Adventures in Partnerships
Forest Service Chief Dale Bosworth
Joint Ventures: Partners in Stewardship Conference
Los Angeles, CA—November 18, 2003
Thank you, Fran—and thanks to all of you who have come here this
week to explore how we can best work together as partners to care for
our nation’s public lands and natural resources.
Those of us who work in land management agencies and related fields often
feel like we’ve got some of the greatest jobs in the world. We spend
our lives taking care of the great legacy of public lands that are the
birthright of all Americans. In doing so, we spend a lot of time in the
company of people who share our commitment to conservation and our passion
for being outdoors. Most of us fall in love with the land long before
we go into the business of caring for the land. I may be Chief of the
Forest Service today, but not so long ago I was just a lucky kid whose
dad happened to be a district ranger.
As great as our jobs are sometimes, they are not without conflict. There
will always be controversy surrounding public land management, heritage
preservation, and natural resource conservation. It’s frustrating
sometimes, but we’ve got to remind ourselves that it’s democracy
in action. People in this country care about their natural resources and
they voice their concerns, sometimes pretty strongly. That’s not
going to change. We will never just get it fixed and then move on to something
else. As old issues fade away, new ones arise because ecosystems are dynamic
living systems.
For example, the problem of wildland fire gets a lot of attention in
the media, so the public hears the debate on the subject, especially during
fire season. Other equally important threats to forest health—such
as invasive species, loss of open space, and unmanaged recreation—rarely
get the same amount of attention. That’s sometimes a problem when
we ask Congress for money to deal with these threats or we ask people
to change their behavior to protect fragile ecosystems. It helps when
we all come together to communicate a clear message and then work together
in partnership to create a better future for our public lands, our communities,
and our planet.
Honest public debate also helps us work with people upfront instead of
doing our own thing and engaging people later. Many of you know this as
“collaboration,” but it is really about working together.
In today’s world, people expect to be informed and involved in decisions
that affect them. They also expect us to work effectively with each other
to carry out our respective agency missions. The Healthy Forests Initiative
and the stewardship contracting authority are two opportunities the Forest
Service has to integrate partnership activities into our daily work. We
will look for other opportunities. There are sure to be some bumps along
the way; if we are respectful of each other and the public we serve, the
bumps may slow us down, but they will not prevent us from reaching our
long-term goals of strong communities and ecosystem health.
During this conference, you will hear many case studies about the power
of the American landscape to inspire people to work together for the benefit
of protected areas and other special places. This power of place helps
people maintain local parks and green space in urban areas like the Los
Angeles Basin. It helps us care for national icons like Yellowstone, and
it helps people stay on the land in rural areas when they might be better
off materially in some big city.
Regardless of whom we work for and where we come from, working in partnership
comes down to taking care of the land and taking care of communities.
To emphasize this point, I want to take a minute to talk about what is
happening during this fire season.
In recent weeks here in southern California, when wildfires were raging
out of control, we saw some of the best examples of selfless service and
partnership from all of the firefighting agencies, emergency services,
and their community partners. There were stories in the media of firefighters
who stayed on the line and support personnel who completed their assignments,
giving everything they could to protect lives and property, even though
their own homes were lost and their families were displaced. Those of
us familiar with firefighting see this over and over again—that
American tradition of pulling together in the face of great danger or
tragedy. It seems to bring out the best of us as a people. In spite of
our individual or collective losses, we feel a need to serve our neighbors,
take care of each other, and give something back to our communities.
I salute all the men and women who responded to the emergency here. You
deserve the honor of your colleagues and the gratitude of those you have
served.
There is still some fire season left in this part of the country; I’m
confident we will continue to work through it together. As the fires die
down, the restoration work begins. The emergency rehabilitation teams
arrived before the fires were completely out to care for the land and
put burned ecosystems on the road to recovery. These teams rarely get
the same publicity as the firefighters, but their jobs are just as vital,
and they are always looking for volunteers.
I want to close by giving you my commitment to the Partnership Pledge.
I will work with all of the agency heads to improve the way we share information
and coordinate programs. We must challenge ourselves to find solutions
for the good of the land and provide a seamless system of service to the
users of public lands. This conference is more than a chance to sign a
pledge, it’s an opportunity to move toward those goals.
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