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H.R. 2647

Emergency Wildfire and Forest Management Act of 2016

Emergency Wildfire and Forest Management Act of 2016

TITLE I--MAJOR DISASTER FOR WILDFIRE ON FEDERAL LAND

(Sec. 101) The Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act is amended to define "major disaster for wildfire on federal lands" to mean any wildfire or wildfires that warrant assistance to supplement the efforts and resources of the Department of the Interior or the Department of Agriculture (USDA) on federal lands or on nonfederal lands pursuant to a fire protection agreement or cooperative agreement.

(Sec. 102) A process is established for declaration of a major disaster for wildfire on federal lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), the National Park Service, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Forest Service. Either Interior (for federal land under its jurisdiction) or USDA (for Forest Service land) may request the President to start such a process, and the President in turn may transfer funds to them to conduct wildfire suppression operations on the lands affected.

The President shall establish a wildfire suppression operations account for wildfires on federal lands, whose funds shall be transferred to the wildfire suppression subactivity of the Wildland Fire Management Account.

If transferred amounts are used to conduct wildfire suppression operations on non-federal land, the appropriate Department shall secure reimbursement for the cost of such operations and transfer the amounts received to the wildfire suppression operations account.

The appropriate Department shall report to Congress annually on:

  • the risk-based factors that influenced management decisions regarding wildfire suppression operations of the federal land management agencies under its jurisdiction;
  • a statistically significant sample of large fires;
  • total expenditures for wildfire suppression operations of the federal land management agencies under its jurisdiction, and
  • lessons learned.

(Sec. 103) No funds may be transferred to or from the wildfire suppression subactivity of the Wildland Fire Management account or the FLAME Wildfire Suppression Reserve Fund account of the federal land management agencies to or from any other account or subactivity of those agencies that is not used to cover the cost of wildfire suppression operations.

TITLE II--EXPEDITED ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS AND AVAILABILITY OF CATEGORICAL EXCLUSIONS TO EXPEDITE FOREST MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES

(Sec. 201) This section shall apply whenever the Department concerned, either USDA with respect to National Forest System (NFS) land or Interior with respect to public lands, prepares an environmental assessment or an environmental impact statement pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) for a forest management activity that:

  • is developed through a collaborative process; or
  • is covered by a community wildfire protection plan.

The primary purpose of which is:

  • the reduction of hazardous fuels,
  • the reduction of fuel connectivity through the installation of fuel and fire breaks,
  • the restoration of forest health and resilience,
  • the protection of a municipal water supply system, or
  • a combination of two or more such purposes.

In such an environmental assessment or environmental impact statement, the Department concerned shall study, develop, and describe only these two alternatives:

  • the forest management activity proposed, and
  • the alternative of no action.

In the case of the alternative of no action, the Department concerned shall evaluate:

  • the effect of no action on forest health, habitat diversity, wildfire potential, insect and disease potential, and other economic and social factors; and
  • the implications of a resulting decline in forest health, loss of habitat diversity, wildfire, or insect or disease infestation on domestic water costs, wildlife habitat loss, and other economic and social factors.

(Sec. 202) A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to propose a forest management activity on NFS land or public land when the activity is developed and implemented through a collaborative process and the primary purpose of the activity is to:

  • address an insect or disease infestation;
  • reduce hazardous fuels;
  • protect a municipal water supply system;
  • maintain, enhance, or modify critical habitat to protect it from catastrophic events;
  • increase water yield; or
  • any combination of such purposes.

(A "categorical exclusion" is defined under this bill as an exclusion from further analysis and documentation in an environmental assessment or an environmental impact statement under the NEPA for a project or activity relating to the management of NFS land or public land.)

A forest management activity covered by this categorical exclusion may not contain harvest units exceeding a total of 3,000 acres.

A forest management activity covered by this categorical exclusion shall be based upon the best available scientific information and subject to section 206 of this bill (consideration of resource conditions for extraordinary circumstances).

