[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 64 (Thursday, April 30, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H2667-H2668]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
{time} 1115
NATIONAL FOREST SYSTEM
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Dold). The Chair recognizes the
gentleman from Pennsylvania (Mr. Thompson) for 5 minutes.
Mr. THOMPSON of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, yesterday, the House
Agriculture Subcommittee on Conservation and Forestry, which I chair,
conducted a hearing to review the National Forest System and active
forest management.
[[Page H2668]]
The health of our national forests is an issue of vital importance
for rural America. Not only are national forests a source of immense
natural beauty, but they provide us with natural resources, healthy
watersheds, recreational opportunities, and wildlife habitat.
Perhaps more importantly, they serve as economic engines for the
surrounding local communities. Our national forests are capable of
providing and sustaining these economic benefits, but they need proper
management in order to do so.
The U.S. Forest Service manages more than 193 million acres of land
across 41 States. Within those 41 States are over 700 counties
containing national forestland. These counties and communities within
them rely on us to be good stewards of these Federal lands, and there
is a direct correlation between forest health and vibrant rural
communities.
The people living in these rural areas depend on well-managed
national forests to foster jobs and economic opportunities. These jobs
come from diverse sources, such as timbering, energy production, or
recreation. However, if those jobs disappear, so do jobs that support
those industries. It is a snowball effect from there, threatening
school systems and infrastructure in these rural communities.
As a result, effective management and Forest Service decisions have
significant consequences on our constituents who live in and around
national forests. Healthier, well-managed national forests are more
sustainable for generations to come due to the continual risks of
catastrophic fires and invasive species outbreaks. Especially with the
decline in timber harvesting and the revenue to counties from timber
receipts over the past two decades, rural economies will benefit
immensely from increased timber harvest.
We can continue supporting a diverse population of wildlife through
active land management practices, such as prescribed burns. Our
national forests are not museums. They were never intended to sit idly.
I say it frequently, but national forests are not national parks.
When Congress created the National Forest System more than 100 years
ago, it was designed so that surrounding communities would benefit from
multiple uses. Our national forests are meant to provide timber, oil,
natural gas, wildlife habitat, recreational opportunities, and clean
drinking water, not just for the rural communities, but these tend to
be the headwaters of the waters that provide water for our cities as
well.
During yesterday's hearing, members of the Conservation and Forestry
Subcommittee called upon Forest Service Chief Thomas Tidwell to use the
tools that Congress made available in the 2014 farm bill in order to
strengthen rural economies and improve the health of our national
forests. One certainly complements the other.
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