Forests And Water. effects of forest management - US Forest Service
The Third Assessment of Indian Forests and Forest Management in the United States
-
Upload
mckenzie-davenport -
Category
Documents
-
view
19 -
download
1
description
Transcript of The Third Assessment of Indian Forests and Forest Management in the United States
The Third Assessment of Indian Forests and Forest Management in the United States
Phil Rigdon (ITC)Larry Mason (IFMAT III)
IFMAT IIITribal Interior Budget Committee
- Billings, MT- July 2014
Intertribal Timber Council (ITC)Phil Rigdon, ITC President
Deputy DirectorNatural ResourcesYakama Nation
ITC is a national association of Tribes and Alaska Native Organizations established in 1976
Yakama
• Income ($43 M stumpage in 2011)• Employment (19,000 jobs)• Fuel • Nontimber forest products ($10 M)• Climate (400 M tons CO2 storage)• Fish & Wildlife• Foods & Medicines• Recreation• Water, soils protection Warm Springs
Sustainable Lifeways, Cultures, Spiritual Practices
“Our Land is What Makes Us Who We Are”
(78,000 cords firewood; $30 M avoided costs)
Coquille
334 forested reservations in 36 states – 18.6 M ac• 1/3 of all Indian lands• 305 reservations in trust & 29 in fee• 294 outside of Alaska• Increased 2.8 million acres in 20 years • 1 million acres in reserves• Fragmentation, fractionation, allotments
Forest lands are among Indian Country’s most valuable assets
National Indian Forest Resources Management Act (NIFRMA) Public Law 101-630, Title 3, 1990,
The US has a trust responsibility toward Indian forest lands.
Existing federal laws do not sufficiently assure the adequate and necessary trust management of Indian forest lands
The federal investment in Indian forestry is significantly below the level of investment in, and management of, forest lands of other federal, state, and private owners.
NIFRMA requires independent assessments of Indian forests and forestry to be completed every ten years and provided to Congress and the Administration. Three have been completed.
1993 2003 2013
IFMAT III
Larry MasonPrincipal Consultant, Alternate Dimensions Inc.UW School of Forest Resources (retired)
Eastern Cherokee San Carlos Apache
8
IFMAT FocusEight topics mandated by NIFRMAAdditional Special Study Areas:
1. Climate Change2. Workforce retention and development3. Economic and employment contributions4. Anchor Forests
Flathead
• Federal funding for Indian forestry has declined by 23% since 1991 and is 33% of NFS.
• Fire preparedness funding to tribes is 25% of NFS. • Hazardous fuels funding is 46% of NFS. • Roads funding is 23% of NFS.
Penobscot
Funding is inadequate and declining
Quinault
More staff are needed• Staffing levels have declined 13% since 1991.• Indian forestry programs are aging (51% of foresters
are 50 years or older). • Wages and benefits for tribal forestry positions are
15-30% lower than for comparable federal jobs. • An erosion of workforce skills, leadership, and
institutional knowledge within BIA and tribal forestry programs is occurring.
• BIA forestry lacks in-house scientific and technical support sufficient for inventory updates, climate change and environmental assessments, market and economic analyses, topical research and reporting, and long-range planning.
• The BIA has no strategic plan to recruit, train, relocate, and retain tribal forestry professionals and technicians.
Quinault
2013
2013: 336MMBF; $42MM
Lowest harvest level in 80 yrs!50 yrs of decline!
Menominee
Hazardous Fuels Treatments decline Planting and Thinning backlogs increase
Woodlands are important but neglected
• 202 tribes have woodlands (109 have only woodlands).
• 2/3 of Indian forests are woodlands and non-commercial forestlands.
• Woodlands are extremely sensitive to climate change, range management, drought, and encroachment by plant and animal species.
Tule River
Mescalero Apache
• Increase funding for tribal forestry and wildfire management by a minimum of $100 million (39%) to provide a level of forest stewardship and timber production consistent with Indian goals and comparator organizations.
• Increase professional and technical staff from current 1,210 by 792 (65%) to 2002 total.
IFMAT III RecommendationsInvestments in Funding & Staffing
The preamble to NIFRMA [Title III SEC 302] explicitly recognized the US trust responsibility for sustained management of Indian forests and expressed concerns with government ability to fulfill it’s obligations.
Two decades later, IFMAT III finds that the federal government continues to inadequately fulfill its trust obligations to Indian forestry. After 20 years, still both “pitcher and umpire”
An inherent conflict of interest is created by the dual obligations of the Bureau of Indian Affairs to both deliver Indian services and to assess whether those services are adequate and well-executed.
Trust Responsibility
Leech Lake
• be assured of predictable, consistent, and adequate funding;
• have access to up-to-date technical and research support;
• be guided by each tribe’s vision for its forests; and
• have a capable workforce committed to protecting tribal resources.
To be sustainable, Indian forestry programs must:
Underfunded and understaffed yet successes are noted
IFMAT observed dedicated forestry staff, Indian and non-Indian, working together in tribal and BIA operations to care for Indian forests. Tribal forestry programs strive to do the best they can with limited available resources in accord with the wishes of tribal leadership. Indian forests are visibly healthier than adjacent national forests.
Tule River
The number of contract and compact tribes that have taken control of their own forest management programs has doubled. Mescalero
Tribal knowledge and stewardship capabilities are uniquely positioned to help sustain forests within and beyond reservation boundaries particularly on the neglected federal estate.
If federal support to Indian forests and forestry programs is increased as recommended and fulfillment of trust responsibility is assured, Indian forests stand to become a model of sustainable management for federal and private forests alike.
Accomplishments notwithstanding, the current situation grows dire
• Chronic underfunding and staffing shortfalls are placing the health and productivity of the trust corpus in jeopardy.
• Increasing threats of catastrophic loss from wildfire, insects, disease, drought, and climate change must be addressed proactively.
• Economic and employment benefits are being lost and opportunities are not being pursued.
• Indian forestry appears at a tipping point as decades of “begging Peter to pay Paul” cannot be sustained.
Makah
IFMAT III Implementation• The Administration has been briefed.• Hearings on IFMAT III has been held in
both the House and Senate• Implementation Teams are being
formed
Nez Perce
IFMATIII ReportReport:– 2-page summary– Executive Summary– Volume I – Summary of findings and recommendations– Volume II – detailed task reports, analyses &
references
Download http://www.itcnet.org/issues_projects/issues_2/forest_management/assessment.html
Plus special issue of Evergreen Magazine