

H.R. 5541, the Federal Land Assistance, Management and Enhancement Act (FLAME) and H.R. 5648, the Emergency Wildland Fire Response Act of 2008

I have read the March 2008 letter from the five living former Chiefs of the Forest Service and Jack Thomas’s written testimony in support of H.R. 5541. I have also read H.R. 5648. The letter from the five former Chiefs and Jack’s testimony make an excellent case for why the present funding formula must be changed. The present formula has had a devastating effect on the ability of the Forest Service to meet its mission of “Caring for the Land and Serving People.”

I believe both Bills have the potential to greatly improve the funding formula dilemma, and I suggest they be combined to capture the most positive attributes of each. They do not go far enough to truly treat the root cause of the wildfire issue, but more about that later.

The positive attributes of each Bill that should be included in the combined version, as well as areas of concern follow:

The positive attributes of H.R. 5541 – The FLAME fund can receive annual appropriations equal to the previous five- year average. Interest is earned on the unused portion. The funds are designated as emergency funds. The Declaration Criteria includes a situation where the costs for cumulative wildfire suppression activities are projected to exceed amounts annually appropriated. An annual report is required. FLAME requires a cohesive Wildland Fire Management strategy that has five required elements. Elements three, four and fire are excellent, especially five. More on this later.

Areas of concern with H.R. 5541 - The ten-year rolling average could present a challenge as fire suppression costs have been escalating at a rapid rate, and five years may be more reflective of the situation.

Section (f) on page 7 – Treatment of Anticipated and Predicted Activities is a little confusing to me as it indicates the agencies have to continue funding anticipated wildfire suppression activities within the appropriate agency budget, and that is what is causing today’s problems. I admit budgeting at this level is not my strong suit.

The positive attributes of H.R. 5648 – the Criteria for Declaration on page five are thorough and I suggest adding a statement to, (ii) Threat, that covers a concern for the medical health of local communities. The intense heavy smoke inversions in many communities have created health problems for people and I predict this issue will become a problem for fire management agencies in the future. The Authorization of Appropriations on page seven uses the previous five years for declared Wildland fire incidents. The (2) Review of Certain Fires section on page nine has some merit but I suggest that flexibility be incorporated if this section is in the final Bill. The flexibility should be on the ten million dollar cost figure, as size and costs of fires are increasing, as well as the requirement to review all of those fire incidents. In the future the Committee may want to relax or increase the requirement, depending on the cost of the reviews, and the level of trust between the Committee and the agency. I really like section (g) Support for Fire Ready Communities on pages nine – eleven, especially the encouragement and incentives for cities and counties to develop local codes for building in the wildland urban interface (WUI). I also like SEC.4. on Partnerships to Reduce Hazardous Fuels on National Forest System Lands. This could prove to be an important section if you incorporate some of my suggestions later in this document.

Areas of concern with H.R. 5648 – On page six (e) Reports on Fund Activities; there is a joint report requirement every six months. This could prove to be an onerous requirement as there is also a requirement for a report on every declared emergency wildland fire incident. Section (1) Transfer of Excess Funds for Reforestation on page eight has a requirement regarding the stratified cost index. The hotter, more costly fires may need reforestation and rehabilitation more than the fires that are below the stratified cost index.

Recommended Additions

Both H.R. 5541 and 5648 contain a mention of “Hazardous Fuels” but the primary focus of both Bills is funding for fire suppression. Funding is an important part of the solution equation, but it is only half of the solution. Treating half of the problem is analogous to a patient going to the Doctor with intense pain and the Doctor prescribes a strong pain- killer without identifying or treating the “root cause.” The Forest Service is in immediate and intense pain, and the painkiller is a different funding formula, but that does not significantly reduce the cause of the pain to the agency or the people they serve.

There are three components to the “root cause.”

  1. Climate: There is ample scientific evidence that we are warming. Our summers are earlier and longer, leading to longer drying periods and hotter fire seasons. We are also in a dry cycle. The February 2008 issue of National Geographic had an article, “Drying of the West”, where data from the Laboratory of Tree Ring Research at the University of Arizona was analyzed. The analysis area was the Colorado River Basin, but the trend is West wide. The twentieth century was the wettest 100 years of the past 1000 years. This is also the century when we started our intense fire suppression efforts. The tree rings showed that before Europeans settled the West there were numerous droughts more severe and protracted than any since then. When you combine the possibility of drought with warming the situation in our forest becomes more critical.
  2. Number of Trees: The combination of moisture and fire suppression has created forest conditions where we have significantly more trees than can be supported with normal moisture regimes. When you factor in the trends of warmer and dryer the need for action is even more critical. The impacts of an excess of trees have been demonstrated for a number of years by bark beetle epidemics all over the West. The Payette National Forest was in a drought period during my tenure there (1986-1992) and five different bark beetles were killing trees where we had not thinned the stands. Over 300,000 acres of the Payette burned in 1994 and another 390,000 acres in 2007, mostly in beetle killed stands. There was some re-burn in 2007 so the numbers are not additive. There are over 1,000,000 acres of beetle-killed lodgepole pine in Colorado and Wyoming, and the future is fairly certain without action. The excess live trees not only create moisture stress for the entire stand, but when they burn they are ladder fuel to move the fire from the ground to the crown which ensures the death of the very trees that should be saved.
  3. Forest Service Management Challenges: The present system for appeals and litigation has progressed to the point where it is extremely difficult for the agency to act decisively, timely and efficiently on large-scale thinning and restoration projects. This is true even in cases where community health and safety concerns are demonstrated. The Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA) has created an incentive program for organizations to file lawsuits. The requirements for a NEPA document for the “Federal Official to make a reasoned decision”, and those to defend in court are significantly different. The responsible official will spend considerably more time and money building a “bullet proof” document than one with sufficient information to make a reasoned decision.

