| S 1453 IS
108th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. 1453
To expedite procedures
for hazardous fuels reduction activities and restoration in wildland fire
prone national forests and for other purposes.
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED
STATES
July 24 (legislative day, JULY
21), 2003
Mr. LEAHY (for himself and Mrs.
BOXER) introduced the following bill; which was read twice and referred
to the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry
A BILL
To expedite procedures
for hazardous fuels reduction activities and restoration in wildland fire
prone national forests and for other purposes.
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
(a) SHORT TITLE- This Act
may be cited as the `Forestry and Community Assistance Act of 2003'.
(b) TABLE OF CONTENTS- The
table of contents for this Act is as follows:
Sec. 1. Short title; table
of contents.
TITLE I--HAZARDOUS FUEL REDUCTION
Sec. 102. Hazardous fuels
reduction projects authorized.
Sec. 103. Collaboration
and public input process.
Sec. 104. Expedited planning
and implementation process.
Sec. 105. Ongoing projects
and existing authorities.
Sec. 106. Preference to
communities with fire prevention ordinances.
Sec. 107. Firefighter safety
and training.
Sec. 108. Prohibition on
the competitive sourcing initiative.
Sec. 109. Sunset provision.
Sec. 110. Authorization
of appropriations.
TITLE II--FOREST HEALTH
Sec. 202. Involvement by
other agencies and organizations.
Sec. 203. Authorization
of appropriations.
TITLE III--WATERSHED FORESTRY
ASSISTANCE
Sec. 301. Findings and purpose.
Sec. 302. Establishment
of watershed forestry assistance program.
Sec. 303. Watershed forestry
assistance program.
Sec. 304. Authorization
of appropriations.
Sec. 305. Forest and rangeland
demonstration projects at the watershed scale.
TITLE IV--HEALTHY FORESTS RESERVE
PROGRAM
Sec. 401. Establishment
of healthy forests reserve program.
Sec. 402. Eligibility and
enrollment of lands in program.
Sec. 403. Restoration plans.
Sec. 404. Involvement by
other agencies and organizations.
Sec. 405. Financial assistance.
Sec. 406. Technical assistance.
Sec. 407. Authorization
of appropriations.
TITLE V--RURAL FOREST COMMUNITY
INITIATIVE PROGRAM
Sec. 502. Rural community
forestry enterprise program.
Sec. 503. Authorization
of appropriations.
SEC. 2. PURPOSES.
(a) To allow for the implementation
of hazardous fuels reduction projects with priority given to lands that
are located within one-half mile of at-risk communities.
(b) To address long-term
forest health issues as it relates to insect and disease infestations.
(c) To establish a watershed
forestry assistance program that would provide States, through State foresters,
technical, financial, and related assistance to expand forest stewardship
capacities and activities and prevent water quality degradation, and address
watershed issues, on non-Federal forest land.
(d) To establish the healthy
forests reserve program for the purpose of conserving, restoring, and enhancing
forest ecosystems to promote the recovery of threatened and endangered
species as well as improve biodiversity and enhance carbon sequestration.
(e) To assist in the economic
revitalization of the rural forest resource dependent communities through
incentives to promote investment in private enterprise, including small
forest products businesses and community development, by the Department
of Agriculture, the Department of the Interior, the Small Business Administration,
and land grant colleges.
TITLE I--HAZARDOUS FUELS REDUCTION
ON FEDERAL LANDS
SEC. 101. DEFINITIONS.
(a) LAND TYPE AND FIRE REGIME
DEFINITIONS FROM FOREST SERVICE ROCKY MOUNTAIN RESEARCH STATION- In this
Act:
(1) CONDITION CLASS 3- The
term `condition class 3' refers to land on which--
(A) fire regimes have been
significantly altered from their historical fire return intervals;
(B) there exists a high
risk of losing key ecosystem components; and
(C) has missed several fire
cycles.
(2) FIRE REGIME I- The term
`fire regime I' refers to lands--
(A) on which historically
there are low severity fires with a frequency of 0-35 years; and
(B) are located primarily
in low elevation forests of pine, oak, and pinyon-juniper.
(3) FIRE REGIME II- The
term `fire regime II' refers to lands--
(A) on which historically
there are stand replacement severity fires with a frequency of 0-35 years;
and
(B) are located primarily
in low- to mid-elevation forests, rangelands, grasslands, or shrublands.
(4) FIRE REGIME III- The
term `fire regime III' refers to lands--
(A) on which historically
there are mixed severity fires with a frequency of 35-100 years; and
(B) are located primarily
in forests of dry mixed conifer and dry Douglas Fir.
(b) OTHER DEFINITIONS- In
this Act--
(1) ADMINISTRATIVE UNIT-
The term `administrative unit', with respect to Federal lands, means a
unit of the National Forest System or a land management district of the
Bureau of Land Management.
(2) AT-RISK COMMUNITY- The
term `at-risk community' means a geographic area designated by the Secretary
concerned as any area--
(A) defined as an interface
community on page 753 of volume 66 of the Federal Register, as published
on January 4, 2001, or consisting of a collection of homes and other structures
with basic infrastructure and services, such as utilities, collectively
maintained transportation routes, and emergency services;
(B) on which conditions
are conducive to large-scale fire disturbance events; and
(C) for which a significant
risk exists of a resulting spread of the fire disturbance event, after
ignition, which would threaten human life and property.
(3) BEST VALUE CONTRACTING-
The term `best value contracting' means the contracting process described
in section 15.101 of title 48, Code of Federal Regulations, which allows
the inclusion of non-cost factors in the contract process.
(4) COMPREHENSIVE STRATEGY-
The term `Comprehensive Strategy' means the Comprehensive Strategy for
a Collaborative Approach for Reducing Wildland Fire Risks to Communities
and the Environment, dated May 2002, which was developed pursuant to the
conference report to accompany the Department of the Interior and Related
Agencies Appropriations Act, 2001 (H. Rept. 106-646).
(5) FEDERAL LANDS- Except
as provided in section 101(c), the term `Federal lands' means--
(A) National Forest System
lands; and
(B) public lands administered
by the Secretary of the Interior acting through the Bureau of Land Management.
