The
Destructive Power of "Roadless" Forests
by
Ryan McMaken
The
Wilderness Society (a bunch of environmentalists) recently commissioned
a report in response to the 6.4 million acres of roadless national
forest land set aside in Montana. As was expected, the report concluded
that rendering 6.4 million acres of land off limits to any type
of development will somehow be a great boon to Montana’s economy.
Concluding that the new roadless initiative "provides Montana
with some real opportunities", the study more or less tells
workers in the logging industry that they should be glad that they
are now prohibited from working. All of this is thanks to an executive
order issued by a President who has rarely ever set foot in Montana,
and certainly knows exceedingly little about the timber industry
in the Rocky Mountains.
The
executive order, signed by Clinton in the last days of his presidency,
declares 58.5 million acres of forest land to be off limits to logging
operations and road building. 6.4 million of those acres are in
Montana, and folks over in Helena don’t much like the new regulations.
The
resistance to the order prompted the Wilderness Society’s study
which approached the problem with an almost comical naïveté.
Noting that people "prefer to live near natural forests rather
than the stumps created by clear cuts, and near clean streams rather
than those clogged with mud from roads and logging operations."
It also states that the lost jobs in the timber industry "probably
will occur unnoticed". The report does not attempt to explain
how all six million acres and all its ‘near clean streams’ will
be made visible from people’s back porches or how timber workers
will not notice that they are unemployed.
The
report bases its conclusions on the fact that 75% of the jobs derived
from the national forests is derived from recreations or "eco-tourism".
Thanks to increasingly stringent regulations on logging over the
past eight years, logging has become a smaller and smaller part
of the economy not only in Montana, but throughout the entire Western
region. With the government-mandated decline in logging, recreation’s
share of the wilderness economy has naturally become larger and
larger. The Wilderness Society’s report acts as if the timber industry
had packed up its bags and voluntarily left the region, when in
reality they were forced out. The Montana Wood Products Association’s
Cary Hegreberg points to the per-capita income and average wages
in Montana. They are falling in relation to the rest of the country,
and Hegreberg blames it on the federal government’s refusal to consider
the opportunity costs of locking up millions and millions of acres
of national forest land.
The
drive for roadless forests doesn’t address the largest problem facing
national forests these days: wildfires. In fact, just months before
wildfires tore through Western States last summer from New Mexico
to Montana, Montana Governor Marc Racicot went before Congress to
complain about the way that roadless initiatives were being implemented.
Even though Montana pleaded the EPA to involve them in the new forest
plans, the federal government refused to consider the interests
of the state. Racicot warned of the fire hazard and pointed to the
well maintained state forests in Montana. The EPA declined to implement
any anti-fire measures and the result was millions of charred acres
of forest land.
In
the end, the goal of roadless initiatives is to hold forests in
a static and pristine state so that people with money to burn can
hire personal tour guides to take them around the back country.
Such a policy not only greatly increases the risks of wildfires,
but it also makes the land inaccessible to most ordinary people.
The environmentalists make a lot of nice talk about preserving the
forests for "future generations" but what they really
end up doing is rendering the forests so inaccessible that no one
other than neoprene-clad yuppie eco-tourists can ever afford to
ever see the forests. In order to preserve the beauty of the forests,
the environmentalists (who are usually moneyed white suburbanites)
want to make sure than no one but them ever come close enough to
the forests to actually enjoy that beauty. The whole system is akin
to the old European practice where aristocrat hunters would steal
the land of peasants in order to make more room for wild game. Indeed,
the environmentalists look with disdain upon the blue-collar folks
who make their money in the timber industry and upon families who
like to drive through and picnic in national forests. To the environmentalists,
such people are parasites who can’t be trusted to give the national
forests with the same dainty treatment they themselves would give
it. The arrogance is quite astounding.
Although
privatization of the national forests would undoubtedly solve many
of these problems, I’ll take the easy way out and just suggest that
forest lands be given back to the states. As Gov. Racicot points
out, the state forests are much better managed than the national
forests, and state governments must be given control over policies
that directly affect their people and their economy. The workers
of Montana have a right to a voice in environmental policy through
their state government. When the federal government declares, with
a stroke of the pen, that 6 million acres of a state’s land are
off limits to the people of that state, it is time for a change.
February
7, 2001
Ryan
McMaken lives in Denver, Colorado. He edits the Western
Mercury.
Copyright
2001 LewRockwell.com
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