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GAO-03-808R 1 (2003-07-10)

handle is hein.gao/gaobaamgh0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 



    A

         Aco untability * Integrity * Reliability
United States General Accounting Office
Washington, D.C. 20548



                                    July 10, 2003

                                    The Honorable Jeff Bingaman
                                    Ranking Minority Member
                                    Committee on Energy and Natural Resources
                                    United States Senate

                                    Subject: Wildland Fires: Forest Service's Removal of Timber Burned by
                                    Wildland Fires

                                    Dear Senator Bingaman:

                                    Wildland fires burned over 8 million acres during the 2000 wildfire season,
                                    making it one of the worst in the past 50 years. As a result, a National Fire
                                    Plan was implemented beginning in 2001 to better prevent, prepare for,
                                    respond to, and repair damage caused by wildland fires. In fiscal years 2001
                                    through 2003, Congress provided $4.9 billion to the U.S. Department of
                                    Agriculture's (USDA) Forest Service to implement the National Fire Plan
                                    on land that it manages. Of this amount, Congress earmarked $212 million
                                    to fund the rehabilitation of land burned by wildland fires. In general,
                                    rehabilitation covers long-term efforts to improve lands unlikely to recover
                                    naturally from wildland fire damage. In some cases, rehabilitation may
                                    include removing timber from burnt land to, among other things, reduce
                                    hazardous fuels. Questions have been raised, however, about whether it is
                                    appropriate to use rehabilitation funds for removing such timber, which
                                    can be sold.

                                    Trees that are removed from National Forest System land can be either
                                    green and healthy or dead or dying as a result of disease or wildland fire.
                                    Depending on their value, the trees may be disposed of or sold. In general,
                                    if the trees have little or no commercial value, the Forest Service will use
                                    service contracts to have the trees removed and disposed of. If the trees
                                    have commercial value, they are considered timber, and the Forest Service
                                    will use timber sale contracts to have the timber removed and sold. Timber
                                    sale contracts generally proceed through two phases-a planning phase
                                    and an implementation and award phase. The Forest Service can use
                                    different funding sources to have timber removed depending on the reason
                                    for removal.

                                    You asked us to determine (1) if the Forest Service uses wildland fire
                                    rehabilitation funding to remove timber from burnt land, and, if not, the
                                    source of funding the Forest Service uses as well as the types of contracts


GAO-03-808R Forest Service Burnt Timber Removal Efforts


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