(6) GOODS FOR SERVICE CONTRACTING-
The term `goods for service contracting' means the contracting process
described in section 347 of the Department of the Interior and Related
Agencies Appropriations Act, 1999 (as contained in section 101(e) of division
A of Public Law 105-277; 16 U.S.C. 2104 note).
(7) HAZARDOUS FUELS REDUCTION
PROJECT- The term `hazardous fuels reduction project' means a project--
(A) undertaken for the purpose
of reducing the amount of hazardous fuels resulting from alteration of
a natural fire regime as a result of fire suppression or other activities;
and
(B) accomplished through
the use of prescribed burning or mechanical treatment, or combination thereof.
(8) INVENTORIED ROADLESS
AREA- The term `inventoried roadless area' means one of the areas identified
in the set of inventoried roadless areas maps contained in the Forest Service
Roadless Areas Conservation, Final Environmental Impact Statement, Volume
2, dated November 2000.
(9) LOCAL PREFERENCE CONTRACTING-
The term `local preference contracting' means the contracting process described
in section 333 of the Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations
Act, 2003 (division F of Public Law 108-7; 117 Stat. 277), that gives preference
to local businesses.
(10) MUNICIPAL WATER SUPPLY
SYSTEM- The term `municipal water supply system' means reservoirs, canals,
ditches, flumes, laterals, pipes,
pipelines, or other surface
facilities and systems constructed or installed for the impoundment, storage,
transportation, or distribution of drinking water for a community.
(11) SECRETARY CONCERNED-
The term `Secretary concerned' means--
(A) the Secretary of Agriculture
(or the designee of the Secretary) with respect to National Forest System
lands; and
(B) the Secretary of the
Interior (or the designee of the Secretary) with respect to public lands
administered by the Secretary through the Bureau of Land Management.
(c) EXCLUDED FEDERAL LANDS-
This Act, including the expedited process described in section 5, does
not apply to any Federal lands--
(1) included as a component
of the National Wilderness Preservation System;
(2) where logging is prohibited
or restricted by Act of Congress, presidential proclamation, or agency
determination;
(3) included in a wilderness
study area; or
(4) included in an inventoried
roadless area.
SEC. 102. HAZARDOUS FUELS REDUCTION
PROJECTS AUTHORIZED.
(a) CONSISTENCY WITH IMPLEMENTATION
PLAN- The processes authorized or required by this Act shall be consistent
with the implementation plan for the Comprehensive Strategy to reduce hazardous
fuels on Federal lands.
(b) PRIORITY HAZARDOUS FUELS
REDUCTION PROJECTS-
(1) PROJECTS ON CERTAIN
LANDS- In implementing hazardous fuels reduction projects under this Act,
the Secretary concerned shall give priority to projects on the following
Federal lands and other lands:
(A) Lands that are located
within one-half mile of an at-risk community where fire regime I, fire
regime II, or fire regime III exists and that are in condition class 3.
(B) Lands where fire regime
I, fire regime II, or fire regime III exists and that are in condition
class 3 and that are located in such proximity to a municipal water supply
system that a hazardous fuels reduction project should be carried out in
order to reduce the risk of harm to such system or the quality of a municipal
water supply resulting from an unusually severe wildfire.
(2) LIMITATION ON OTHER
PROJECTS PENDING COMPLETION OF PRIORITY PROJECTS- With respect to projects
on Federal lands in a State, the Secretary concerned shall complete all
projects on Federal lands identified in paragraph (1) in that State before
carrying out projects in areas outside of those Federal lands in that State.
(c) COMPLIANCE WITH LAND
MANAGEMENT PLANS- A hazardous fuels reduction project planned and conducted
under this Act must be consistent with the land and resource management
plan, land use plan, and other agency plans and regulations applicable
to the Federal lands covered by the project.
(d) PROJECT CONTRACTING-
To conduct a hazardous fuels reduction project under this Act, the Secretary
concerned shall use local preference contracting and best value contracting.
Payments under a contract entered into to implement a project under this
Act shall only be made on a fee-for-service basis. The Secretary concerned
shall not use goods-for-service contracting to implement a project under
this Act.
(e) OLD GROWTH AND OTHER
LIMITATIONS- In conducting a hazardous fuels reduction project under this
Act, the Secretary concerned--
(1) shall not construct
new permanent or temporary roads;
(2) shall fully maintain
the structure, function, processes and composition of structurally complex
older forests (old growth) according to each ecosystem type;
(3) shall focus on thinning
from below when using mechanical treatment;
(4) shall ensure that condition
classes are assessed and mapped at watershed and site-specific scales;
and
(5) shall apply the risk
assessment methodology and project selection process of the National Wildfire
Coordinating Group.
(f) ACREAGE LIMITATION-
Not more than 20,000,000 acres of Federal land may be treated using the
authorities provided by this Act.
(g) FUNDING PRIORITY- Of
funds expended for hazardous fuels reduction projects under this Act, at
least 85 percent shall be expended on projects on lands described in subparagraphs
(A) and (B) of section 102(b)(1). Upon forming cooperative agreements with
the appropriate parties, the Secretary concerned may use these funds for
treatment of non-Federal lands. Funds for treatment of non-Federal lands
shall be expended in the form of block grants to States and local communities
to plan and carry out hazardous fuels reduction projects and other wildland
fire protection efforts on non-Federal lands in accordance with the Comprehensive
Strategy.
(1) MONITORING REQUIRED-
The Secretary concerned shall establish a balanced multiparty monitoring
process in order for Congress to assess a representative sampling of the
hazardous fuels reduction projects implemented under this Act.
(2) REPORT REQUIRED- Not
later than one-year after the expiration of this Act, as provided in section
109, the Secretary concerned shall submit to Congress a report containing,
at a minimum, the following--
(A) an assessment of the
cumulative accomplishments or adverse impacts of the fuels reduction projects
conducted under this Act;
(B) a description of the
ecological effects of the projects conducted under this Act; and
(C) a description of the
economic viability, impacts, and costs of the projects conducted under
this Act.
SEC. 103. COLLABORATION AND
PUBLIC INPUT PROCESS.
