Obstructionist enviro lawsuits blamed for severe Montana wildfires

“It is the lawyers who are funding for these extreme environmental groups, who are having a tremendous impact, (a) devastating impact on allowing us to move forward here on some common-sense timber projects…”

Dillon Tabish

Flathead Beacon

In the midst of Montana’s severe fire season, a heated debated has reignited over forest management, with a group of Montana Republican lawmakers arguing that lawsuits halting logging projects are elevating wildfire dangers, while critics counter that GOP lawmakers are at fault for not recognizing climate change and failing to properly fund federal agencies.

U.S. Sen. Steve Daines, Rep. Greg Gianforte and Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke recently toured the Lolo Peak Fire, which has burned nearly 40,000 acres, forced numerous evacuations in the Lolo and Florence areas and cost more than $34 million.

“Montanans are saying we are tired of breathing the smoke,” Daines said on the tour, according to Montana Public Radio. “We are tired of seeing these catastrophic wildfires. And either we are going to better manage our forests, or the forests are going to manage us.” 

Daines blames “extreme environmental groups” that have sued the U.S. Forest Service for halting logging and thinning projects that he says could reduce large amounts of fuel and help prevent wildfires.

“It is the lawyers who are funding for these extreme environmental groups, who are having a tremendous impact, (a) devastating impact on allowing us to move forward here on some common-sense timber projects,” Daines said.

The comments made by Daines, and similar ones made by Gianforte and Zinke, sparked backlash from others who say the GOP-led Congress has neglected to properly fund the U.S. Forest Service for fire prevention and forest management. Rising firefighting expenditures are eating up the Forest Service’s budget at an unsustainable pace — fire suppression consumed 52 percent of the agency’s budget in 2015, a number expected to increase to 67 percent in 2025. The swelling costs of wildfires have directly led to a 68 percent reduction in facility maintenance, a 15 percent cut to recreation and an 18 percent cut to wildlife and fish habitat management, according to the agency.

There appears to be widespread agreement that the fire-funding conundrum is serious and in immediate need of a solution, but some members of Congress have been accused of playing politics by making demands that would limit public involvement in the management of national forests to streamline timber harvests.

Critics also say the GOP, including Montana’s delegation, is failing to recognize the impacts of climate change, an issue that has elicited wavering responses and inaction among a number of Republicans.

Daines reaffirmed his stance this week following the latest lawsuit challenging a logging project in Northwest Montana.

A collective of conservation groups is challenging a proposed logging project along the east shore of Lindbergh Lake at the headwaters of the Swan River, saying the project would harm sensitive wildlife and damage habitat while also bucking environmental regulations. Four groups — Friends of the Wild Swan, Swan View Coalition, Native Ecosystems Council, and the Alliance for the Wild Rockies — filed suit in federal district court in Missoula on Aug. 31, challenging the Beaver Creek Timber Sale in the Swan Lake Ranger District of the Flathead National Forest.

Read the full article here


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  1. I think most or all these environmentalist groups and the Federal agencies are enemies of the Several States, and if they aren’t they might as well be as everything they do has been an action to destroy the Forest, the loggers, the ranchers and the States, in this instance Montana. These environmentalist will destroy everything and the judges that allow there nonsense are just as much to blame. The best solution i can think of is for the States to stand up and kick the Feds out, the States can do a far better job of managing there forests if we have some good and sensible people people in the right positions. These environmentalist are a huge problem and they must be stopped, about all they can do is cause harm using some obscure reason that really will never matter. I am against clear cutting but for responsible logging and cattle grazing, both of which lower the fire danger and damage.

  2. A good article. I live next to a national forest and am surrounded by BLM land. I can tell you that we, the people that live in these areas, or the states where the fires occur are the most affected by these fires. We are the ones whose homes are threatened. We are the ones that cannot see a half a mile because of the smoke and we live with the smell of the smoke during the fire and months afterwards. We are the ones that pay extra for fire insurance, or heaven forbid, the replacement of our homes and property. Why do the people and their representatives in Washington, D.C., Connecticut, Alabama, Rode Island, and other states with little “government lands” have equal, or more (based on population) say over these topics than those of us that live here? The issues of forest management belong in the states where the forest are. Wyoming, I am sorry for your loss but stand up for yourselves and get your forest management turned over to the states. I have empathy for your loss, and I know what you are going through. But guess what? I bet you $500 I don’t care as much about your fires as you do! And I bet the reverse is true when we have a fire in New Mexico. Someones tragedy does not have the same effect as it has when it is personal. All people in the western states need to realize this.

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