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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 14, 2006
Contact:
Paul Hughes, executive director: (415) 974-4201; paul@forestsforever.org
Marc Lecard, communications manager: (415) 974-4202; marc@forestsforever.org
Forest
Service takes a whack at NEPA
New rule excludes forest management plans from review
The U.S. Forest Service will publish a new rule in the Federal Register
this week that will allow it to exclude its forest management plans
from the requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).
Every national forest has a forest management plan that governs
land use decisions– what can be done, and where, within the
forest. These plans must be rewritten every 15 years.
Up until now, the forest management plans and any updates to them
were subject to the environmental review and public comment provisions
of NEPA.
But under the new rule promulgated by the Forest Service, the plans
will be categorically excluded from environmental review.
“Categorical exclusions were designed to exempt small, insignificant
projects, like remodeling a ranger cabin,” noted Paul Hughes,
executive director of Forests Forever.
“Now the Forest Service wants to exclude the planning documents
for entire forests. This is a blatant misuse of the exemption, and
one more attempt to keep agency activities hidden from the American
public.”
The Forest Service claims that rewriting the plans does not actually
implement changes on the forests, and therefore does not need an
environmental impact statement or the opportunity for public comment
required by NEPA. The agency claims that such reviews will be done
when individual projects are proposed, and do not need to be performed
for the forest management plans themselves.
Rep. Nick Rahall (D-WV), who will chair the House Resources Committee
in the next session of Congress, points out that the recent history
of the Forest Service makes it unlikely that proper NEPA review
will be done at the project level.
According to a statement issued by Rahall’s office, almost
72 percent of vegetation management projects on federal forests
were exempted from NEPA review by categorical exclusion.
Rahall and Rep. Tom Udall (D-NM) have written a letter to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture asking that the new rule be withdrawn.
Under the Bush administration, the Forest Service has expanded the
use of categorical exclusions to “fuels reduction” projects
and salvage logging. This rule is the first attempt to exclude entire
national forests from NEPA.
“If no one stops the Forest Service,” Hughes said, “it
will end by categorically excluding its every function from review.”
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