(1) DEVELOPMENT- As a condition
on the selection of hazardous fuels reduction projects under section 102,
the Secretary of Agriculture and the Secretary of the Interior shall jointly
develop a collaborative process with interested parties, consistent with
the implementation plan for the Comprehensive Strategy. The collaborative
process developed by the Secretaries may be the process set forth in title
II of the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act of
2000 (Public Law 106-393; 16 U.S.C. 500 note).
(2) REQUIRED MAPS AND PUBLIC
MEETINGS- As part of the process developed under subsection 103(a), the
Secretaries shall--
(A) produce maps, at the
appropriate land-scape scale, designating the condition class of Federal
lands and other lands and including a fire risk assessment based on natural
and human-caused factors, including insect and disease mortality, associated
with those lands;
(B) make such maps readily
available for public inspection; and
(C) hold a public meeting
by administrative unit to discuss condition class and associated fire risk
factors and to identify priority areas for the hazardous fuels reduction
projects.
(1) QUARTERLY NOTICE- The
Secretary concerned shall provide quarterly notice of each hazardous fuels
reduction project proposed to be conducted using the expedited process
described in section 104. The quarterly notice shall be provided in the
Federal Register, in a local paper of record, and on an agency website.
The Secretary concerned may combine this quarterly notice with other quarterly
notices otherwise issued regarding Federal land management.
(2) CONTENT- The notice
required by section 103(b)(1) shall include, at a minimum, the following
information regarding each hazardous fuels reduction project contained
in the notice--
(A) specific identification
that the project is a hazardous fuels reduction project for which the expedited
process described in section 104 will be used, including a clear statement
whether the agency intends to use a categorical exclusion or to prepare
an environmental assessment or environmental impact statement;
(B) a description of the
project, including as much information on its geographic location as practicable;
(C) the approximate date
on which scoping for the project will begin; and
(D) information regarding
how interested members of the public can take part in the development of
the project pursuant to the expedited process described in section 104.
(c) PUBLIC MEETING- Following
publication of each quarterly notice under section 103(b), but before the
beginning of scoping for the project pursuant to the expedited process
described in section 104, the Secretary concerned shall conduct a public
meeting at an appropriate location in each administrative unit of the Federal
lands regarding those hazardous fuels reduction projects contained in the
quarterly notice that are proposed to be conducted in that administrative
unit. The Secretary concerned shall provide advance notice of the date
and time of the meeting in the quarterly notice described in section 103(b)(1).
(d) FINAL AGENCY ACTION-
The Secretary concerned shall provide notice in the local paper of record
and on an agency website of any final agency action regarding a hazardous
fuels reduction project for which the expedited process described in section
104 are used.
SEC. 104. EXPEDITED PLANNING
AND IMPLEMENTATION PROCESS.
(a) SCOPING- The Secretary
concerned shall conduct scoping with respect to each hazardous fuels reduction
project for which the expedited process established by this section is
to be used.
(b) CATEGORICAL EXCLUSIONS-
(1) PRESUMPTION NEAR COMMUNITIES-
If a hazardous fuels reduction project covered by section 102, for which
the collaborative and public input process required by section 103 is used,
covers Federal lands located within one-half mile of an at-risk community,
the project is deemed to be categorically excluded from further analysis
under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4331 et
seq.). The Secretary concerned need not make any findings as to whether
the project, either individually or cumulatively, has a significant effect
on the environment. However, within one-half mile of an at-risk community,
the Secretary concerned shall vary the treatments used to achieve heterogeneity
of forest conditions and to ensure forest health.
(2) EXTRAORDINARY CIRCUMSTANCES
EXCEPTION- Section 104(b)(1) shall not apply to Federal lands located within
one-half mile of an at-risk community if extraordinary circumstances exist
with respect to the lands.
(3) EXTRAORDINARY CIRCUMSTANCES-
In the case of a hazardous fuels reduction project for which a categorical
exclusion applies under section 104(b)(1), if extraordinary circumstances
exist with respect to the project, the Secretary concerned shall follow
agency procedures (as contained in CEQ regulation 1508.4, Forest Service
Handbook 1909.15, chapters 30-33, as of August 22, 2002, and Bureau of
Land Management Handbook H-1790-1, 516 DM 2.1-2.10) related to categorical
exclusions and extraordinary circumstances.
(4) APPEALS- Hazardous fuels
reduction projects implemented using a categorical exclusion under paragraph
(1) are not subject to appeal requirements imposed by section 322 of the
Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1993
(Public Law 102-381; 16 U.S.C. 1612 note), or the Department of the Interior
Office of Hearings and Appeals.
(c) ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENTS-
(1) IN GENERAL- With respect
to priority lands identified in section 102(b), if a categorical exclusion
does not apply under section 102(b) to a hazardous fuels reduction project
under section 104 for the lands, the Secretary concerned shall determine,
consistent with the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, whether
an environmental assessment will be sufficient to meet the requirements
for the project under such Act.
(2) CONTENT- An environmental
assessment prepared for a hazardous fuels reduction project under section
102 shall--
(A) be concise, if possible
not more than 10-15 pages;
(B) describe sufficient
information and analyses for determining whether to prepare an environmental
impact statement or a finding of no significant impact;
(C) state the need for the
proposed action;
(D) describe alternative
actions, as required by section 102(a)(2)(E) of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969;
(E) briefly describe the
environmental impacts of the proposed action and alternatives;
(F) list the agencies and
persons consulted, as required by section 1508.9 of title 40, Code of Federal
Regulations, with respect to National Forest System lands;
(G) reference supporting
data, inventories and other documents on which the Secretary concerned
relied to make the decision; and
(H) involve interested agencies
and the public in the preparation of the environmental assessment.
(3) AVAILABILITY OF DECISION
DOCUMENT- When the decision document is complete for a hazardous fuels
reduction project under section 102 for which an environmental assessment
or categorical exclusion memo is prepared, the Secretary concerned shall--
(A) provide notice of the
decision document in the Federal Register, the local paper of record, and
an agency website, including notice stating how the documentation listed
in section 104(c)(3)(B) will be available; and
(B) make the environmental
analysis document, administrative record, and decision document for the
project, pursuant to section 215.2 of title 36, Code of Federal Regulations,
readily available for public review.
