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Oregon Logging Conference
Resolution # 2004-2
A Resolution For Implementing The Healthy
Forest Restoration Act
In
2003, Congress passed landmark legislation instructing federal land
management agencies to restore the health of the nation’s forestlands, to
reduce the unnatural level of forest fuels, address insect and disease
outbreaks and to implement forest protection plans around at risk
communities. The success of this legislation will depend on the ability
and desire of federal land management agencies to implement the law and
use the authorities it has provided to actively manage forestlands in need
of restoration efforts.
WHEREAS, several years of catastrophic wildfire throughout the
forests of the west have documented the serious forest health and fuel
load problems plaguing federal forestlands, and
WHEREAS, President Bush has taken a personal interest in this
crisis having made two personal visits to Oregon to inspect the situation
firsthand, and
WHEREAS, with the 500,000 acre Biscuit Fire still burning, and
using the smaller 2,800 acre Squires Peak fire as a backdrop, the
president announced the Healthy Forest Initiative (HFI), giving land
management agencies the necessary tools to cut through procedural red tape
and expedite the implementation of forest health and fuels reduction
projects and to salvage burned timber, and
WHEREAS, recognizing that legislative authorities were necessary to
accomplish the president’s objectives, Congress passed the Healthy Forest
Restoration Act (HFRA) with overwhelming bipartisan support, effectively
giving the Congressional stamp of approval for the president’s initiative,
and
WHEREAS, the nation’s land management agencies and their employees
now have the responsibility and the authority to effectively implement the
directives given to them by both the executive and legislative branches of
the United States government.
NOW, THEREFORE LET IT BE RESOLVED, that the Oregon Logging
Conference and its members call on the line officers of the U.S Forest
Service and the Bureau of Land Management, along with all of their
respective employees, to utilize to the fullest extent possible the
authorities and expedited procedures provided by the president and
Congress to prepare and implement forest health restoration projects and
to salvage burned timber consistent with the intent of the HFI and HFRA.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that aggressive and successful
implementation of the HFI and HFRA be considered a significant factor in
the evaluation of agency and agency personnel performance.
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