Federal agencies fall short of Trump forest protection goals

Near­ly two years ago, Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump stood amid the smoky ruins of Par­adise, Cal­i­for­nia, where he blamed the dead­liest wild­fire in the state’s his­to­ry on poor for­est management.

“You’ve got to take care of the floors, you know? The floors of the for­est, very impor­tant,” the pres­i­dent said.

He ordered the U.S. For­est Ser­vice and the Depart­ment of Inte­ri­or to make fed­er­al lands less sus­cep­ti­ble to cat­a­stroph­ic wild­fires with mea­sures such as remov­ing dead trees, under­brush and oth­er poten­tial­ly flam­ma­ble materials.

But while Trump has accused Cal­i­for­nia and Demo­c­ra­t­ic Gov. Gavin New­som of doing a “ter­ri­ble job” of for­est pro­tec­tion, his own agen­cies fell short of his goals for fed­er­al lands in 2019.

They treat­ed a com­bined 6,736 square miles (17,446 square kilo­me­ters) — just over half of the 13,203 square miles (34,196 square kilo­me­ters) the pres­i­dent sought, accord­ing to gov­ern­ment data. It was only slight­ly bet­ter than their aver­age annu­al per­for­mance over near­ly two decades.

With­out direct­ly address­ing the fig­ures, the For­est Ser­vice said in a state­ment Fri­day to the Asso­ci­at­ed Press that prospects are “very good” for step­ping up for­est treat­ments in the next sev­er­al years, assum­ing Con­gress pro­vides more fund­ing and state and pri­vate landown­ers play big­ger roles. The agency has formed stew­ard­ship agree­ments with 19 states and “will rely on part­ner­ships with state gov­ern­ments to get this work done,” it said.

The num­bers show it will take more than exec­u­tive orders to make sig­nif­i­cant progress on a prob­lem that has been build­ing for a cen­tu­ry, sci­en­tists and advo­cates say. More mon­ey and per­son­nel are need­ed, along with pol­i­cy changes.

“The fires are get­ting big­ger, the fire sea­sons are longer and costs are sig­nif­i­cant­ly increas­ing,” said Dylan Kruse, direc­tor of gov­ern­ment affairs for Sus­tain­able North­west, a Port­land, Ore­gon-based non­prof­it that seeks col­lab­o­ra­tion between for­est indus­tries and con­ser­va­tion­ists. “We need bil­lions of dol­lars and we’re not even close.”

Trump and Con­gress have pro­vid­ed only mod­est spend­ing increas­es for for­est treat­ments in recent years, he said. The pres­i­dent sought a near­ly $50 mil­lion cut in 2018, which law­mak­ers reject­ed. His 2021 bud­get rec­om­mends $510 mil­lion, up from $445 mil­lion allo­cat­ed this year.

Trump has drawn ridicule from polit­i­cal foes and some sci­en­tists for argu­ing that west­ern for­est floors should be “raked” and ignor­ing the role of cli­mate change-induced warm­ing and drought in the West’s wors­en­ing wild­fire crisis.

But pro­tec­tion mea­sures like those sought in his 2018 exec­u­tive order have drawn sup­port from admin­is­tra­tions of both par­ties for two decades.

A nation­al fire plan devel­oped under Pres­i­dent Bill Clin­ton and con­tin­ued under Pres­i­dent George W. Bush called for haz­ardous fuel reduc­tion and sup­press­ing inva­sive bee­tles, along with restora­tion of burned-over lands to pre­vent ero­sion. The Oba­ma admin­is­tra­tion released a fire man­age­ment strat­e­gy that embraced fuel removal and con­trolled burns.

The amount of land receiv­ing such treat­ments from the For­est Ser­vice and Depart­ment of Inte­ri­or has edged upward, peak­ing at 10,469 square miles (27,115 square kilo­me­ters) in 2009 before declin­ing to almost half that for sev­er­al years. It jumped to 8,505 square miles (22,027 square kilo­me­ters) in 2016 — Pres­i­dent Barack Obama’s last year in office.

Under Trump, the treat­ed area has gone from 6,367 square miles (16,490 square kilo­me­ters) in 2017 to near­ly 7,336 square miles (19,000 square kilo­me­ters) in 2018. Last year it was up to 6,736 square miles (17,446 square kilometers).

Still, the For­est Ser­vice says 125,000 square miles (323,748 square kilo­me­ters) it man­ages need work such as tree thin­ning and reg­u­lat­ed burns to reduce fuel loads. The agency esti­mates many times more that much gov­ern­ment and pri­vate land is vul­ner­a­ble to severe wildfire.

The Depart­ment of Inte­ri­or, which includes the Bureau of Land Man­age­ment and the Nation­al Park Ser­vice, did not respond to writ­ten ques­tions from AP.

“These agen­cies are still lag­ging far behind on these projects,” said Susan Jane Brown, an attor­ney with the West­ern Envi­ron­men­tal Law Center.

Fed­er­al offi­cials acknowl­edge their long­stand­ing pol­i­cy of putting out fires as quick­ly as pos­si­ble, instead of let­ting some take their nat­ur­al course, made forests over­grown and less able to cope with drought and disease.

A For­est Ser­vice study this month found that about one-third of trees in areas where exces­sive veg­e­ta­tion had not been removed died between 2014 and 2018. In thinned out places, the tree mor­tal­i­ty rate was 11%.

Some treat­ed areas had been sub­ject­ed to “pre­scribed” burns — fires inten­tion­al­ly set and care­ful­ly monitored.

In its state­ment, the agency said it now uses pre­scribed fire on about 2,187 square miles (5,664 square kilo­me­ters) of nation­al for­est land each year and plans to do more. But it said the prac­tice “has its chal­lenges,” includ­ing smoke pol­lu­tion in near­by com­mu­ni­ties and a minor risk of los­ing control.

Those burns — along with oth­er fuel reduc­tion mea­sures — also are cost­ly, requir­ing gear, mate­ri­als and skilled per­son­nel. Yet the For­est Ser­vice has few­er staffers to devote to them, while hir­ing thou­sands more peo­ple to extin­guish fires that have grown big­ger and more numerous.

The ser­vice lost 7,000 non-fire­fight­er posi­tions between 1998 and 2015. The share of its bud­get devot­ed to fire­fight­ing has shot up from 16% in the mid-1990s to more than 50% today and is expect­ed to keep ris­ing as the agency buys more heli­copters, fire engines and oth­er equipment.

Shift­ing resources from for­est treat­ment to fire­fight­ing doesn’t bode well for long-term pre­ven­tion, said John Bai­ley, an Ore­gon State Uni­ver­si­ty forestry pro­fes­sor who worked with fed­er­al offi­cials on a fire man­age­ment strat­e­gy released in 2014. It empha­sized fuel reduc­tion efforts, from clear­ing for­est debris to range­land grazing.

“We’re on a tra­jec­to­ry where fire sea­sons are going to get longer and dri­er and resources stretched thin­ner,” he said. “We’re just not mak­ing the progress we need to.”



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