(4) APPEALS- Notwithstanding
the appeal requirements imposed by section 322 of the Department of the
Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1993 (Public Law 102-381;
16 U.S.C. 1612 note), or the Department of the Interior Office of Hearings
and Appeals--
(A) persons must file any
administrative appeal of a project under this subsection within 30 days
after the date of issuance of the decision document for the project;
(B) the Secretary concerned
shall resolve any appeal not later than 20 days after the closing date
for filing an appeal; and
(C) the Secretary concerned
shall stay implementation of the project until the end of the 15-day period
beginning on the date on
which the Secretary concerned
resolves any administrative appeal that complies with the requirements
in section 104(d).
(d) ADDITIONAL LIMITATION
ON ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS- Notwithstanding section 322 of the Department
of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1993 (Public Law
102-381; 16 U.S.C. 1612 note), if a draft document prepared pursuant to
the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 for a hazardous fuels reduction
project covered by section 3 was available for public comment, the Secretary
of Agriculture may require that a person filing an administrative appeal
with respect to the project must have been involved in the public comment
process for the project by submitting written comments raising specific
issues with regard to the project.
(e) STATEMENT OF COMPLIANCE-
A categorical exclusion memo or environmental assessment decision document
prepared under this section shall include a short statement as to how the
hazardous fuels reduction project complies with the requirement of section
102(c).
SEC. 105. ONGOING PROJECTS AND
EXISTING AUTHORITIES.
Nothing in this Act shall
affect a hazardous fuels reduction project for which scoping has begun
before the date of the enactment of this Act or affect authorities otherwise
granted to the Secretary concerned under existing law.
SEC. 106. PREFERENCE TO COMMUNITIES
WITH FIRE PREVENTION ORDINANCES.
In determining the allocation
of funding for the Community and Private Land Fire Assistance program under
section 10A(b) of the Cooperative Forestry Assistance Act of 1978 (16 U.S.C.
2106c(b)), the Secretary of Agriculture shall prioritize funding to those
communities that have taken proactive steps through the enactment of ordinances
and other means to encourage property owners to reduce fire risk on private
property.
SEC. 107. FIREFIGHTER SAFETY
AND TRAINING.
The Secretaries shall track
funds expended for firefighter safety and training and include a line item
for such expenditures in all budget requests after October 1, 2003.
SEC. 108. PROHIBITION ON THE
COMPETITIVE SOURCING INITIATIVE.
The Competitive Sourcing
Initiative and the Office of Management and Budget Circular No. A-76, dated
May 29, 2003, shall not apply to the Forest Service.
SEC. 109. SUNSET.
The provisions of this section
shall expire at the end of the five-year period beginning on the date of
the enactment of this Act, except that a hazardous fuels reduction project
for which a decision notice, or memo in the case of a categorical exclusion,
has been issued before the end of such period may continue to be implemented
using the provisions of this Act.
SEC. 110. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
(a) NATIONAL FOREST SYSTEM
LANDS- For the purpose of planning and conducting hazardous fuels reduction
projects under this Act on National Forest System lands, there are authorized
to be appropriated to the Secretary of Agriculture $1,250,000,000 during
the five-fiscal year period beginning October 1, 2003.
(b) BLM LANDS- For the purpose
of planning and conducting hazardous fuels reduction projects under this
Act on Federal lands described in section 101(b)(2)(B), there are authorized
to be appropriated to the Secretary of the Interior $1,250,000,000 during
the five-fiscal year period beginning October 1, 2003.
(c) OTHER LANDS- For the
purpose of planning and conducting hazardous fuels reduction projects under
this Act on tribal lands, nonindustrial private lands, and State lands,
there are authorized to be appropriated to the Secretary of the Interior
$2,500,000,000 during the five-fiscal year period beginning October 1,
2003.
(d) UNOBLIGATED FUNDS- Subject
to section 109, amounts appropriated in one fiscal year and unobligated
before the end of that fiscal year shall remain available for use in subsequent
fiscal years.
TITLE II--FOREST HEALTH
SEC. 201. PURPOSE.
The Secretaries shall ensure
that a forest health program includes research on--
(1) determining how to best
use mechanical thinning and prescribed fire to modify fire behavior and
reduce fire risk, and to improve the scientific basis for design, implementation
and evaluation of hazardous fuels reduction treatments;
(2) gathering systematic
information on insect and associated disease types, including Emerald Ash
Borers, Gypsy Moth, Red Oak Borers, Asian Longhorned Beetles, Sudden Oak
Death Syndrome, and Bark Beetles, that have caused large-scale damage to
forest ecosystems, to establish early detection programs for insect and
disease infestation in order to prevent massive breakouts, to prevent introduction
and spread of new exotic insects, to determine the correlation between
insect and disease mortality and fire risk in specific forest types, and
to test silvicultural systems that use integrated management practices;
and
(3) developing new technologies
and markets for value-added products that use the byproducts of insect
and disease infestation or hazardous fuels reduction treatments.
SEC. 202. INVOLVEMENT OF OTHER
AGENCIES AND ORGANIZATIONS.
The Secretaries shall establish
and carry out the program in cooperation with scientists from universities
and forestry schools, State agencies, and private and industrial land owners.
The Secretaries shall designate universities and forestry schools, including
Land Grant Colleges and Universities and 1890 institutions, to carry out
the program.
SEC. 203. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
During fiscal years 2004
and 2008, the Secretaries jointly shall make available from funds otherwise
available in the Treasury, without further appropriation, $25,000,000 each
fiscal year to conduct a systematic information gathering program on certain
insect types and associated diseases that could cause large-scale damage
to forest ecosystems in order to complete research that can be applied
to forest management treatment and product utilization. The funds authorized
in this section shall also be made available to expand the joint Forest
Service--APHIS early detection network, to provide for control programs
for new exotic insects; and to expand cooperative programs that prevent
transport of exotics overseas.
TITLE III--WATERSHED FORESTRY
ASSISTANCE
SEC. 301. FINDINGS AND PURPOSE.
