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  • 2 days ago
During a Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee hearing on Thursday, Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-WA) asked Forest Service Chief Tom Schultz about his agency's budget.
Transcript
00:00Senator Cantwell.
00:03Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
00:05First, I want to thank you, Chief Schultz, for being here.
00:09And I want to take a moment with my colleague from Idaho to acknowledge the sacrifice and
00:15bravery of the firefighters in the Coeur d'Alene, Idaho area.
00:19And my condolences go out to their families and to this community.
00:23And so we want to remember these individuals and, again, thank the firefighters all across
00:32the nation.
00:35Chief Schultz, the season is upon us.
00:37I think my staff probably has our most recent charts that show how bad our prediction is
00:43for this summer.
00:45You know, each month it gets more dramatic.
00:48And so the challenges that we face is we want to prepare.
00:53And I think as the nation sees practically 24-7 coverage of what natural disasters can do
01:00to a community, one of the best things that you can do is cache resources early.
01:06And that cache, meaning C-A-C-H-E, cache them early so that they're close to the proximity
01:13of where they need to be.
01:15And that's always the best thing to do.
01:18And I do think, you know, people are probably asking questions why, if you thought you were
01:23going to have flood season in Texas, why didn't you have more resources there at an earlier
01:28time?
01:29But now we know this is the outlook for us.
01:32My colleague and I, I think our whole states will be covered in red.
01:35I don't know about you, but as I fly home every week I see less and less snow on the
01:39Cascades and I keep thinking, wow, this is really a challenge.
01:43Because you're just going to have drier and drier conditions.
01:46Okay.
01:47So where is the resource for the state?
01:50I think it's, you know, a budget that's already been approved.
01:56So why aren't we, why aren't we releasing the funds that go to the community so that they
02:03can best prepare for this fire season?
02:05Senator Campbell, thanks for the question.
02:09I think you're talking about the SFA and the VFA funding.
02:11We were talking about that previously.
02:13So we are evaluating that right now.
02:16We've had a lot of feedback from the state foresters.
02:18We're working with OMB on that question right now, looking at that issue.
02:22So we have not made a determination yet, but that's something that is being evaluated.
02:26So when, when, when do you expect that to go out?
02:31So we expect there probably to be determination in the next several weeks would be my expectation.
02:37Okay.
02:38But we don't, again, we can't commit that that's for sure going to go out yet.
02:41We're still, that's still under discussion.
02:43Well, we just, we want to follow the normal process so that the forest services working,
02:50you know, with others to get the resources in, into those communities and do the work that they need to do.
02:57Same question about LWCF.
02:59Why, why is that money being held up by OMB or others?
03:03So, Senator Cantwell, what we're looking at is just looking at the administration's priorities
03:08and looking at the 25 budget to make sure the, the work that we're doing is in alignment with the priorities of the administration.
03:15So that's something that's just being evaluated right now.
03:17Um, and we're, we're still looking at that.
03:19But if LWCF, our projects submitted and approved by Congress, this committee played a key role in saying,
03:25we want to fund these and let's move forward.
03:27Why is OMB now requiring, you know, a review of LWCF projects?
03:34Senator, I think it's just like I mentioned.
03:36We're looking at all those programs in the 25 budget, just looking at alignment with the priorities of the administration.
03:42What does that mean?
03:43That you're creating a different process than exists that has been practiced for 50 or 60 years?
03:49I don't think it's that we're creating a new process.
03:53I think what we're saying is that just given the authorities in this year,
03:57so I think the language looking is that, so we're saying the president is acting within his authority
04:00for the full year continuing appropriations to revise spending within the amounts provided by Congress.
04:05I mean, I think that's, that's what's being done.
04:07We're looking at that right now.
04:09Okay.
04:10And then on the roadless rule, you know, I love my colleague from Idaho.
04:13He probably doesn't want me to say that.
04:14Okay.
04:15I'll pretend I don't like you.
04:16How about that?
04:17I don't like you.
04:18But he did implement a roadless rule in his state, which he got the people together and he got it done.
04:29He made the right decisions.
04:31So, or he made a lot of decisions.
04:33Okay.
04:34He made a lot of decisions.
04:35So he, that's the prerogative.
04:38Like that was the way it worked.
04:39Like a state could step up and do the work or you could have somebody else tell you.
04:43In this case, he did the work.
04:44So are you aware that researchers found that approximately 88% of all wildfires are human caused
04:50and 95% of those fires are, we ignited within a half a mile of a road, a road.
04:56And so one of the reasons why the roadless rule was good for some of these areas because no, we're not,
05:02we're not having roads all over the place and we're not igniting fires all over the place.
05:07So do you have an assessment of the, of the cost of rescinding the roadless rule when you might be building roads
05:16into pristine areas and causing more challenges?
05:19So Senator, I think our bigger concern isn't building roads into pristine areas.
05:24It's that we've got 24 and a half million acres of the roughly 60 million acres of roadless that is within either,
05:30it's either in the WUI or it's within a mile of the WUI.
05:33So that is our primary concern on this is that we've got areas and much,
05:37I mentioned this earlier in my testimony that there is much roadless area that actually has roads in it.
05:41I was on the Helena Lewis and Clark forest last week.
05:44The Lolo forest has roads.
05:45It's not uncommon that roadless areas do have roads.
05:48Um, it just.
05:49No, the question is whether we want to continue that process.
05:52And I think what, you know, I think what everybody wants is to not, we want to maintain our forest.
06:00We want to have recreational areas.
06:02We want to invest in the resources to have the public go enjoy those recreational areas.
06:07I personally don't want to sell public lands.
06:10So, but at the same time, you're, you're saying let's not build more roads in places we don't need to build more roads.
06:18Just because somebody, one or two people have a great idea that that's what they want to go do.
06:22Let's set aside those areas that we think, no, really, we shouldn't be building roads there.
06:26That was the whole point of the roadless rule is to make those decisions.
06:30And as I said, my colleague was successful at making those decisions and prioritizing that.
06:34And so now, if you're saying the wildland urban interface is really an issue.
06:39Yeah, I, I, I agree.
06:41The wildland urban interface should be debated every day of the week now.
06:45Because what we're finding is that we almost had literally a fire approach Spokane.
06:51I mean, there, there are people who are looking at and saying not where the next, you know, fire like the Palisades or like Hawaii,
07:00but people are saying the next event is going to be something that goes all the way from the WUI to a major urban city and could,
07:09and could cause that much damage.
07:11And that's what happened outside of Spokane last summer.
07:13So I think we, I think we're all in, but I, I think you and I will probably have to continue this dialogue about what,
07:19what's best to do to approach this issue.

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