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 <subject>Data collection</subject>
 <subject>Forest conservation</subject>
 <subject>Forest management</subject>
 <subject>Internal controls</subject>
 <subject>National forests</subject>
 <subject>National Fire Plan</subject>
 <type>Correspondence</type>
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 <title>Forest Service: Information on Decisions Involving Fuels Reduction Activities</title>
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<abstract>Human activities--especially the federal government&apos;s decades-old
policy of suppressing all wildland fires--have resulted in	 
dangerous accumulations of brush, small trees, and other	 
vegetation on federal lands. This vegetation has increasingly	 
provided fuel for large, intense wildland fires, particularly in 
the dry, interior western United States. The scale and intensity 
of the fires in the 2000 wildland fire season made it one of the 
worst in 50 years. That season capped a decade characterized by  
dramatic increases in the number of wildland fires and the costs 
of suppressing them. These fires have also posed special risks to
communities in the wildland-urban interface--where human	 
development meets or intermingles with undeveloped wildland--as  
well as to watersheds and other resources, such as threatened and
endangered species, clean water, and clean air. The centerpiece  
of the federal response to the growing threat of wildland fires  
has been the development of the National Fire Plan. This plan	 
advocates a new approach to wildland fires by shifting emphasis  
from the reactive to the proactive--from attempting to suppress  
wildland fires to reducing the buildup of hazardous vegetation	 
that fuels fires. The plan recognizes that unless these fuels are
reduced, the number of severe wildland fires and the costs	 
associated with suppressing them will continue to increase.	 
Implementation of the National Fire Plan began in fiscal year	 
2001; full implementation of the plan is expected to be a	 
long-term, multibillion-dollar effort. In fiscal year 2001, the  
first year the National Fire Plan was in effect, the Congress	 
substantially increased funding for hazardous forest fuels	 
reduction--from $108 million in FY 2000 to $401 million in FY	 
2001. The Congress continued this increased funding level for	 
2002 and 2003. Among the federal agencies, the Forest Service	 
receives, by far, the largest portion of these funds. Since the  
National Fire Plan began emphasizing the need to reduce forest	 
fuels buildup and the Congress has supported this initiative with
substantially increased funding, concerns have been raised about 
delays in implementing forest fuels reduction projects. 	 
Essentially, these concerns focus on whether Forest Service	 
decisions to implement specific forest fuels reduction activities
are being delayed by the appeals and litigation of these	 
decisions. In August 2001, we were asked to report on some	 
limited aspects of this issue. We provided this information to	 
the congressional requesters on August 31, 2001. In 2002, the	 
Forest Service also analyzed specific aspects of this issue and  
provided its findings to the Congress. While the subject of these
reports was the same, the specific objectives and scope of the	 
analyses differed considerably. Not unexpectedly, these 	 
differences led to different analytical results. Accordingly, in 
the summer of 2002, Congress asked us to perform a more 	 
comprehensive analysis of the issue. Specifically, we determined 
(1) the number of decisions involving fuels reduction activities 
and the number of acres affected in FY 2001 and FY 2002, (2) the 
number of decisions that were appealed and/or litigated and the  
number of acres affected in FY 2001 and FY 2002, (3) the outcomes
of the appealed and/or litigated decisions and the names of the  
appellants and plaintiffs, (4) whether the appeals were processed
within prescribed time frames, (5) the number of acres treated or
planned to be treated by each of the fuels reduction methods, and
(6) the number of decisions involving fuels reduction activities 
in the wildlandurban interface and inventoried roadless areas.</abstract>
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<identifier type="preferred citation">GAO-03-689R</identifier>
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<note>Correspondence</note>
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 <searchTitle>GAO-03-689R; Forest Service: Information on Decisions Involving Fuels Reduction Activities;
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<subject>
 <topic>Data collection</topic>
 <topic>Forest conservation</topic>
 <topic>Forest management</topic>
 <topic>Internal controls</topic>
 <topic>National forests</topic>
 <topic>National Fire Plan</topic>
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