(a) FINDINGS- Congress finds
that--
(1) there has been a dramatic
shift in public attitudes and perceptions about forest management, particularly
in the understanding and practice of sustainable forest management;
(2) it is commonly recognized
that proper stewardship of forest land is essential to--
(A) sustain and restore
watershed health;
(B) produce clean water;
and
(C) maintain healthy aquatic
systems;
(3) forests are increasingly
important to the protection and sustainability of drinking water supplies
for more than 1/2 of the population of the United States;
(4) forest loss and fragmentation
in urbanizing areas are contributing to flooding, degradation of urban
stream habitat and water quality, and public health concerns;
(5) scientific evidence
and public awareness with respect to the manner in which forest management
can positively affect water quality and quantity, and the manner in which
trees, forests, and forestry practices (such as forest buffers) can serve
as solutions to water quality problems in rural and urban areas, are increasing;
(6) the application of forestry
best management practices developed at the State level has been found to
greatly facilitate the achievement of water quality goals;
(7) significant efforts
are underway to revisit and make improvements on needed forestry best management
practices;
(8) according to the report
of the Forest Service numbered FS*09660 and entitled `Water and the Forest
Service', forests are a requirement for maintenance of clean water because--
(A) approximately 66 percent
of the freshwater resources of the United States originate on forests;
and
(B) forests cover approximately
1/3 of the land area of the United States;
(9) because almost 500,000,000
acres, or approximately 2/3 , of the forest land of the United States is
owned by non-Federal entities, a significant burden is placed on private
forest landowners to provide or maintain the
clean water needed by the public
for drinking, swimming, fishing, and a number of other water uses;
(10) because the decisions
made by individual landowners and communities will affect the ability to
maintain the health of rural and urban watersheds in the future, there
is a need to integrate forest management, conservation, restoration, and
stewardship in watershed management;
(11) although water management
is the primary responsibility of States, the Federal Government has a responsibility
to promote and encourage the ability of States and private forest landowners
to sustain the delivery of clean, abundant water from forest land;
(12) as of the date of enactment
of this Act, the availability of Federal assistance to support forest landowners
to achieve the water goals identified in many Federal laws (including regulations)
is lacking; and
(13) increased research
for, education for, and technical and financial assistance provided to,
forest landowners and communities that relate to the protection of watersheds
and improvement of water quality, are needed to realize the expectations
of the general public for clean water and healthy aquatic systems.
(b) PURPOSES- The purposes
of this section are to--
(1) improve the understanding
of landowners and the public with respect to the relationship between water
quality and forest management;
(2) encourage landowners
to maintain tree cover and use tree plantings and vegetative treatments
as creative solutions to water quality and quantity problems associated
with varying land uses;
(3) enhance and complement
source water protection in watersheds that provide drinking water for municipalities;
(4) establish new partnerships
and collaborative watershed approaches to forest management, stewardship,
and protection; and
(5) provide technical and
financial assistance to States to deliver a coordinated program that through
the provision of technical, financial, and educational assistance to qualified
individuals and entities--
(A) enhances State forestry
best management practices programs; and
(B) protects and improves
water quality on forest land.
SEC. 302. ESTABLISHMENT OF WATERSHED
FORESTRY ASSISTANCE PROGRAM.
The Cooperative Forestry
Assistance Act of 1978 is amended by inserting after section 3(c) (as added
by section 303) the following:
`SEC. 303. WATERSHED FORESTRY
ASSISTANCE PROGRAM.
`(a) ESTABLISHMENT- Subject
to the availability of appropriations, the Secretary shall establish a
watershed forestry assistance program (referred to in this section as the
`program') to provide to States, through State foresters or Indian tribes,
technical, financial, and related assistance to--
`(1) expand forest stewardship
capacities and activities through best management practices and other means;
and
`(2) prevent water quality
degradation, and address watershed issues, on non-Federal forest land.
`(b) WATERSHED FORESTRY
EDUCATION, TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE, AND PLANNING-
`(A) IN GENERAL- In carrying
out the program, the Secretary shall cooperate with State foresters or
Indian tribes to develop a plan, to be administered by the Secretary and
implemented by State foresters or tribal government, to provide technical
assistance to prevent and mitigate water quality degradation.
`(B) PARTICIPATION- In developing
the plan under section 303(b)(1)(A), the Secretary shall encourage participation
of interested members of the public (including nonprofit private organizations
and local watershed councils).
`(2) COMPONENTS- The plan
described in section 303(b)(1) shall include provisions to--
`(A) build and strengthen
watershed partnerships focusing on forest land at the national, State,
regional, and local levels;
`(B) provide forestry best
management practices and water quality technical assistance directly to
private landowners;
`(C) provide technical guidance
relating to water quality management through forest management in degraded
watersheds to land managers and policymakers;
`(D) coordinate with State
agencies and tribal governments where it will--
`(i) complement nonpoint
source assessment and management plans established under section 319 of
the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (33 U.S.C. 1329); and
`(ii) provide enhanced opportunities
for coordination and cooperation among Federal and State agencies having
responsibility for water and watershed management under that Act; and
`(E) provide enhanced forest
resource data and support for improved implementation of forestry best
management practices, including--
`(i) designing and conducting
effectiveness and implementation studies; and
`(ii) meeting in-State water
quality assessment needs, such as the development of water quality models
that correlate the management of forest land to water quality measures
and standards.
`(c) WATERSHED FORESTRY
COST-SHARE PROGRAM-
`(1) ESTABLISHMENT- In carrying
out the program, the Secretary shall establish a watershed forestry cost-share
program, to be administered by the Secretary and implemented by State foresters
or tribal governments, to provide grants and other assistance for eligible
programs and projects described in section 303(c)(2).
`(2) ELIGIBLE PROGRAMS AND
PROJECTS- A community, nonprofit group, or landowner may receive a grant
or other assistance under this subsection to carry out a forestry best
management practices program or a watershed forestry project if the program
or project, as determined by the Secretary--
`(A) is consistent with--
`(i) nonpoint source assessment
and management plan objectives established under section 319 of the Federal
Water Pollution Control Act (323 U.S.C. 1329); and
`(ii) the cost-share requirements
of this section; and
`(B) is designed to address
critical forest stewardship, watershed protection, and restoration needs
through--
`(i) the use of trees and
forests as solutions to water quality problems in urban and agricultural
areas;
`(ii) community-based planning,
involvement, and action through State, local and nonprofit partnerships;
`(iii) the application of
and dissemination of information on forestry best management practices
relating to water quality;
`(iv) watershed-scale forest
management activities and conservation planning; and
`(v) the restoration of
wetland and stream side forests and establishment of riparian vegetative
buffers.
