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U.S. forest chief: ‘Tough choices’ ahead in budget

Money for wildfire prevention subject of Congress hearing

By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN, Associated Press
Published: February 27, 2020, 8:01pm
2 Photos
FILE - This July 5, 2011, file photo, shows a grove of ponderosa pines charred by the Las Conchas fire near Cochiti Mesa, N.M. The U.S. Forest Service has been working with states and other partners to treat more acres every year in hopes of reducing the threat of catastrophic wildfire, but Forest Chief Vicki Christiansen acknowledged that a budget proposal for the next fiscal year reflects "tough choices and tradeoffs" that will mean no funding for some programs. Christiansen said during a congressional hearing Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2020, that while the budget request emphasizes the agency's most critical work, it marks a starting point for negotiations.
FILE - This July 5, 2011, file photo, shows a grove of ponderosa pines charred by the Las Conchas fire near Cochiti Mesa, N.M. The U.S. Forest Service has been working with states and other partners to treat more acres every year in hopes of reducing the threat of catastrophic wildfire, but Forest Chief Vicki Christiansen acknowledged that a budget proposal for the next fiscal year reflects "tough choices and tradeoffs" that will mean no funding for some programs. Christiansen said during a congressional hearing Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2020, that while the budget request emphasizes the agency's most critical work, it marks a starting point for negotiations. (AP Photo/Susan Montoya Bryan, File) Photo Gallery

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — The U.S. Forest Service has been working with states and other partners to treat more acres every year in hopes of reducing the threat of catastrophic wildfire, but Forest Chief Vicki Christiansen acknowledged that a budget proposal for the next fiscal year reflects “tough choices and trade-offs” that could mean no funding for some programs.

Christiansen said during a congressional hearing Tuesday that while the budget request emphasizes the agency’s most critical work, it marks a starting point for negotiations. She tried to assure lawmakers that the agency remains focused on addressing the wildfire threat and on improving forest conditions.

“We aim to build on our progress,” she said, adding that the agency is outpacing last year’s work to reduce hazard fuels.

But some lawmakers voiced concerns about the zeroing out of funding for a large-scale forest restoration program that has helped to finance prescribed fire and thinning projects in more than a dozen states over the last decade. The work has spanned from the Rockies and the more arid mountain ranges of New Mexico and Arizona to longleaf pine forests in Mississippi.

U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., was among those to win reauthorization for the collaborative forest landscape restoration program in 2018. He has vowed that lawmakers will work to get as much funding restored as possible.

“We have a huge backlog to get to but the more we’re able to invest in this, not only is it great for communities but it creates a forest that does a better job of sustaining its own health,” he said in an interview. “There are a lot of members on both sides of the aisle who understand the value of landscape-scale restoration.”

Across the West, hotter and drier conditions have combined to make wildfires more intense and destructive as they burn through overgrown forests. California has been among the hardest hit, with its deadliest fire season recorded in 2018 followed by forced power outages in 2019 that utility executives said were necessary to prevent more fires.

It’s been a slow start to the year, but experts say they’re closely watching those pockets of the region that received less than adequate winter precipitation.

Nevada Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto said there’s no longer such a thing as fire season as crews in her state are seeing a blaze every month.

Christiansen said given the budget constrains, the Forest Service is focusing on the right prescriptions in the right areas to get the most benefits.

That’s been the case with the Jemez Mountains. Anne Bradley, the forest program director with The Nature Conservancy in New Mexico, said land managers, residents and environmentalists agreed the area was a tinder box and risk was high so they designed the restoration project to work with the specific characteristics of the landscape.

They took into account the steep slopes and prevailing winds that come out of the southwest each spring.

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