(Sec. 203) A categorical exclusion is also made available to the Department concerned to carry out a salvage operation as part of the restoration of NFS land or public land following a catastrophic event.

This kind of salvage operation may not contain harvest units exceeding a total of 3,000 acres either, nor may it exceed one-third of the area impacted by the catastrophic event.

This kind of salvage operation shall be subject to section 206.

(Sec. 204) A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to carry out a forest management activity on NFS land or public land which is developed and implemented through a collaborative process and when its primary purpose is to modify, improve, enhance, or create early successional forests for wildlife habitat improvement and other purposes, consistent with the applicable forest plan.

The Department concerned shall design a forest management activity under this section to meet early successional forest goals so as to maximize production and regeneration of priority species, as identified in the forest plan and consistent with the capability of the activity site.

A forest management activity covered by such a categorical exclusion may not contain harvest units exceeding a total of 3,000 acres.

A forest management activity covered by this categorical exclusion shall be:

  • based on the best available scientific information, and
  • subject to section 206.

(Sec. 205) A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to carry out specified forest management activities on NFS land or public land which are developed and implemented through a collaborative process and whose primary purpose is to:

  • improve forest health,
  • restore forest health,
  • reduce the risk of wildfire, or
  • achieve state wildlife population goals.

A forest management activity covered by this categorical exclusion:

  • may not contain harvest units exceeding a total of 3,000 acres, and
  • shall be based on the best available scientific information.

A forest management activity covered by this categorical exclusion shall be subject to section 206.

(Sec. 206) The extraordinary circumstances procedures under a specified federal regulation (or a successor regulation) shall apply to a proposal for:

  • a forest management activity that is categorically excluded under this title, or
  • a project that is categorically excluded under the Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2013.

In determining whether extraordinary circumstances preclude a proposal for such an activity or project, the Department concerned shall consider the beneficial effect of the proposed activity or project on sensitive species.

The Department concerned shall not determine that extraordinary circumstances preclude such a proposal from being categorically excluded if there is a reasonable beneficial effect or reasonably foreseeable beneficial effect of the proposed activity or project on sensitive species.

Uncertainty with respect to the degree of the beneficial effect of a proposed activity or project on sensitive species shall not preclude the use of a categorical exclusion.

(Sec. 207) A forest management activity covered by a categorical exclusion granted by this title shall be conducted consistent with the forest plan applicable to the NFS land or public land covered by that activity.

(Sec. 208) Forest management activities carried out under this title shall not include the construction of any new permanent roads.

The Department concerned may carry out necessary maintenance of, repairs to, or reconstruction of, an existing permanent road for purposes of this title.

The Department concerned shall decommission any temporary road constructed under this title within three years of the completion of the project.

(Sec. 209) This title does not apply to:

  • a component of the National Wilderness Preservation System,
  • any federal land on which the removal of vegetation is prohibited by an Act of Congress,
  • a congressionally designated wilderness study area, or
  • an area in which the activities authorized under this title would be inconsistent with the applicable resource management plan.

TITLE III--TRIBAL FORESTRY PARTICIPATION AND PROTECTION

(Sec. 301) Interior shall take specified administrative action under the Tribal Forest Protection Act of 2004 within 120 days of receiving a request from an Indian Tribe to enter into an agreement or contract to carry out a project to protect Indian forest land or rangeland (including bordering or adjacent federal land). Interior shall (under current law, may) issue a notice of denial to the Tribe if the request is denied.

(Sec. 302) The Department concerned, at the request of an Indian Tribe, may treat federal forest land as Indian forest land for purposes of planning and conducting forest land management activities under the National Indian Forest Resources Management Act if the federal forest land is located within, or mostly within, a geographic area presenting a feature or involving circumstances principally relevant to that Indian tribe.

The Department concerned and the Tribe, as part of an agreement to treat federal land as Indian forest land, shall:

  • provide for continued public access (with possible exceptions),
  • continue sharing revenue generated by the federal forest land with state and local governments,
  • comply with applicable prohibitions on the export of unprocessed logs harvested from the federal forest land,
  • recognize all right-of way agreements in effect on federal forest land before tribal forest land management activities commence, and
  • ensure that any commercial timber removed from the federal forest land is sold on a competitive bid basis.

