Advocates for government funding to help with the pine beetle epidemic are testifying in Washington D.C. in June.
Beetle-ravaged forests prompt pleas for aid
Associated Press
Originally published 06:40 a.m., June 16, 2009
Updated 08:40 a.m., June 16, 2009
WASHINGTON (AP) — Officials from Rocky Mountain states urged
Congress on Tuesday help them avert a potential catastrophe this summer
as they grapple with millions of acres of beetle-ravaged pines that are
prone to fire.
Local government officials and forestry experts told the House
Natural Resources Committee at a hearing Tuesday that small towns, ski
resorts, water supplies and electricity transmission lines surrounded
by dead or dying forests are at risk for wildfires.
"The inevitable looms on the horizon like a gathering storm," John
Rich, a commissioner from Jackson County, Colo., said in prepared
testimony. "Shame on us if we do not heed the storm clouds and fail to
take the actions necessary to adequately prepare."
Rich quoted Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, a former Colorado
senator, as describing the mountain pine beetle infestation as the
"Katrina of the West."
The pine beetle epidemic, which hit Colorado in 1996, has spread to
more 2 million acres in the state. U.S. Forest Service officials have
predicted that by the end of 2013, beetles will kill most of the
state's lodgepole pines, the predominant pine at higher elevations.
Other severely affected states include Idaho, Montana and Wyoming.
In Canada, more than 22 million acres have been affected and scientists
suspect that the death of so many trees is altering local weather
patterns and air quality.
"In spite of the state's best efforts, resources are limited and it
is incumbent upon the federal government to act more aggressively to
suppress and prevent fires," two Colorado lawmakers said in joint
testimony.
State Sen. Dan Gibbs and state Rep. Christine Scanlan also said they
want the federal government to help create a market for wood products —
including wood pellets that can be burned to create energy — made from
the dead trees.
A decimated pine forest due to beetle kill.
On the Net:
House Natural Resources Committee: resourcescommittee.house.gov
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