`(A) IN GENERAL- After taking
into consideration the criteria described in section 303(c)(3)(B), the
Secretary shall allocate among States and tribal governments, for award
by State foresters and tribal governments under section 303(c)(4), the
amounts made available to carry out this subsection.
`(B) CRITERIA- The criteria
referred to in section 303(c)(A) are--
`(i) the number of acres
of forest land, and land that could be converted to forest land;
`(ii) the nonpoint source
assessment and management plans as developed under section 319 of the Federal
Water Pollution Control Act (33 U.S.C. 1329);
`(iii) the acres of wetland
forests that have been lost or degraded or cases in which forests may play
a role in restoring wetland resources;
`(iv) the number of non-Federal
forest landowners; and
`(v) the extent to which
the priorities of States are designed to achieve a reasonable range of
the purposes of the program and, as a result, contribute to the water-related
goals of the United States.
`(4) AWARD OF GRANTS AND
ASSISTANCE-
`(A) IN GENERAL- In implementing
the program under this subsection, the State forester, in coordination
with the State Coordinating Committee established under section 19(b) of
the Act referenced, shall provide annual grants and cost-share assistance
to communities, nonprofit groups, and landowners to carry out eligible
programs and projects described in section 303(c)(2).
`(B) APPLICATION- A community,
nonprofit group, or landowner that seeks to receive cost-share assistance
under this subsection shall submit to the State forester or tribal government
an application, in such form and containing such information as the State
forester or tribal government may prescribe, for the assistance.
`(C) PRIORITIZATION- In
awarding cost-share assistance under this subsection, the Secretary shall
give priority to eligible programs and projects that are identified by
the State foresters or tribal governments and the Stewardship Committees
as having a greater need for assistance.
`(D) AWARD- On approval
by the Secretary concerned of an application under section 303(c)(3)(B),
the state forester or
tribal government shall award
to the applicant, from funds allocated to the State or tribal government
under section 303(c)(3), such amount of cost-share assistance as is requested
in the application.
`(A) FEDERAL SHARE- The
Federal share of the cost of carrying out any eligible program or project
under this subsection shall not exceed 75 percent, of which not more than
50 percent may be in the form of assistance provided under this subsection.
`(B) NON-FEDERAL SHARE-
The non-Federal share of the cost of carrying out any eligible program
or project under this subsection may be provided in the form of cash, services,
or in-kind contributions.
`(d) WATERSHED FORESTER-
A State or tribal government may use a portion of the funds made available
to the State under section 304 to establish and fill a position of `Watershed
Forester' to lead programs and coordinate watershed-level projects.'.
SEC. 304. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
(1) IN GENERAL- There are
authorized to be appropriated to carry out this section $20,000,000 for
each of fiscal years 2004 through 2008.
(2) ALLOCATION- Of the funds
made available under paragraph (1)--
(A) 75 percent shall be
used to carry out subsection 303(c); and
(B) 25 percent shall be
used to carry out provisions of this section other than subsection 303(c).
SEC. 305. FOREST AND RANGELAND
HEALTH DEMONSTRATION PROJECTS AT THE WATERSHED SCALE.
(a) DEMONSTRATION PROJECTS-
The Secretary of Agriculture shall designate 10 demonstration projects,
and the Secretary of the Interior shall designate 5 demonstration projects,
whose purpose shall be to restore forest and rangeland health and reduce
unnatural hazardous fuels at a landscape scale, setting ecosystem restoration
objectives, using adaptive management, and integrating scientific research
with the restoration and hazardous fuel reduction. These projects shall
demonstrate cost-effective and scientifically credible methods for the
large-scale restoration forests and rangelands at other locations.
(b) PROJECT CHARACTERISTICS-
(1) STUDY AREAS- The study
area for each treatment should be at the watershed scale.
(2) ACREAGE LIMITS- The
total acreage of projects authorized under this section shall be no more
than two million acres.
(c) FOREST HEALTH RESTORATION-
(1) CATEGORIES- Categories
of ecosystem restoration objectives shall include, to the extent applicable:
(A) change in composition
and extent of unnatural and hazardous fuel loads;
(B) change in ecosystem
distribution, structure, function and composition;
(C) reintroduction of fire
as a natural process;
(D) protection and restoration
of at-risk species, such as species listed as threatened or endangered
under the Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C. Sec. 1531 et seq., and species
designated as Forest Service sensitive species;
(E) maintenance and/or improvement
of water quality and quantity;
(F) detection and control
of ecologically harmful non-native species; and
(G) prevention of unnaturally
severe native insect or disease epidemics.
(2) OBJECTIVES- Objectives
should be directed towards ecological conditions within the historical
range of natural variability.
(d) ANALYSIS- Specific,
measurable ecosystem restoration objectives shall be established for projects.
Objectives shall be analyzed at the landscape level, using the best available
information. The analysis may include a consideration of how specific projects
would carry out the objectives. The analysis does not commit resources
or limit the range of alternatives at the project level. This initial analysis
may identify multiple opportunities for management activities that meet
305(b) and (c) criteria. Projects identified through this watershed scale
review will be subject to all applicable laws, including the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4331 et seq.) and section 322 of the Department
of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1993 (Public Law
102-381; 16 U.S.C. 1612 note), or the Department of the Interior Office
of Hearings and Appeals.
(1) MONITORING- The Secretary
concerned shall monitor the accomplishment of the objectives in section
305(c)(1), issuing a report at least every five years that includes the
following information--
(A) the monitoring results;
(B) an evaluation of progress
towards specific objectives; and
(C) recommendations for
modifications to the strategies, projects and management treatments.
Projects approved following
the issuance of the monitoring reports shall be consistent with any recommendations
in the reports.
(2) AVAILABILITY OF RESULTS-
Results of the demonstration projects should be distributed to, and used
where appropriate at, projects in similar ecosystems on Federal lands.
