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Craig says he'll stop national forest sale

Washington Hunter

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Article published Mar 23, 2006

Craig says he'll stop national forest sale
Bush plan could save senator's rural school program


Idaho Sen. Larry Craig says he will not allow a Bush administration proposal to sell 300,000 acres of national forest land to make it through a subcommittee he controls and which has to approve the idea.

"It's bad policy to sell land to fund programs," Craig's spokesman, Dan Whiting, told The Spokesman-Review newspaper of Spokane. "That's not a road he wants to go down. I don't really see it going anywhere in Congress."
Craig, a Republican, is chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on Public Lands and Forests, and his support would be needed for the plan to go forward. Previously he expressed concern about the plan but did not oppose it.

The Bush administration has proposed selling 150,000 to 200,000 acres of "small and isolated" tracts of national forest lands chosen from 309,000 acres listed in a Federal Register notice. The public has until March 30 to comment.
Senate Democrats said they would ask Interior secretary-nominee Gov. Dirk Kempthorne about the issue in upcoming confirmation hearings. The administration's plan to sell the land to raise $800 million for rural schools and road maintenance has yet to get any support in Congress.

The Forest Service identified 26,194 acres for sale in Idaho. The largest tract is 10,701 acres south and east of Anderson Ranch Reservoir in the Boise and Sawtooth national forests, popular with snowmobilers and hunters.

The sales would fund renewal of the Secure Rural Schools and Communities Self-Determination Act, which is also referred to as the Craig-Wyden act for its sponsors, Craig, and Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. The 6-year-old act has pumped more than $2 billion into rural states hurt by logging cutbacks on federal land.
Funding for the program expires this year. If renewed, the Craig-Wyden act is expected to be cut over the next five years, eventually putting an end to the program that was designed to help communities that relied on timber revenue to make the transition to more broad-based economies.

But officials in some rural areas that receive money as a result of the act say their communities will be hurt if the program is phased out.
Mark Rey, Agriculture Department undersecretary and a former Craig staffer, said that if the land sales are stopped, then the school and road funding program would also be killed.

"So far, nobody has come up with an alternative funding source," Rey said in a telephone interview from his office in Washington, D.C. "Until we start seeing alternatives, there's really no debate. We're not willing to rule out land sales prematurely."

Some alternative funding sources the Bush administration has considered include speeding up the gas and oil drilling permit process and using money raised by drilling in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
Last week, the Idaho Senate voted 34-1 to oppose the plan. On Tuesday, a House committee unanimously passed a resolution urging the congressional delegation to oppose the Bush administration plan.

Idaho Statesman reporter Rocky Barker contributed to this story.
 
When your constituents tell you how stupid of an idea it is to fund what is a temporary program it only makes sense he would eventually figure out what side to be on. Makes absolutely no sense to permanently deplete the nation’s forests for a temporary program. Has there been any real measured benefit to the program this is designed to fund or has it been just a throw away for money? Also there's drilling in ANWR coming back around.
 

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