[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 169 (Saturday, December 18, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S10684-S10686]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FOREST JOBS AND RECREATION ACT
Mr. TESTER. Mr. President, I want to talk a little bit about the
omnibus bill that was pulled down 2 nights ago because there were not
the votes from across the aisle to get the bill moving.
In that omnibus bill, there was a number of very important projects
for every State in the Union. But there were a lot of very important
projects for the State of Montana in that bill that I am afraid now
will be put on the back burner.
Nonetheless, there was also some very important language in the
omnibus bill. In my particular case, there was language in that bill
that was going to help put people back to work, and that language was
contained in a bill we call the Forest Jobs and Recreation Act.
What this bill does is create 660,000 acres of new wilderness. It
creates 370,000 permanent acres in new recreation areas. It requires
forest restoration and logging of 100,000 acres over 15 years.
It is important in Montana for several reasons. The first reason is,
we have been attacked by beetles, the bark beetles that have killed a
large percentage of our forests, and we need to give the Forest Service
the tools they need to be able to treat that.
The second thing is that in the western part of Montana the economy
has been hurt pretty badly. The unemployment rate there is the highest
in our State. This bill will create jobs. Let me give you an example.
Over the last year, in Montana, 1,700 jobs were lost in the wood
products industry alone. This bill would help get those folks back to
work. How? Well, it would help the folks running the chain saws, doing
the cutting in the woods, the mills that create dimension lumber and
plywood, and those kinds of things, get back up running and employing
people.
It would help provide the opportunity for biofuels with these trees,
to be able to get a dependable supply, to be able to put the investment
in to create biofuels, and move that industry along, to make this
country more energy independent.
It would help save our timber infrastructure because, quite frankly,
if you look at some of the States in the West, that timber
infrastructure is gone, and our ability to manage those forests leaves
us when that timber structure goes. That is not the case in Montana,
but we are getting very close. It is why this bill needs to be passed.
Unfortunately, it does not look as though it is going to happen at this
point in time.
The other part about this bill--as I said, while there were so many
projects in the omnibus, the CBO says this bill is deficit neutral,
with no cost to the taxpayers. It is a bipartisan bill. It is a bill we
have support for from both sides of the aisle, with Governors and
Senators and Congressmen and local county commissioners, from both
parties.
It is a bill that the Forest Service, through Secretary Vilsack,
supports. It is popular with over 70 percent of Montanans.
As I said earlier, we are in dire need of it because our forest is
dying, with
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over 1 million acres of dead and dying trees. This bill has been the
subject of intense public debate for the past year and a half since I
dropped it in. We had a Senate hearing a year ago, a year ago
yesterday, I believe it was. We have had townhall meetings, 11 in
total, across Montana. We have had unprecedented transparency with this
bill, with it being online and explaining and taking input and changing
the bill as it has moved forward, making it a better bill. We have
taken suggestions from the public, and where we have been able to
address those concerns, we have been able to address them straight-up
and move forward. It really is a new way of doing business for the
Forest Service, for our forested lands, our government-owned forested
lands in this country.
It has not been an easy go. This bill would not have happened 10
years ago. It absolutely would not have happened 20 years ago because
for the last 30 years we have had gridlock in our forest industry. We
have had conservationists and environmentalists and loggers and mill
owners and recreationists all fighting with one another, and nothing
has gotten done in the last 30 years.
Well, about 5 years ago these folks got together and they said: You
know, we have all been losing. Nobody has been winning. We should set
our differences aside--and this body should listen to this--set our
differences aside, find a common ground, and move forward with
solutions. They did exactly that. It was not easy, but they did exactly
that--where everybody gives a little but gets a lot. They sat down at
those tables and they met, and they met for years, and they came up
with this proposal.
Shortly after I was elected, they came to me and said: Would you
carry it?
I looked at it, and I said: You know what, this bill makes sense. It
makes sense for Montana. It makes sense for the West.
We were on track to get this bill passed until the omnibus was pulled
the other night because of a lack of support. Our No. 1 responsibility
right now is jobs--jobs, jobs, jobs. This bill helped create jobs,
helped put people to work in an industry that needs help.
Regardless of what happens from here, it is going to be critically
important that we stay focused on jobs in this body. I will tell my
colleagues that I think if we do that and we are successful in that,
this country will be a better place. It will be a better place for our
kids and our grandkids, and it will be a better place for people right
now. Quite frankly, I haven't seen a lot of that working together in
the last 4 years. When we have a piece of legislation that really isn't
a Democratic piece of legislation or a Republican piece of legislation
but, rather, a good piece of legislation, it gets caught up in the
process.
I will continue to fight for jobs for everybody in this country,
particularly in Montana. We will continue to work to get this bill
passed and bills like this passed because it is good for the country
and it gives the agencies--in this case, the Forest Service--the kinds
of tools they need to manage our forests.
As I said before, I was going to ask unanimous consent for the
passage of this bill. I have been informed that will be objected to, so
there is no reason to go through that formality. But I will say we hope
to bring it up again, and hopefully next time we will be successful
because it is a good bill.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Merkley). The Senator from Idaho.
Mr. RISCH. Mr. President, I wish to respond briefly to my good friend
from Montana.
First of all, let me say that I, of course, was at the hearings the
Senator referred to in our Energy and Natural Resources Committee.
Ordinarily, I wouldn't involve myself at all in the internal matters in
Montana. Natural resource issues are best decided by the people who
live in the particular counties and in the particular States where that
resource is located. On this particular issue, however, one of the
areas of land included in the landmass my good friend from Montana
described in his bill is an area that is referred to as Mount
Jefferson. Mount Jefferson and the area included admittedly are
entirely within the State of Montana. However, the only way the
southern part can be accessed is through the State of Idaho.
I couldn't agree more with my good friend from Montana in saying that
we need to keep our eye on the ball, and that is jobs, jobs, jobs.
The particular area in question is not a large area. I think the
total amount is 4,400 acres. The amount I am talking about is about
2,200 acres, but it is used intensively by Idaho people engaging in
recreation in the wintertime. Under my good friend's bill, that would
have been closed out, and the snowmobiling particularly would have been
prohibited in this area, which is the south side of Mount Jefferson.
I sincerely appreciate my friend's willingness to talk about this and
to work on this particular issue. As we go forward with this--and I
have no doubt that his commitment to his State will cause him to
continue to work with us on this issue and to deal with this particular
bill and the areas of land he is talking about in this bill as we go
into the next Congress. I commit to work with him, and I hope we can
resolve this issue. As I say, the issue of winter snowmobiling only as
far as motorized use of this particular area is of great importance to
the people of the State of Idaho.
I thank the Senator for his courtesies thus far, and I look forward
to working with Senator Tester in the next Congress on this issue.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
Mr. TESTER. Thank you, Mr. President.
I appreciate the remarks of the good Senator from Idaho. I understand
the Senator's concern as we have talked about the Mount Jefferson issue
before. Overall in the bill, just for the record, we have added 370,000
acres of recreation area for exactly that--snowmobiles. That doesn't
solve the problem on Mount Jefferson of the 4,400 acres, but we will
continue to work with the Senator from Idaho and move forward to try to
get something as close to what meets the needs of everybody as we can.
As Vince Lombardi once said, the recipe for failure is trying to please
everybody.
I thank the good Senator from Idaho.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
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