The requirement for use of adaptive management and ecosystem restoration
objectives on these projects does not preclude the agencies from using
these practices on other lands.
(f) COLLABORATIVE PROCESS-
The Secretary concerned shall develop the objectives in section 305(c)(2)
through a collaborative framework as described in the Implementation Plan
for the 10-year Comprehensive Strategy for a Collaborative Approach for
Reducing Wildland Fire Risks to Communities and the Environment, dated
May 2002, developed pursuant to the Conference Report to the Department
of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, FY 2001 (H. Rept.
106-646) to reduce hazardous fuels. Projects shall be consistent with the
applicable forest plan or resource management plan, and other applicable
agency plans.
(g) USE OF RESEARCH- Research
Institutions and Forest and Rangeland Health Demonstration Projects at
the Watershed Scale:
(1) The Secretary concerned
may contract with universities, scientific non-governmental organizations
and other research institutions to assist federal agencies in planning,
implementing, and assessing the effectiveness of projects and management
activities and research associated with the projects. Contracts shall promote
the use of science and adaptive ecosystem management, and shall provide
that:
(A) research provides timely
information and guidance on the development and implementation of practical,
cost-effective, science-based, ecological restoration treatments for forest
and rangeland ecosystems affected by wildfires, and on the use of adaptive
ecosystem management practices to Federal agencies;
(B) research includes field
studies, modeling, management experiments and monitoring, or other scientific
support deemed necessary to accomplish project objectives; and
(C) research is fully integrated
with ecosystem restoration objectives, and the results are provided to
the federal agencies.
(2) REPORTING- As a condition
of the receipt of funds made available under this Act, for each fiscal
year, each Research Institution shall submit to the Secretary concerned
an annual work plan that includes assurances, satisfactory to the Secretary
concerned, that the proposed work of the Research Institutions will serve
the informational needs of affected entities.
(h) FUNDING- No more than
ten (10) percent of the total cost for each demonstration project shall
be used for field research, monitoring and modeling, or other activities
outlined in sections 305(g)(1)(A) and (B).
TITLE IV--HEALTHY FORESTS RESERVE
PROGRAM
SEC. 401. ESTABLISHMENT OF HEALTHY
FORESTS RESERVE PROGRAM.
(a) ESTABLISHMENT- The Secretary
of Agriculture shall establish the healthy forests reserve program as a
program for the purpose of conserving, restoring, and enhancing forest
ecosystems to promote the recovery of threatened and endangered species
as well as improve biodiversity and enhance carbon sequestration.
(b) COOPERATION- The Secretary
of Agriculture shall carry out the healthy forests reserve program in cooperation
with the Secretary of the Interior, acting through the United States Fish
and Wildlife Service.
SEC. 402. ELIGIBILITY AND ENROLLMENT
OF LANDS IN PROGRAM.
(a) ELIGIBLE LANDS- The
Secretary of Agriculture, in coordination with the Secretary of the Interior,
shall describe and define forest ecosystems to be eligible for the healthy
forests reserve program. The following lands are eligible for enrollment
in the healthy forests reserve program--
(1) private lands whose
enrollment will conserve, restore, enhance, or otherwise measurably increase
the likelihood of recovery of species listed as endangered or threatened
under section 4 of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1533);
and
(2) private lands whose
enrollment will conserve, restore, enhance, or otherwise measurably improve
the well-being of species not listed as endangered or threatened under
section 4 of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1533) but that
are candidates for such listing, State-listed species, or special concern
species.
(b) OTHER CONSIDERATIONS-
In enrolling lands that satisfy the criteria in paragraph (1) or (2) of
subsection 402(a), the Secretary of Agriculture shall give additional consideration
to those lands whose enrollment will also improve biological diversity
and increase carbon sequestration.
(c) ENROLLMENT BY WILLING
OWNERS- The Secretary of Agriculture shall enroll lands in the healthy
forests reserve program only with the consent of the owner of the lands.
(d) MAXIMUM ENROLLMENT-
The total number of acres enrolled in the healthy forests reserve program
shall not exceed 2,000,000 acres.
(e) METHODS OF ENROLLMENT-
Lands may be enrolled in the healthy forests reserve program pursuant to
a 10-year cost-share agreement, a 30-year agreement, or a permanent easement.
The extent to which each enrollment
method is used shall be based
on the approximate proportion of owner interest expressed in that method
in comparison to the other methods.
(f) ENROLLMENT PRIORITY-
The Secretary of Agriculture shall give priority to the enrollment of lands
that provide the greatest conservation benefit to species listed as endangered
or threatened under section 4 of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16
U.S.C. 1533), and secondarily to species not listed as endangered or threatened
under section 4 of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1533)
but that are candidates for such listing, State-listed species, or special
concern species. The Secretary shall also consider the cost-effectiveness
of each agreement and easement and their associated conservation plans
so as to maximize the environmental benefits per dollar expended.
SEC. 403. RESTORATION PLANS.
(a) PLAN REQUIRED- Lands
enrolled in the healthy forests reserve program shall be subject to a restoration
plan, to be developed jointly by the landowner and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service and National Marine Fisheries Service. The conservation plan shall
include such restoration practices as are necessary to protect, restore,
and enhance habitat for federally-listed threatened and endangered species
and/or habitat for animal and/or plant species before these species reach
threatened or endangered status, such as candidate, State-listed species,
and special concern species.
SEC. 404. INVOLVEMENT BY OTHER
AGENCIES AND ORGANIZATIONS.
The Secretary of Agriculture,
where appropriate, may consult with non-industrial private forest landowners,
other federal agencies, a State fish and wildlife agency, State forestry
agency, State environmental quality agency, and other State conservation
agencies and nonprofit conservation organizations for the development and
implementation of the healthy forest reserve program.
SEC. 405. FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE.
(a) PERMANENT EASEMENT-
In the case of land enrolled in the healthy forests reserve program using
a permanent easement, the Secretary of Agriculture shall pay the owner
of the land an amount not more than--
(1) the fair market value
of the enrolled land less the fair market value of the land encumbered
by the easement; plus
(2) the actual costs of
the approved conservation practices or the average cost of approved practices,
as established by the Secretary.