(Sec. 303) Interior and USDA may carry out demonstration projects under which federally recognized Indian tribes or tribal organizations may contract to perform administrative, management, and other functions of programs of the Tribal Forest Protection Act of 2004 through contracts entered into under the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act.

TITLE IV--MISCELLANEOUS FOREST MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES

(Sec. 402) The State-Supported Forest Management Fund is established in the Treasury to cover costs to plan, carry out, and monitor a forest management activity on NFS land or public land that is developed through a collaborative process, proposed by a resource advisory committee, or covered by a community wildfire protection plan.

The Fund shall consist of such amounts as may be: (1) contributed by an eligible entity for deposit into the Fund, (2) appropriated to the Fund, or (3) generated by forest management activities carried out using amounts in the Fund.

An "eligible entity" is:

  • a state or political subdivision containing NFS land or public land,
  • a publicly chartered utility serving at least one state or its political subdivision,
  • a rural electric company, and
  • any other entity appropriate for participation in the Fund.

In making a contribution, an eligible entity may:

  • specify the NFS land or public land for which the contribution may be expended; and
  • limit the types of forest management activities for which the contribution may be expended.

The Knutson-Vandenberg Act shall apply to any forest management activity carried out using amounts from the Fund.

The Fund shall terminate on September 30, 2018.

(Sec. 403) Courts reviewing an agency action shall balance short- and long-term impacts of forest management activities in considering injunctive relief.

(Sec. 404) USDA shall establish a competitive grant program to provide financial and technical assistance to:

  • encourage active forest management on cross-boundary priority forest landscapes, including land owned by beginning and previously unengaged forest owners, in order to maintain forest health;
  • protect forests from natural threats and wildfire;
  • enhance public benefits from forests;
  • conserve and manage working forest landscapes for multiple values and uses; and
  • advance priorities in statewide forest assessment and resource strategies.

To become eligible to receive a grant, an applicant shall submit to USDA, through the state forester or appropriate state agency, a state and private forest landscape-scale restoration proposal (that includes specified criteria) based on a restoration strategy that is:

  • complete or substantially complete,
  • for a multiyear period,
  • composed of nonindustrial private forest land or state forest land,
  • accessible by wood-processing infrastructure, and
  • based on the best available science.

In making grants under the program, USDA shall give priority to plans that:

  • further a statewide forest assessment and resource strategy;
  • promote cross boundary landscape collaboration; and
  • leverage public and private resources.

The Forest Service, the Natural Resources Conservation Service, and relevant stakeholders shall collaborate and consult on an ongoing basis regarding the administration of the program and identify other applicable resources towards landscape-scale restoration.

As a condition for receiving a grant under the program, USDA shall require the grant recipient to furnish funds or in-kind support from nonfederal sources in an amount that is at least equal to the amount furnished by the federal government.

USDA may, in making grants under the program, consider coordination with and proximity to other landscape-scale projects on other land under its jurisdiction, the jurisdiction of Interior, or the jurisdiction of a state governor.

USDA shall report to Congress on the status of the development, execution, and administration of selected projects, accounting of program funding expenditures, and specific accomplishments that have resulted from landscape-scale projects.

The State and Private Forest Landscape-Scale Restoration Fund is established in the Treasury to be used by USDA to make grants.

The bill authorizes appropriations for such Fund through FY2018.

(Sec. 405) USDA shall establish within the Forest Service a pilot arbitration program to designate specified projects for an alternative dispute resolution process to replace the judicial review of those projects.

USDA shall establish a process for the designation of projects under the program and publish a description of that process in the Federal Register.

No more than 10 projects may be designated for the program in any applicable calendar year.

The authority of USDA to designate a project under the program terminates on October 1, 2018.

An individual or entity:

  • may file a demand for arbitration of a project that has been designated for the program in accordance with specified federal law; and
  • if such a demand for arbitration is filed, shall include in the demand a proposal for an alternative to the project describing each modification sought with respect to the project.

