AB 715
runs out of time in Assembly
Bill to protect California's wild forests must wait
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California’s
wild forests protection bill cleared one more hurdle on Sept. 8,
recommended for concurrence by an Assembly committee but failing
to pass an Assembly floor vote.
But the bill will be reconsidered when the legislature reconvenes
in early 2006.
“Though disappointing at first glance, this is actually a
good development for AB 715,” said Paul Hughes, executive
director of Forests Forever. “Indications recently were that
the governor would veto the bill, as he did SB
744.
“But this gets us past the special election (in November)
and gives us more time to organize.”
Sponsored by Assemblyman Lloyd Levine (D-Van Nuys), AB 715 would
prevent state agencies and departments from assisting the federal
government in any action not compatible with the original, protective
2001 federal roadless rule.
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Roadless
area in Sequoia National Forest
Photo courtesy California Wild Heritage Campaign
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The measure had passed its first Assembly floor vote on May 31,
then passed the state Senate on Sept. 6 by a 22 to 15 vote. The
hurdle cleared Sept 8 was a 6 to 2 concurrence vote in an Assembly
Committee.
"California spoke loud and clear in 2000 when the original
roadless rule was written," Hughes said.
"The Senate passage of AB 715 is an emphatic re-statement that
we want our last wild forests protected."
There are 18 national forests in California; inventoried roadless
areas within them cover about 4.4 million acres. It is these roadless
areas that the recent Bush administration repeal of the 2001 roadless
rule would leave vulnerable to logging, roadbuilding, and other
kinds of development.
The Forest Service repealed the original roadless rule in May 2005
and substituted a phony petition process in which governors can
ask to protect (or open to development if they choose) the roadless
forests in their states. The Bush-appointed secretary of agriculture,
however, can approve or deny these requests.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said back in November 2004 that he will
not file a petition under the Bush administration’s new rule.
Instead his administration would seek to negotiate a state-specific
rule for California with the Forest Service.
The governor has not yet indicated whether he will sign AB 715.
“The governor’s record on forest protection just took
a step backward with his veto of online access to timber harvest
plans,” Hughes said. “Signing a popular bill to help
protect some of the last wild forests in the state could lend credibility
to his promise to ‘keep the roadless areas roadless.’
”
WHAT YOU CAN DO
Write to Assemblyman Lloyd Levine and thank him for introducing
AB 715. Assure him of your continued support, and tell him that
you look forward to helping him pass the bill in the next session.
Assemblymember Lloyd E. Levine
District
Office
Van Nuys State Building
6150 Van Nuys Blvd., Suite 300
Van Nuys, CA 91401
(818) 904-3840
If
you haven't written to your state senator or assemblymember about
AB 715, it's not too late to do so and remind him or her how important
wild forests are to all Californians.
You can find contact information for your state legislators at:
http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/
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Forests Forever:
Their Ecology, Restoration, and Protection
by
John J. Berger
NOW AVAILABLE
from Forests Forever Foundation
and the Center for American Places