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| Release No. FS-0514 |
Contact: |
Dan Jiron, (202) 205-0896 |
FOREST SERVICE CHIEF UPHOLDS MANAGEMENT
PLAN FOR SIERRA NEVADA FORESTS WITH MINOR CHANGES
WASHINGTON, Nov. 18, 2004 – U.S. Department
of Agriculture Forest Service Chief Dale Bosworth today affirmed
the January 2004 Sierra Nevada Forest Plan Amendment (SNFPA), a
land management plan affecting 11.5 million acres in the Sierra
Nevada mountain range and Modoc Plateau in California and parts
of Nevada, which is designed to reduce fire danger, improve wildlife
habitat and protect communities.
“After reviewing the appeals, I have found that the Pacific
Southwest region complied with all applicable laws, regulations
and policies in amending the 2001 plan,” said Bosworth. “Jack
Blackwell and regional employees should be commended for all of
their hard work.”
In making the administrative appeal decision, Bosworth looked
at the plan’s supplemental environmental impact statement
(EIS) and record of decision (ROD) as well as the administrative
record. Specifically, the chief instructed Forest Service Pacific
Southwest Regional Forester Jack
Blackwell to make two changes to the 2004 SNFPA. First, the region
must reinstate the standard for plant surveys. Second, the region
must further develop the plan’s evaluation and adjustment
requirements in the adaptive management strategy. The region will
have six months to respond to the instructions.
The Forest Service’s Washington office reviewed more than
6,200 appeals to the amendment. There were 27 unique letters; the
remainder nearly identical. The appeals covered a wide range of
natural resource issues, including fire and fuels, forest management,
riparian and meadow ecosystems, terrestrial wildlife and aquatic
species, range management, road management and social and economic
considerations. In addition, the Forest Service’s Pacific
Southwest Research Station in Albany, Calif., conducted a review
of the science used in the supplemental EIS and found that it was
consistent with current science.
Appeal decisions rendered by the chief are subject to discretionary
review by the secretary of agriculture. However, since Secretary
Ann M. Veneman recused herself from this issue, Agriculture Under
Secretary for Natural Resources and Environment Mark Rey will have
15 days to decide whether or not to conduct a discretionary review
of Bosworth’s decision.
The 2004 SNFPA will remain in effect throughout this time.
The chief previously affirmed the plan in November 2001 with direction
for Blackwell to conduct a management review. Bosworth's appeal
decision for the 2001 SNFPA recommended reevaluating the SNFPA decision
in light of recent and repeated severe fire seasons and a need to
aggressively manage excessive hazardous fuels in the forests. That
led the region to conduct a year-long review of the decision with
federal, state and local agencies, scientists and other stakeholders.
A supplemental EIS was prepared and in January 2004, Blackwell signed
the ROD to amend the 2001 SNFPA.
The 2004 SNFPA amends 11 land and resource management plans: Humboldt-Toiyabe,
Modoc, Lassen, Plumas, Tahoe, Eldorado, Stanislaus, Sierra, Sequoia
and Inyo national forests, and the Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit.
For a copy of the chief’s administrative appeal decision,
visit http://www.fs.fed.us/emc/applit/nhappdec.htm;
for more information on the
2004 SNFPA, visit http://www.fs.fed.us/r5/snfpa/.
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