[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 17 (Monday, February 2, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H669]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ACTIVE FOREST MANAGEMENT LEADS TO HEALTHY COMMUNITIES
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Thompson) for 5 minutes.
Mr. THOMPSON of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, the Twenty-Five Percent
Fund Act of 1908 required 25 percent of tax receipts of timber
harvested from U.S. national forests to be returned to the counties
where the tax receipts originated.
Since local property taxes cannot be levied on Federal lands, these
dollars along with payment in lieu of taxes, or PILT, funding are
critical for counties located in national forests and other Federal
lands. This is because the 1908 law specifies that they directly
support local schools and road activities in national forests.
Unfortunately, timbering has dramatically decreased in the National
Forest System since the late 1980s. According to the Forest Service,
the agency was annually harvesting over 12 billion board feet by the
end of the 1980s, but today, this amount has decreased to less than 2
billion board feet per year.
Make no mistake, timbering activities, such as removing unhealthy
wood waste and potential fire fuel, plays a fundamental role in the
core mission of the Forest Service and lends the forest health.
Leading up to the turn of the century, declining timber production
has resulted in less forest management and, therefore, decreased forest
health, fewer local employment opportunities, and dramatically less
funding for schools and roads in forested communities.
As a result, the Secure Rural Schools program was created in 2000 to
help offset the lack of funding for essential local activities.
Unfortunately, the program was allowed to expire at the end of
September 2014, resulting in payments to counties reverting back to
previous law which again requires 25 percent of the tax receipts from
timbering to be returned to the counties of origin.
Earlier this month, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the parent
agency of the Forest Service, announced that 25 percent of receipts
will be paid to 41 States throughout the coming months in 2015.
These funds are very much needed in rural communities located on
Federal lands, including the Allegheny National Forest, where four
counties in northwestern Pennsylvania directly benefit.
While these funds amount to nearly $50 million nationally, they
represent only one-sixth of the funds that were provided the previous
year through the Secure Rural Schools program.
Mr. Speaker, as a member of the Education and the Workforce Committee
and a former school board president, I can attest that there is no
school district in America that could have 94 percent of a funding
stream pulled out from underneath them and still manage.
Make no mistake, the Secure Rural Schools program has gone a long way
in helping communities bridge the financial shortfalls for the lack of
taxable land over the past 15 years, but the program alone does not
solve the underlying challenges faced by counties and communities
colocated in national forests and other Federal lands.
In order to ensure the long-term ecological sustainability and
economic prosperity of our national forests and our local communities,
the Forest Service must adhere to its historical mission of active
forest management and timber harvesting for our Nation.
Mr. Speaker, let us not be confused. National forests are not
national parks; they are home to the people's resources. We must
encourage sustainable and increased production of the public's
resources which directly support those communities that are colocated
on Federal lands. This would be a win-win for the country. The American
people deserve as much.
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