Page 8 - Flathead Beacon // 2.25.15
P. 8
8 | FEBRUARY 25, 2015 NEWS FLATHEADBEACON.COM
Daines Confident U.S. Can Pass Forest Management Reform
Sen. Steve Daines talks to forest shareholders during a roundtable discussion at F.H. Stoltze Land & Lumber C o . i n C o l u m b i a F a l l s o n F e b . 1 7. J U S T I N F R A N Z | F L A T H E A D B E A C O N
READER POLL
FLATHEADBEACON.COM
Do You Support a Resort Tax Increase in Whitefish to Partially Fund a Conservation Easement?
42% YES 58% NO TOTAL VOTES: 184
Should Montana Lawmakers Revoke the Federal Common Core Educational Standards?
56% YES 44% NO TOTAL VOTES: 123
Are Montana’s Income Taxes Too High?
58% YES 42% NO TOTAL VOTES: 160
ONLINE POLL RESULTS ARE NOT SCIENTIFIC
Senator meets with
shareholders for roundta-
ble discussion on Feb. 17
By JUSTIN FRANZ of the Beacon
U.S. Sen. Steve Daines believes Con- gress can pass forest management reform and send it to the president’s desk before the end of the year.
On Feb. 17, the freshman Republican senator from Montana met with industry and conservation leaders at F.H. Stoltze Land and Lumber Co. in Columbia Falls to talk about management issues within the U.S. Forest Service and how that is im- pacting local communities.
“There is an appetite to get this done,” Daines said. “Because right now it seems like beetles and forest fires are the ones who are managing our forests.”
Among those in attendance were offi- cials from F.H. Stoltze, Plum Creek Tim- ber Co., Pyramid Mountain Lumber, the Wilderness Society, the National Parks Conservation Association, the Kalispell Chamber of Commerce and local govern- ment officials from Sanders, Mineral and Lincoln counties. The visit was one of three roundtable discussions Daines host- ed across the state last week, including meetings in Missoula and Bozeman.
Since 1987, there has been an 82 per- cent decline in timber harvested on feder- al lands in Montana, according to the U.S. Forest Service, from more than 600 mil- lion board feet in 1987 to just over 100 mil- lion board feet in 2014. During that same time, 27 wood and paper product mills have closed in the state and the number of people employed in the industry has been cut in half. Those declines have had major impacts on rural communities like Lincoln County, which has had one of the highest unemployment rates in the state in recent years.
Daines attributed the decline in tim- ber production to what he described as burdensome regulations and persistent
litigation from environmental groups try- ing to stop timber sales. In August 2014, F.H. Stoltze laid off 10 people after a tim- ber sale on the Stillwater State Forest was halted in court. Industrial officials say the unpredictable supply of timber has hurt business.
However, some environmentalists say that harvests that are too aggressive can have a negative impact on wildlife and hab- itat. Environmental groups also point to figures released in 2014 that show the For- est Service met its harvest goals last year in Region One, encompassing Montana.
Also in attendance were two local mill workers, Jeff Mills from F.H. Stoltze and Matt Hannay from Plum Creek.
“The guys and gals out there don’t know if they’re going to have a job in a few weeks,” Mills said. “I’m going to retire in a few years, but there are people in their 30s and they don’t know if they’re going to be working in the industry in the future... There are not a lot of opportunities here for people who don’t have degrees. We in the working class need help.”
Daines and others who attended the meeting said the only way for progress to
be made on forest reform is for all inter- ested parties to work together. Scott Bren- nan, the Montana state director for the Wilderness Society, said more often than not people in conservation and the timber industry have more in common with each other than they think.
“We need to bridge divides to solve problems,” he said.
One area that everyone in attendance seemed to agree on was how the U.S. For- est Service should fund firefighting efforts.
Right now, 1 percent of forest fires con- sume 30 percent of the USFS’s annual bud- get. There is a push in Washington D.C. for wildland fire suppression to be funded the same way other agencies combat natural disasters, including hurricanes and snow- storms, instead of dipping into the agen- cy’s annual budget. Daines said reforms like that would lead to healthier forests and economies.
“Montanans want jobs that let them stay in the state they love, but they also want to protect the reasons they love this state, like hunting, fishing, camping and hiking,” Daines said.
[email protected]
I want to help make your journey as memorable as your destination.
Proudly serving the Flathead Valley since 1975 with
3 Convenient locations.
Glacier Park Int’l Airport 406-755-7500 Downtown Whitefish 406-862-8170 AMTRAK Whitefish 2988 US HWY 93 South
Brad ”Budget Brad” Cain
Flathead Valley Manager, All Locations
Ask for Brad to receive the special daily rate!
www.budget.com
“
“

