Blame
for wildfires gets pinned on ‘environmental extremists’
Montana’s
lawmakers slight climate change as a main driver for the state’s
blazes.
High Country News,
25 August, 2017
Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue traveled to Zinke’s home state of Montana on Thursday to join members of Montana’s Republican delegation for an on-site briefing on a large wildfire south of Missoula, which the group blamed not chiefly on drought and climate change, but on mismanagement resulting from lawsuits by “environmental extremists.”
The
Lolo Peak Fire was ignited by lightning in mid-July and has since
burned more than 34,000
acres,
prompting hundreds of evacuations and destroying two homes and
several outbuildings. One
firefighter was killed working
the fire on Aug. 2 when he was struck by a falling tree. As of
Thursday, the blaze was 14 percent contained.
By
Aug. 25, the Rice Ridge fire north of the town of Seeley Lake had
grown to nearly 18,100 acres and was just 16 percent contained.
At
a briefing at
the Lolo Peak Incident Command in Missoula, Zinke and the others
spoke of the importance of getting ahead of wildfires by better
managing forests, as well as the threat they say certain
environmentalists pose to that effort. “Montanans are saying, ‘We
are tired of breathing the smoke. We are tired of seeing these
catastrophic wildfires,’” said Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont. “Either
we are going to better manage our forests, or the forests are going
to manage us.”
Rep.
Greg Gianforte, R-Mont., said forest fires in Montana have become all
too common and that better management will result in healthier
forest, more wildlife and hunting, and less frequent and intense
fires. “Everyone benefits,” he said. “Conservation benefits and
our communities benefit. We all benefit. And yet we’re tied up in
knots through extensive and ridiculous permitting processes, and
frivolous lawsuits from environmental extremists.”
Daines
echoed that sentiment, saying that the Libby Loggers — the mascot
of the school in Libby, Montana — could be renamed the “Libby
Lawyers,” apparently implying that the town’s timber mills have
been replaced by lawyers working for “extreme environment groups”
fighting to stall and stop efforts to clear dead and dying timber.
In
June 2015, when still a Montana congressman, Zinke introduced
a bill to
limit what he described as “predatory
lawsuits funded
by out-of-state special-interest groups” against timber projects on
U.S. Forest Service land. The bill would have required a
plaintiff to post
cash bonds to
cover the Forest Service’s defense costs, with the plaintiff
getting the money back only if it proved victorious.
Removing
dead trees and thinning forests are common tools for helping to
prevent wildfires. But scientists have
shown climate
change is driving up temperatures and triggering longer wildfire
seasons in western states. Last year, researchers from Columbia
University and the University of Idaho found that climate change has
been fueling
wildfires in the western United States for
decades.
As
HuffPost previously
reported,
President Donald Trump’s proposed 2018 budget calls for
a $300 million reduction to
the U.S. Forest Service’s wildfire fighting programs, another $50
million in cuts to its wildfire prevention efforts and a 23 percent
reduction in funding for volunteer fire departments.
Montana
climatologist Kelsey Jencso told
Montana Public Radio last
week that a long period of observation is needed to tell if Montana’s
current wildfire season is the result of climate change, but that the
smoke currently blanketing the state “is certainly what the future
[of climate change] may look like.”
Asked
Thursday if climate change has anything to do with the intensity of
fires in recent years, Perdue said there have also been major fires
in the eastern part of the country at certain periods of time. “There
obviously is climate change, temperature change, weather change. And
we have to deal, we have to adapt to it. And we have to manage the
forest,” he said.
Perdue
added that steps should be taken to minimize the threat regardless of
the cause. “We can’t affect what the weather is or anything else,
but we can affect how we manage these forests to reduce the impact of
forest fires.”
In
an apparent attempt to dismiss the role of climate change, Daines
pointed to the Great Fire of 1910, which “burned
three million acres (in
Montana and Idaho) and killed enough timber to fill a freight train
2,400 miles long,” according to the Department of Agriculture.
“The
climate has always been changing, we go through warmer cycles, cooler
cycles, droughts, excessive precipitation,” Daines said. “We are
in a warm cycle right now, we are in drought conditions here in
Montana. And consequently, we’re having a severe fire season.”
Trump
and several members of his Cabinet have dismissed the threat of
climate change and the role humans are playing in driving up global
temperatures. And the administration has worked expeditiously
to derail
America’s actions to combat climate change and
roll back environmental regulations.
Environmental
Protection Agency head Scott
Pruitt and
Energy Secretary Rick Perry have denied the
role carbon
dioxide emissions are playing in driving climate change. Zinke has
said glaciers in Montana’s Glacier National Park started melting
“right
after the end of the Ice Age”
and that it has “been a consistent melt.” He also dismissed the
notion that government scientists can predict with certainty how much
warming will occur by 2100 under a business-as-usual scenario.
Listen
to the full press briefing here,
recorded by Newstalk KGVO.
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