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Yakima Times

Friday, November 1, 2024

House passes Fix Our Forests Act for improved wildfire management

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U.S. Rep. Dan Newhouse Working for Central Washington | Official U.S. House headshot

U.S. Rep. Dan Newhouse Working for Central Washington | Official U.S. House headshot

Rep. Dan Newhouse (WA-04) has expressed his approval following the passage of the Fix Our Forests Act by the United States House of Representatives.

“As Chairman of the Congressional Western Caucus and a lifelong resident of Central Washington where we are affected by these disasters, wildfire risk remains top of mind as states across the West are ravaged by wildfires year after year,” said Rep. Newhouse.

“In Washington state alone, wildfires have destroyed hundreds of thousands of acres in recent years, and there is no sign of it slowing down. We need proactive forest management now, and the Fix Our Forests Act will help achieve this goal.”

“This bipartisan effort will enable desperately needed active forest management by expediting permitting reviews and limiting senseless lawsuits from extreme environmentalists.”

The legislation aims to restore forest health, increase resiliency to catastrophic wildfires, and protect communities. It seeks to expedite environmental analyses, reduce frivolous lawsuits, and increase the pace and scale of forest restoration projects.

Sponsored by House Committee on Natural Resources Chairman Bruce Westerman (R-AR) and Congressman Scott Peters (D-CA), the bill provides agencies with critical tools to implement vital forest management projects immediately.

The key components of the legislation include:

- Simplifying and expediting environmental reviews to reduce costs and planning times for critical forest management projects while maintaining rigorous environmental standards.

- Utilizing state-of-the-art science to prioritize the treatment of forests at the highest risk of wildfire.

- Promoting federal, state, tribal, and local collaboration by creating a new Fireshed Center and codifying the Shared Stewardship initiative.

- Making communities more resilient to wildfire by coordinating existing grant programs and incentivizing new research.

- Revitalizing rural economies by strengthening tools such as Good Neighbor Authority and Stewardship Contracting.

- Hardening utility rights-of-way against wildfire by encouraging more active management and removal of dangerous hazard trees.

Full bill text can be found here.

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