The burning west: after a series of tragic fires, loggers go on the offensive. (Currents).Wildfires ravaging the American West have citizens, civic leaders and environmentalists searching for answers. Many blame our country's past attitude towards fire, and a U.S. Forest Service (symbolized by the venerable Smoky Smoky, river, c.250 mi (400 km) long, rising in Jasper National Park, W Alta., Canada, and flowing generally NE to the Peace River. It receives the Wapiti and Little Smoky rivers. It was explored (1792) by Alexander Mackenzie. Bear) that has been suppressing healthy, natural burning for too long. Fuel supplies--leaves, underbrush and other tinder--usually consumed in small blazes have instead been accumulating for up to 70 years, and when a spark finally catches the forest erupts into a destructive inferno. For many Republican leaders the answer is simple: Remove the fuel by selectively cutting down trees and clearing underbrush in densely wooded areas. "Through site-specific thinning of small trees and underbrush ... scientists are reducing the likelihood of forest fires This is a list of notorious forest fires: North America Year Size Name Area Notes 1825 3,000,000 acres (12,000 km²) Miramichi Fire New Brunswick Killed 160 people. , and reducing their intensity if fires happen to start," says Senator Jon Kyl
But some environmentalists fear that these politicians are generating sympathy for the timber industry in the name of fire suppression. President Bush disappointed the Alaska Rainforest Campaign in May when his administration pursued a court-ordered wilderness review of the nine-million-acre Tongass Forest in Alaska and concluded that none of it was to be protected. A number of industrial timber sales are now planned for formerly roadless areas. "The Bush Administration had a dear-cut choice and it sided with the timber industry," says Michael Finkelstein of the Alaska Rainforest Campaign. "Meanwhile, the overwhelming public support for protecting the last remaining Tongass roadless areas has been tossed out the window." Designed to protect 58.5 million acres of national wilderness from logging and road construction, the Roadless Area Conservation Roadless area conservation is a conservation-related term in which most road construction is prohibited on designated areas of public land such as national parks and national forests. Laws that support roadless area conservation are often called roadless rules. Rule was adopted by Congress last year. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the Wilderness Society, "More than 2.3 million comments have been received by the Forest Service with upwards of 95 percent of them in favor of the strongest protections possible. However, the rule has yet to be executed and Bush intends industry-friendly amendments. As it stands the Roadless Area Conservation Rule allows for logging and road construction when certain practicalities demand them, including the fighting and discouraging of forest fire. Fear of conflagration has been used to protect the timber industry in the past. Senator Mike Enzi Michael Bradley "Mike" Enzi (born February 1 1944) is a conservative Republican United States Senator from Wyoming. Before his election to the U.S. Senate in 1996, Enzi had been a businessman, who at one time owned family shoe stores. (R-WY) invoked fire anxiety in 2000 to help defeat a proposed amendment to the Interior Department Appropriations bill that would have ended the selling of timber by the U.S. Forest Service. Catastrophic fires will continue, he says, "until our forest managers are allowed to thin out the forests and remove the dense undergrowth and some of the increasingly taller layers of trees that create the deadly fuel ladders A fuel ladder is a firefighting term for live or dead vegetation that allows a fire to climb up from the forest floor into the tree canopy. Common fuel ladders include tall grasses, shrubs, and tree branches, both living and dead. that feed these fires." Whatever the science, Enzi made cl7ear his priority remains defending forest product jobs. As if it weren't hot enough already, some politicians are turning up the heat by blaming environmentalists for problem blazes. In a recent Denver Post, Senator Ben Campbell Ben Campbell may refer to:
A frivolous suit is one without any legal merit. In some cases, such an action might be brought in bad faith for the purpose of harrassing the defendant. lawsuits fan the fires." Kyl agrees, targeting "groups on the radical fringe" that oppose any efforts to thin forests. The Sierra Club Sierra Club, national organization in the United States dedicated to the preservation and expansion of the world's parks, wildlife, and wilderness areas. Founded (1892) in California by a group led by the Scottish-American conservationist John Muir, the Sierra Club claims these accusations are an inaccurate distortion. "The Forest Service has not been hampered from preventing fires by thousands of lawsuits. Congress' own General Accounting Office found that of 1,671 `fuel reduction' projects last year, only one percent were appealed, and none were brought to court," the club said last summer. Mudslinging mud·sling·er n. One who makes malicious charges and otherwise attempts to discredit an opponent, as in a political campaign. mud aside, evidence suggests that thinning forests can in some situations lead to more manageable combustion. "We have empirical evidence that thinning lessens the severity of fires," says Mike Da Luz, a National Fire Plan coordinator with the Forest Service. "On several large fires in Colorado, the intensity and speed were favorably fa·vor·a·ble adj. 1. Advantageous; helpful: favorable winds. 2. Encouraging; propitious: a favorable diagnosis. 3. influenced in forests that were treated with thinning." Scott Stephens, professor of fire science in the College of Natural Resources at UC Berkeley, says, "Harvesting can make forest sustainability better, but the devil is in the details." Improper thinning, he says, can lead to conditions that make destruction worse. "If you thin in a place with a high canopy cover and slim trees7' he says, "you increase the wind speed inside the forest, the amount of sunlight hitting the ground and dryness of the forest floor. That coupled with poor fuels management can lead to worse fires. But if you do things properly, those increases in winds and dryness aren't necessarily a problem and may actually be more natural." In the New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Times last June, Stephen Pyne, an Arizona State biology professor, argued that thinning techniques should be used selectively. The Sierra Club agrees, advising homeowners to protect their property by "clearing flammable flam·ma·ble adj. Easily ignited and capable of burning rapidly; inflammable. [From Latin flamm materials within 30 to 60 feet of your home." But the club believes prescribed pre·scribe v. pre·scribed, pre·scrib·ing, pre·scribes v.tr. 1. To set down as a rule or guide; enjoin. See Synonyms at dictate. 2. To order the use of (a medicine or other treatment). burning better serves the health of the forest. "Restoring the natural role of fire to a landscape often provides the best wildfire prevention and pays off with long-term financial savings," the club says. "What many areas need is a kind of woody weeding," Pyne writes, "which removes woody vegetation that has replaced natural grasses--but not logging, because the debris or slash left from clear-cutting is among the most hazardous fuels imaginable i·mag·i·na·ble adj. Conceivable in the imagination: imaginable exploits. i·mag ." But in extreme conditions, there's nothing homeowners can do. "I can't say things like `fire-proofing,'" says Da Luz. "This is a natural disaster, like a hurricane. What could you do to hold a hurricane back?" Because of fire threats, owning property in woody environments is financially risky. "Most people pick the mountains because of the aesthetics. But their property values will change if that area goes through a fire." Da Luz says the Forest Service intends to combine forest thinning with prescribed burning. However, he doesn't project a rapid return to healthy conditions, suggesting that thinning is likely to continue indefinitely. "When you're talking 100 million acres, it's not like you could fix it in 70 years," he says. CONTACT: The Wilderness Society, (800)843-9453, www. wilderness.org; The Sierra Club, (415) 977-5500, www.sierraclub.org. |
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