A demand for arbitration may only be filed by an individual or entity that has participated in a collaborative process or has proposed the project with a resource advisory committee.

An arbitrator shall make a decision on each demand for arbitration by selecting only:

  • the project, as approved by USDA; or
  • a proposal submitted by an individual or entity for an alternative to the project, as described in this section.

An arbitrator may not modify any proposal contained in a demand for arbitration under the program.

A decision made by an arbitrator under the program shall be:

  • based only on the administrative record of the project;
  • within the authority of USDA;
  • consistent with each applicable forest plan; and
  • binding;

Arbitration under the program shall be conducted according to the rules and procedures of the American Arbitration Association.

A decision made by an arbitrator under the program shall not be considered to be a major federal action and shall not be subject to judicial review, except as provided under specified federal law.

(Sec. 406) USDA shall establish a NFS accelerated landscape restoration pilot program for the restoration or maintenance of designated landscapes.

The Forest Service shall designate at least 10 landscape-scale areas within the NFS for the program.

Each designated landscape shall:

  • include at least 75,000 acres, but not more than 1 million acres;
  • be identified by a collaborative group;
  • not include any inventoried roadless area; and
  • include forests that are not in a state of forest health, are at an increased risk of high-severity wildfire, or are at an increased risk of an insect or disease infection.

In designating landscape-scale areas for the program, USDA shall:

  • prioritize landscape-scale areas in which social, ecological, and economic conditions support landscape-scale restoration; and
  • consider certain ecological and economic factors and other specified factors.

USDA shall publish in the Federal Register:

  • a notice of the process for the designation of landscape-scale areas under the program, and
  • a specified final notice with respect to each designated landscape.

USDA shall prepare a specified landscape-scale environmental impact statement for each designated landscape for purposes of complying with the NEPA.

The bill authorizes appropriations through FY2018.

(Sec. 407) The bill designates specified federal lands in the Cherokee National Forest in Tennessee as wilderness and as additions to the National Wilderness Preservation System.

(Sec. 408) The bill amends the Small Tracts Act of 1983 (the Act) to permit the sale, exchange, or interchange under such Act of NFS lands the sale or exchange of which is not practicable under any other authority of the USDA which have a value determined to be not more than $500,000.

Those lands permitted to be sold, exchanged, or interchanged under the Act include:

  • parcels of 40 acres or less which are determined to be physically isolated, to be inaccessible, or to have lost their National Forest character;
  • parcels of 10 acres or less which are not eligible for conveyance under such Act, but which are encroached upon by permanent habitable improvements for which there is no evidence that the encroachment was intentional or negligent; and
  • parcels used as a cemetery (including a parcel of at least one acre adjacent to the parcel used as a cemetery), a landfill, or a sewage treatment plant under a special use authorization issued by the USDA.

Any proceeds under this section shall be deposited in the special fund established under the Sisk Act and made available for:

  • the acquisition of land or interests in land for administrative sites for the NFS in the state from which the amounts were derived;
  • the acquisition of land or interests in land for inclusion in the NFS in that state, including those which enhance opportunities for recreational access;
  • the performance of deferred maintenance on administrative sites for the NFS in that state or other deferred maintenance activities in that state which enhance opportunities for recreational access; and
  • the reimbursement of the USDA for costs incurred in preparing a competitive sale conducted under the authority of the Act.

(Sec. 409) The bill amends the Forest Service Facility Realignment and Enhancement Act of 2005 to extend the authority of the USDA to initiate conveyances of Forest Service administrative sites under such Act through FY2018.

(Sec. 410) Federal agencies shall not authorize a prescribed burn on federal lands if, for the county or contiguous county in which the federal land is located, the national fire danger rating system indicates an extreme fire danger level.

However, a federal agency may authorize a prescribed burn under such a condition if the agency coordinates it with applicable state government and local fire officials.

