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OPINION

Misguided Environmentalism Root Cause of Calif. Wildfires

Misguided Environmentalism Root Cause of Calif. Wildfires

A "Prevent Wildfires" billboard as seen near Napa, California on Sept. 17, 2017. (Zhukovsky/Dreamstime)

James Hirsen By Monday, 11 December 2017 11:40 AM EST Current | Bio | Archive

California is in the midst of battling some of the worst wildfires in its history. These fires have resulted in the wholesale decimation of forests, extensive destruction of property, and massive disruption of people’s lives.

Gov. Jerry Brown recently characterized the dire situation by stating that these types of fires "could happen every year or every few years” and that Californians are simply "facing a new reality."

A new reality? Hardly comforting words from the Golden State’s chronic political presence. Certainly the "new reality" warrants a deeper investigation into what factors have been contributing to the escalation and what steps could be taken to mitigate and/or prevent future catastrophes.

The fact of the matter is there has been a decided increase in unusually devastating fires over the last few decades. The wildfires that are occurring today are twice as large as they were 40 years ago. The fires themselves are much bigger, significantly more powerful, and consequently more dangerous.

The left claims that the mega fires are happening as a result of global warming. However, according to a recent Reason Foundation study, changes in climate cannot adequately account for the "pattern of fires observed over the past century."

The United States Forest Service (USFS) is the agency responsible for managing the nation’s wilderness areas. Those areas constitute almost two-thirds of U.S. forests. The USFS once had a great deal of success in mitigating the risk of major fires in the early part of the last century. Over the past few decades, though, forest management policy has become overly-centralized and increasingly bureaucratic, while simultaneously presenting a growing detriment to public safety.

During the 1970s, after legislation was passed claiming to protect the ecosystem, the USFS altered its policies in a manner that would have extremely serious consequences for those parts of the country concerned over wildfire hazards, particularly the Western part of the nation.

Decades of politicians employing central planning while pandering to environmental groups have resulted in overgrowth in the nation’s forests. Methods which previously worked to lower fire danger were abandoned, and the USFS spent appreciably more money for significantly fewer results, as it used its resources for questionable environmental practices.

Excess fuel in the form of overly dense wilderness areas became a mega fire hazard creating a danger to the public and to regional economies. Additionally, severe limitations on the harvesting of timber on federal land created dangerous conditions in forests leading directly to the massive fires of late. If the logging industry had been permitted to clear more wilderness areas, the fire threat would have been dramatically reduced.

The public needs to be alerted to the fact that when forests are too dense they become susceptible to the kind of explosive infernos which actually end up harming the ecosystem, killing wildlife and destroying habitats. Logging, controlled burns, and natural low-intensity wildfires not only assist in making mega fires less likely but contribute to the creation of healthier ecosystems as well.

Removing the wood fuels in naturally dry forests helps to greatly reduce the probability of high intensity fires while assisting the environment. It's imperative that the excess growth caused by decades of bad policy be removed. Dry forests, which were historically cleared by frequent, low-intensity fires, may need the careful implementation of controlled burns to protect the life and property of adjacent communities.

Republican leaders in Congress, who have been working along with the Trump administration, are attempting to reform the legal landscape plaguing America’s national forests. Congressional members are seeking to increase logging in order to thin out the overly dense and dangerous forest conditions that now exist.

Last month, the U.S. House passed legislation called the Resilient Federal Forests Act of 2017 in order to allow salvage logging and other forms of tree cutting on federal properties.

U.S. House Speaker Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., indicated that the bill was necessary to protect the nation’s federal forests "from the kind of devastation that California experienced."

The bill would remove draconian environmental restrictions dramatically curtailing timber harvests on federal lands. The legislation currently awaits action in the U.S. Senate.

James Hirsen, J.D., M.A., in media psychology, is a New York Times best-selling author, media analyst, and law professor. Visit Newsmax TV Hollywood. Read more reports from James Hirsen — Click Here Now.

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JamesHirsen
The public needs to be alerted to the fact that when forests are too dense they become susceptible to the kind of explosive infernos which actually end up harming the ecosystem, killing wildlife and destroying habitats.
congress, house, usfs
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2017-40-11
Monday, 11 December 2017 11:40 AM
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