(b) 30-Year Agreement- In
the case of land enrolled in the healthy forests reserve program using
a 30-year agreement, the Secretary of Agriculture shall pay the owner of
the land not more than--
(1) up to 60 percent of
the fair market value of the land less the fair market value of the encumbered
by the agreement; plus
(2) up to 60 percent of
the actual costs of the approved conservation practices or up to 60 percent
of the average cost of approved practices, as established by the Secretary.
(c) 10-Year Agreement- In
the case of land enrolled in the healthy forests reserve program using
a 10-year cost-share agreement, the Secretary of Agriculture shall pay
the owner of the land not more than--
(1) 30 percent of the actual
costs of the approved conservation practices; or
(2) 30 percent of the average
cost of approved practices, as established by the Secretary.
(d) ACCEPTANCE OF CONTRIBUTIONS-
The Secretary of Agriculture may accept and use contributions of non-federal
funds to make payments under this section.
SEC. 406. TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE.
The Secretary of Agriculture
shall provide landowners with technical assistance to comply with the terms
of conservation plans as included in agreements and easements under the
healthy forests reserve program. The Secretary of Agriculture may request
the services of, and enter into cooperative agreements with, individuals
or entities certified as technical service providers under title XII of
the Food Security Act of 1985, as amended (16 U.S.C. 3842), to assist the
Secretary of Agriculture in providing technical assistance necessary to
develop and implement the healthy forests reserve program.
SEC. 407. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
There are authorized to
be appropriated $25,000,000 for fiscal year 2004 and such sums are necessary
for fiscal years 2005 through 2008.
TITLE V--RURAL COMMUNITY FORESTRY
ENTERPRISE PROGRAM
SEC. 501. PURPOSE.
To assist in the economic
revitalization of the rural forest resource dependent communities through
incentives to promote investment in private enterprise, including small
forest products businesses and community development, by the Department
of Agriculture, the Department of the Interior, the Small Business Administration,
and land grant colleges.
SEC. 502. RURAL COMMUNITY FORESTRY
ENTERPRISE PROGRAM.
(a) DEFINITIONS- In this
title--
(1) ELIGIBLE ENTITY- The
term `eligible entity' means a unit of State or local government, Indian
tribes, a nonprofit organization, rural forest resource dependent community,
small forest products business, land grant college or 1890 institution.
(2) ELIGIBLE PROJECT- The
term `eligible project' means proposals that will promote the economic
development in rural forest resource dependent communities based upon responsible
forest stewardship, sustainable forest products or the development of forest
related tourism and recreation activities.
(3) FOREST PRODUCTS- The
term `forest products' includes logs, lumber, chips, small diameter finished
wood products, energy biomass, mulch, and any material derived from forest
vegetation and individual trees and shrubs.
(4) INDIAN TRIBE- The term
`Indian tribe' has the meaning given the term in section 4 of the Indian
Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 450b).
(5) NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION-
The term `nonprofit organization' means any organization that is--
(A) described in section
501(c) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986; and
(B) exempt from taxation
under 501(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
(6) PROGRAM- The term `program'
means the Rural Community Forestry Enterprise Program established by subsection
(b).
(7) SMALL FOREST PRODUCTS
BUSINESS- The term `small forest products business' means a small business
concern (as defined under section 3 of the Small Business Act) that is
classified under subsector 113 or code number 115310 of the North American
Industrial Classification System.
(8) RURAL FOREST RESOURCE
DEPENDENT COMMUNITY- The term `rural forest resource dependent community'
means communities located in rural environs throughout the nation that
are traditionally dependent upon forestry products as a primary source
of the community infrastructure. Examples include, but are not limited
to, the Northern Forest lands of Maine, New Hampshire, New York, and Vermont,
the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, Northern California, Eastern Oregon, the
Bitterrroot Valley of Montana, and the Northern Panhandle of Idaho.
(9) SECRETARY- The term
`Secretary' means the Secretary of Agriculture, acting through the Chief
of the Forest Service.
(1) IN GENERAL- The Secretary
shall, in coordination with the Small Business Administration, Economic
Development Administration, land grant colleges and 1890 institutions,
establish within the Forest Service a joint program between State and Private
Forestry and Research to be known as the `Rural Community Forestry Enterprise
Program' which emphasizes, but is not limited to--
(A) enhancing technical
and business management skills training;
(B) organizing cooperatives
and marketing programs;
(C) establishing and maintaining
timber worker skill pools;
(D) establishing and maintaining
forest product distribution networks and collection centers;
(E) facilitating technology
and transfer for processing small diameter trees and bush into useful products;
(F) developing, where support
exists, a program to promote science based technology implementation and
technology transfer which would expand the capacity for small forest product
businesses to work within large market areas;
(G) promoting forest-related
tourism and recreational activities; and
(H) enhancing the rural
forest business infrastructure needed to reduce hazardous fuels on public
and private lands.
(2) FOREST ENTERPRISE CENTERS-
The Secretary shall establish at least one Forest Enterprise Center at
each Research Station of the Forest Service to be located at a forest science
laboratory to carry out activities under section 502(b)(1) of this title
and to coordinate assistance to small forest products businesses with the
Small Business Administration, USDA Rural Development and the Economic
Development Administration, including the SBA Timber Set-Aside Program
and the EDA Local Technical Assistance Program.
(3) FOREST ENTERPRISE TECHNICAL
ASSISTANCE AND GRANT PROGRAM- The Secretary, through the Forest Enterprise
Centers, shall establish a Forest Enterprise Technical Assistance and Grant
Program to fund eligible projects carried out by an eligible entity to
carry out activities listed in section 502(b)(1) of this title.
(A) CRITERIA- The Secretary
shall work with each Forest Enterprise Center to develop appropriate program
review and prioritization criteria for each research station.
(B) MATCHING FUNDS- Grants
under this section shall not exceed 50 percent of the eligible project
cost and be made on the condition that non-Federal sources, including in-kind
contributions of services or materials, provide the remainder of eligible
project costs.
SEC. 503. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
There are authorized to
be appropriated to carry out this section $15,000,000 for each fiscal year.
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