Contributors
M. David Stirling- Contributor
Mr. Stirling
served in the California Assembly between 1976 and 1982,
and as chief deputy attorney general from 1991 to 1998. He
is vice president of Pacific
Legal Foundation, a public interest
legal organization.
[go to Stirling index]
It's
Time To Snuff Out The 'Let It Burn' Idea
Anti-people environmentalism fuels the flames...
[M. David Stirling] 11/11/03
It has been
said that "timing is everything." In
the world of ideas, however, that’s clearly an overstatement,
as an idea’s timing is rarely as important as its content.
On October
13th just past, an eco-activist group called the Forest Service
Employees for Environmental Ethics filed a federal
suit in Missoula, Montana, against the United States Forest
Service, seeking to stop Forest Service firefighters’ use
of aerially-applied chemical fire retardants and heavy equipment
such as bulldozers to create firebreaks in the national forests.
A few days later the most devastating fires in California
history erupted.
Yet, this
bad timing doesn’t begin
to compare with the flawed thinking of the so-called "environmental
ethicists" who
filed the suit. Based on the Endangered Species Act (ESA),
these self-appointed fire policy-makers contend that the
use of chemical retardants and bulldozers are detrimental
to protected
wildlife species. They argue that the ESA requires a federal
court to stop all such suppression efforts.
The claim
that the Forest Service’s spraying of fire
retardants and use of bulldozers to create fire breaks
are "negatives" for
protected species is not only an extreme position, it
defies common sense and years of firefighting experience.
Speaking
for the U.S. Forest Service Retirees, Richard Pfilf,
a 30-year Forester, Ranger, and Forest Supervisor, said: "We
believe that an injunction in favor of the plaintiffs
will result in
serious and increasing loss of life to firefighters and
citizens, an increase in damage to property, and a greatly
increased
cost of fighting fires. Such an injunction will cause
great harm to the fabric of affected communities, due
to increased
destruction of community infrastructure and the displacement
of its citizens."
The fact
that some sediment or fire retardant might occasionally get
into streams hardly
justifies snuffing out proven
fire-extinguishing techniques, especially when out-of-control
fires ultimately
threaten not only lives and property, but decimate
countless species and habitat, and degrade inestimable watershed
and forest streams – the very natural treasures
that environmental groups profess a desire to protect.
Yet, this
and most other environmental organizations firmly embrace a "nature
first, people last" philosophy,
which, in the case of forests, means taking no human
steps to remove the kindling-like accumulation of dead
and dying
trees, and when a fire begins, allowing it to burn
naturally without human intervention. Because environmentalists
within the Forest Service share the Clinton administration’s "let
it burn" forest management practice, just last
year seven million acres of forests were destroyed,
15 states
experienced
heavily-polluted air and water, and 23 firefighters
died as people’s homes burned. Maybe this "natural" approach
to forest fires is just too sophisticated a proposition
for regular people to understand, but it seems obvious
that when
a forest catches fire, species will die and so may
people.
What makes
this issue all the more frustrating is that the government
has already addressed potential
risks
of fire
retardant chemicals on ESA-protected species. Under
the Forest Service’s
own regulations, airplane and helicopter pilots currently
shut off their sprayers within 300 feet of streams
or rivers.
These "let
it burn" activists
know no limits. They even want firefighters to
obtain an "advance" permit
for aerial spraying and bulldozing. Imagine the
nightmare for fire crews fighting multiple fires coordinating
permit applications
to the Environmental Protection Agency for aerial
spraying and the Army Corps of Engineers for bulldozing.
If it weren’t
so serious, it would be laughable.
In the just-contained
Southern California fires, 22 lives, 3,577 homes,
and nearly 745,000 public
and private
forest
acres were lost. If this ESA-based lawsuit had
tied the hands of
the 15, 630 valiant firefighters, the devastation
would have been unimaginable.
The anti-people
Endangered Species Act is responsible for damaging thousands
of lives and livelihoods
since its enactment
in 1973.
Until Congress has the political will to make
the ESA people-friendly, all lawsuits based
on it must
be taken
seriously.
copyright
2003 Pacific Legal Foundation
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