We can’t do anything about number one, climate, but we can do something about numbers two and three. In that vein of thought I recommend the following additions to whatever final Bill is proposed.

    1. Clearly define Congress’s expectations for the mission of the Forest Service in Fire Management. This includes: a focus on reducing hazardous fuels to prevent the large quantities of carbon released into the atmosphere; reduce the chances of large catastrophic stand replacing fires; increase the safety of firefighters; reduce the impacts to the health and economic stability of communities; increase the resiliency and sustainability of the National Forests; sequester carbon in live trees that will have an improved chance of surviving a bark beetle epidemic and/or a wildfire.
    2. Direct the Secretaries of Interior and Agriculture to collaborate with the Governors of each state to identify the communities that are at risk and agree on a comprehensive strategy to reduce the risk to an acceptable level. Once the communities are identified and a strategy is in place, NEPA will be suspended, the appeals process will be suspended, EAJA will become a two way street (loser pays) and a bond of a significant amount will be required to file a lawsuit. In a two and one half year period, from 2005 to 2007, Region One of the USDA Forest Service paid $456,750 for attorney fees under EAJA. I recognize this will be difficult and controversial, but the situation is critical and calls for bold action by Congress. Rather than waiting for the situation to get so bad that you have no choice, take preventative action now. Enable the agencies to move quickly and efficiently to prevent the impacts associated with large catastrophic wildfires. You will also see a significant savings in the long run, which makes taxpayers happy. The math is based on general estimates with approximate ranges.

    Fire Suppression - $1000.00 to $2000.00 per acre

      Fire Rehabilitation - $500.00 to $1000.000 per acre

      Impact to Communities – no estimate

      Carbon into Atmosphere – millions of tons annually

      Thinning will not prevent forest fires, but it will reduce the chances for a fire to grow in intensity due to accumulations of fuel. It will also aid in suppression efforts under all conditions. I have personally seen moving uncontrollable fires reduce their intensity, rate of spread and resistance to control when burning into a thinned area. The thinned biomass must be removed from the forest and ground fuels (needles, cones, limbs and trees) reduced to a prescribed tonnage per acre. This biomass has value as a direct fuel source as “fuel for schools” and as feedstock for conversion to liquid bio fuel. Approximately 70% to 80% of the ponderosa pine stands on National Forest System Lands in Montana will pay for the thinning and removal costs due to the value of excess commercial sized trees. Some subsidy will be required but it is far less that the amount that will be required for reforestation and rehabilitation after the stands burn.

    1. Change the definition of renewable biomass in the 2008 Energy Bill. The definition makes no sense when you consider the: cost of fuel; reliance on foreign oil; goal of twenty five percent of energy to come from renewable sources by 2025 (25x25); the amount of carbon being released from wildfire; impacts on air quality; the need for carbon sequestration; advances in technology to convert woody biomass to bio fuel and the huge quantities of available feed stock in our forests.

Thank you for the opportunity to testify before your Committee.

To comment on this post via email, click here.

4.06.2008

Beaverhead-Deerlodge plan moves past gridlock

Letters to the Editor - Missoulian

I wanted to write in and share my support of the Beaverhead-Deerlodge Partnership guest opinion that appeared in the February 24 issue of the Missoulian.

I agree that this partnership is a new model of public land management for Montana and I personally am glad these groups are working together to move beyond the gridlock of the past. I agree that for too many years, these groups did not work together and because of that, all of Montana has suffered.

I feel there is more than enough space to meet all national-forest-user’s needs within the Beaverhead-Deerlodge. I have been employed seasonally within the Bitterroot National Forest’s wilderness/trails program since 1998 and have witnessed firsthand all of the various conflicts between motorized and non-motorized users. I truly believe that common ground can be achieved and we all can enjoy our public lands as we see fit. I feel we all need to set aside our assumptions and stereotypes and focus on our needs and how together, they can be met.

Again, I know there is plenty of space for everyone. It does sadden me to see the incredible amount of miscommunication and misperceptions of all national-forest-users involved and I am concerned that we are getting further and further away from our needs and goals.

With the Beaverhead-Deerlodge Partnership plan, I am excited to see quiet areas set aside for hunting, camping, fishing and horseback riding. I agree that we will see Montanans working in good-paying jobs in our forests and lumber mills. And we will see landscapes badly in need of restoration finally being brought back to health.

Because of these reasons, I am publicly supporting the Beaverhead-Deerlodge Partnership and I urge others to do the same.

Sean Meister, Hamilton

To comment on this post via email, click here.

View Stats
Funny viagra stories search buy viagra
Get viagra how to buy viagra. Does viagra work buy viagra no script.