[Congressional Record Volume 165, Number 87 (Thursday, May 23, 2019)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3109-S3110]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
By Mr. WYDEN (for himself, Mr. Crapo, Mr. Merkley, and Mr.
Risch):
S. 1643. A bill to amend title 36, United States Code, to grant a
Federal charter to the Forest and Refuge County Foundation, to provide
for the establishment of the Natural Resources Permanent Fund, and for
other purposes; to the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, today Senator Crapo of Idaho, Senator
Merkley of Oregon, Senator Risch of Idaho, and I are introducing the
Forest Management for Rural Stability Act. This legislation replaces
the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act (SRS) to
provide revenue sharing with and compensation to over 700 rural
forested counties in the over 40 States that host America's treasured,
public forested lands and wildlife refuges.
In 2000, then-Senator Larry Craig, also of Idaho, and I, had signed
into law SRS: a 6-year long safety-net program to stabilize county
budgets following years of depleted revenue sharing payments from the
U.S. Forest Service (USFS) and the Oregon and California Grant Lands
managed by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM). Over its lifetime,
SRS has been a success, providing more than $6.8 billion nationwide for
rural roads, schools, and healthy forest projects. SRS also provided
the basis for the beginning of, and the now growing propensity for, the
USFS and the BLM to collaborate with local people and interests on the
management of these public lands, and for local folks and counties to
collaborate together and with the USFS and BLM, in return.
Despite its many successes, the continuation of SRS is in jeopardy.
The program expired in fiscal year 2016. Congress passed a two-year
extension of the program, but after its expiration. And this was not
the first time nor the last time Congress allowed it to expire--SRS is
expired right now, though Senator Crapo and I are attempting, in these
last moments of the 115th Congress, to reauthorize it again for at
least a year, perhaps two.
This stop and start existence of this program hits at the heart of
any attempts at collaboration. And it certainly undermines any attempts
for a county to budget. Our rural counties should not continue to
suffer neither this uncertainty, nor the market based uncertainty that
comes with simply relying on revenue sharing and forest management for
support.
That is why Senator Crapo and I propose an SRS modernization, funding
certainty while supporting active forest management. The Forest
Management for Rural Stability Act establishes a permanent endowment
fund,
[[Page S3110]]
the Natural Resources Permanent Fund, to provide stable, reliable,
increasing payments to counties, in perpetuity, removing them from the
vagaries of Congress or the market.
Under this legislation, Congress charters a fiduciary corporation,
the Forest and Refuge County Foundation, to manage the endowed fund.
The corporation will be independent from any instrumentality of the
U.S. government, including Congress, to ensure the principle balance is
held in perpetuity and is separate from annual appropriations. The
corporation will be overseen by a board of directors responsible for a
transparent governance structure. The principle of the fund will be
invested to earn interest. To grow the fund, in addition to the
investment income, the USFS, BLM, and the Fish and Wildlife Service
will deposit their annual revenue sharing receipts into the fund. The
interest the fund generates will constitute the payments to the
counties, distributed annually using the existing SRS formula. Initial
payments to counties will be equal what counties received for Fiscal
Year 2017 SRS payments.
The Forest Management for Rural Stability Act continues Congress's
commitment to fostering economic growth in rural counties by continuing
Forest Service Resource Advisory Committees. In addition, the bill
gives county governments greater flexibility in how these funds are
spent for economic development and rural jobs.
Passing the Forest Management for Rural Stability Act will update SRS
for 2018 and beyond--looking forward for our forested counties, rather
than backward to last century efforts.
This bill updates an already successful program that deserves action.
I urge my colleagues to support this important bill.
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