At the end of every fiscal year, the Forest Service shall submit a report that describes:

  • the number and locations of prescribed burns during that fiscal year, and
  • each prescribed burn during that year that was authorized by a federal agency pursuant to this section.

(Sec. 411) USDA shall not designate any land in the Nantahala National Forest or the Pisgah National Forest in North Carolina as a wilderness study area until the affected counties approve the designation.

TITLE V--KISATCHIE NATIONAL FOREST LAND CONVEYANCE

Kisatchie National Forest Land Conveyance Act of 2016

(Sec. 502) This section sets forth a finding of Congress that it is in the public interest to authorize the conveyance of certain federal land in the Kisatchie National Forest in Louisiana for market value consideration.

(Sec. 504) USDA may convey, by quitclaim deed, specified federal land in Winn Parish, Louisiana, at public or private sale, including competitive sale by auction, bid, or other methods.

USDA shall convey, by quitclaim deed, portions of such land to Collins Camp Properties, Inc.

USDA may:

  • configure the federal land to be conveyed so as to maximize the marketability of the conveyance or to achieve management objectives, and
  • establish any terms and conditions for conveyances under this title that are in the public interest.

Consideration for a conveyance of federal land under this title shall be in cash and in an amount that is equal to the market value of the land being conveyed.

The market value of the federal land to be conveyed shall be determined as follows:

  • for the federal land to be conveyed to Collins Camp Properties, by a specified appraisal; or
  • if conveyed by a method other than the methods specified in this section, by competitive sale.

In any conveyance of federal land under this title to Collins Camp Properties, or any occupant residing on the federal land under a special use permit issued by the Forest Service, USDA shall meet disclosure requirements for hazardous substances, pollutants, and contaminants, but shall not otherwise be required to remediate or abate them.

As a condition of the conveyance, Collins Camp Properties, or any such occupant that acquires the federal land shall agree to indemnify and hold harmless the United States for costs associated with the remediation or abatement of any hazardous substances, pollutants, or contaminants on the acquired land.

Nothing in this section otherwise affects the application of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 to conveyances of federal lands under this title.

(Sec. 505) USDA shall deposit the proceeds from the conveyances of the federal lands in the fund established under the Sisk Act.

USDA may use the deposited amounts from such fund for the acquisition of land and interests in land in the Kisatchie National Forest in Louisiana.

(Sec. 506) As a condition of a conveyance of federal land to Collins Camp Properties, USDA shall require Collins Camp Properties to pay at closing reasonable appraisal costs and the cost of any administrative and environmental analyses required by law.

An offer by Collins Camp Properties for acquiring the federal land must be accompanied by a written statement from each holder of a Forest Service special use authorization with respect to such land specifying that the holder agrees to relinquish that authorization upon the conveyance of such land to Collins Camp Properties.

If a holder of such a special use authorization fails to furnish such a written statement, USDA shall require, as a condition of the conveyance, that Collins Camp Properties administer that authorization in accordance with its terms until it expires.

TITLE VI--CHATTAHOOCHEE-OCONEE NATIONAL FOREST LAND ADJUSTMENT

Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest Land Adjustment Act of 2016

(Sec. 602) This title sets forth findings with respect to certain NFS land in Georgia.

(Sec. 604) USDA may: (1) sell or exchange all right, title, and interest of the United States in 30 tracts of NFS land in Georgia totaling approximately 3,841 acres; (2) modify the boundaries of such lands based on land management considerations; and (3) reserve any rights-of-way or other rights or interests in land sold or exchanged under this section that is considered necessary for management purposes or to protect the public interest.

USDA shall convey by quitclaim deed land sold or exchanged under in this section.

USDA may not sell or exchange land under this section for less than market value, as determined by an appraisal or through a competitive bidding process.

Such an appraisal shall be:

  • consistent with the Uniform Appraisal Standards for Federal Land Acquisitions or the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice, and
  • subject to USDA's approval.

Consideration for sales of land or equalization of exchanges under this section shall be paid in cash.

USDA may accept a cash equalization payment that exceeds 25% of the value of the land to be exchanged.

