Oct. 9, 2006
COMMENTARY: Western Fires: Made in Washington, DC
By Deroy Murdock
Scripps Howard News Service
Big Sky, Montana (SHNS) -- From high atop a horse named Cruiser, it's easy
to see what ails so much of America's West. Above and below an equestrian
path in the Gallatin National Forest, pine trees and Douglas firs crowd
together like rush-hour subway commuters. Many are shorter and thinner than
normal, due to intense competition for water, nutrients, and sunlight. Among
these upright evergreens, dead trunks, limbs, and branches litter the arid
ground. They are parched white, like the bones of a carcass bleached beneath
the searing sunshine.
"This hasn't burned since the 1940s," says Ryan Neel, a wrangler from the
nearby Lone Mountain Ranch. One well-placed lightning bolt could turn this
overgrown hillside into a furnace.
Compare this neglected patch of the federal property portfolio to the
practically groomed habitat at media mogul Ted Turner's 175-square-mile
Flying D Ranch, about 50 miles away. Young and old members of assorted
arboreal species stand comfortably apart from each other, minimizing fire
risk. On this private land, foresters carefully pick trees to sell, and then
carefully remove them by helicopter. Despite such costly techniques, Turner
Enterprises turns a profit.
"Fire safety is an ancillary benefit of thinning for pest and disease
control," says general manager Russ Miller. "Spacing out the trees makes it
more difficult for insects to spread from tree to tree."
This contrast between public mismanagement and private stewardship recurs
across the West. The enormous fires that routinely engulf millions of acres
from the Rockies to the Pacific tend to devour federal lands. The federal
government owns, for instance, 29.9 percent of Montana, 45.3 percent of
California, and 84.5 percent of Nevada. Excluding Alaska and Hawaii, 54.1
percent of America's West is federal property.
Actively maintained private forests usually enjoy health and fire
resistance, thanks to deadwood clearance, controlled burns, and selective
harvesting.
Southern California's Day Fire roared from Labor Day through last Monday,
charring an area the size of Chicago. Most of these 254 square miles were in
the Los Padres National Forest. Years of piled-up kindling, insufficient
prescribed fires, and a lack of tree sales fueled California's fifth largest
fire, ever. The bitter irony is that ecologists' objections to sensible fire
prevention fed an inferno that destroyed trees, birds, and butterflies,
while choking the atmosphere with tons of the environmentalists' newest
enemies: carbon dioxide and other pesky greenhouse gases.
Between January 1 and October 4, 2003, the National Fire Information Center
calculates, 3,159,062 acres of wild land burned. That number has grown
steadily. During 2006's equivalent period, 9,102,776 acres were consumed.
Fires also soared from 49,957, during that span of 1993, to 84,214 in 2006's
comparable interval.
"In our area, fundamentally all the fires of any significance are on federal
lands," says Southwest Idaho Resources Advisory Committee Chairman F.
Phillip Davis. "Fires on state and private lands tend to be smaller and are
extinguished quickly due to access and the thinner, managed condition of the
forests."
To exacerbate matters, extracting trees is increasingly difficult, since
fewer places process logs. The Endangered Species Act and other timber
restrictions have helped padlock lumber mills. In southern Idaho, for
example, mills have plunged from 17 in 1975 to one today.
"That is true across the West, and no one wants to invest in new lumber
mills," says Holly Fretwell, research fellow with Bozeman, Montana's
Property and Environment Research Center (PERC.org). "Forest policy makes
investment riskier because the future possibility of obtaining sufficient
timber is dubious."
Lumberjacks, foresters, and lumber-mill workers are joining other
professions, making their skills scarcer every day.
"Within a generation, we could lose the people who know how to manage
timber," Davis remarks. He says 18 fires recently incinerated 320,000 acres
of Idaho. On September 7, blazes around Boise gave it America's second worst
air quality, right behind Sacramento, California.
The federal government should permit increased, sensible timber removal. It
should encourage "salvage logging," to clear at least the inflammable dead
trees from Western forests. Also, until Washington demonstrates that it can
handle its current holdings, Congress should prohibit new land purchases. In
fiscal year 2005 alone, it appropriated $255.5 million to expand the Feds'
already smoldering real-estate empire.
To see why the West burns, look east, through the smoke, to Uncle Sam.
Correction: I apologize for my last column's erroneous reference to this
legislative session as the 108th Congress. This is the 109th.
New York commentator Deroy Murdock is a columnist with the Scripps Howard
News Service and a media fellow with the Hoover Institution on War,
Revolution and Peace at Stanford University.