USDA may:

  • sell land under this section at public or private sale, including competitive sale by auction, bid, or otherwise, according to any terms, conditions, or procedures that are in the best interest of the United States;
  • make public or private solicitations for the sale or exchange of land;
  • reject any offer that is not adequate or in the public interest;
  • use a broker or other third party in the sales or exchanges of land; and
  • from the proceeds of such a sale or exchange, pay reasonable commissions or fees, if applicable.

(Sec. 605) USDA shall deposit the proceeds or a cash equalization payment of a sale or exchange of land in the fund established under the Sisk Act.

Amounts deposited into such fund shall be made available to USDA only for the acquisition of land for the NFS in Georgia.

Nothing in this title authorizes the use of the amounts deposited into such fund for the acquisition of land without the landowner's written consent.

Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 634.

Rep. Westerman, Bruce [R-AR-4](R-AR)Sponsor
13 cosponsors1 D12 R
13cosponsors3committees50actions4amendments10related bills18subjects
  1. Calendars

    Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 634.

  2. Committee

    Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry. Reported by Senator Roberts with an amendment in the nature of a substitute. Without written report.

    Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Committee
  3. Committee14000

    Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry. Reported by Senator Roberts with an amendment in the nature of a substitute. Without written report.

    Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Committee
  4. Committee

    Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry. Ordered to be reported with an amendment in the nature of a substitute favorably.

    Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Committee
  5. IntroReferral

    Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.

    Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Committee
  6. FloorH38800

    The title of the measure was amended. Agreed to without objection.

  7. FloorH38310

    Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.

  8. FloorH37100

    On passage Passed by recorded vote: 262 - 167 (Roll no. 428).

  9. Floor8000

    Passed/agreed to in House: On passage Passed by recorded vote: 262 - 167 (Roll no. 428).

  10. FloorH34400

    The House adopted the amendment in the nature of a substitute as agreed to by the Committee of the Whole House on the state of the Union. (text of amendment in the nature of a substitute: CR H4995-5002)

  11. FloorH35000

    The previous question was ordered pursuant to the rule. (consideration: CR H5006)

  12. FloorH32600

    The House rose from the Committee of the Whole House on the state of the Union to report H.R. 2647.

  13. FloorH8D000

    UNFINISHED BUSINESS - The Chair announced that the unfinished business was the question of adoption of an amendment which had been debated earlier and which further proceedings had been postponed.

  14. FloorH8D000

    DEBATE - Pursuant to the provisions of H. Res. 347, the Committee of the Whole proceed with 10 minutes of debate on the part C Kilmer amendment No. 4.

  15. FloorH8D000

    DEBATE - Pursuant to the provisions of H. Res. 347, the Committee of the Whole proceeded with 10 minutes of debate on the part C Lujan Grisham amendment No. 3.

  16. FloorH8D000

    DEBATE - Pursuant to the provisions of H. Res. 347, the Committee of the Whole proceeded with 10 minutes of debate on the part C Tipton amendment No.2.

  17. FloorH8D000

    POSTPONED PROCEEDINGS - At the conclusion of debate on the Polis amendment, the Chair put the question on adoption of the amendment and by voice vote, announced that the noes had prevailed. Mr. Polis demanded a recorded vote and the Chair postponed further proceedings on the question of adoption of the amendment until a time to be announced.

  18. FloorH8D000

    DEBATE - Pursuant to the provisions of H. Res. 347, the Committee of the Whole proceeded with 10 minutes of debate on the part C Polis amendment No. 1.

  19. FloorH8D000

    GENERAL DEBATE - The Committee of the Whole continued with the remaining 12 1/2 minutes of general debate on H.R. 2647.

  20. FloorH32050

    The House resolved into Committee of the Whole House on the state of the Union for further consideration.

  21. FloorH30000

    Considered as unfinished business. (consideration: CR H4987-4993, H4993-5007)

  22. FloorH32700

    Committee of the Whole House on the state of the Union rises leaving H.R. 2647 as unfinished business.

  23. FloorH32341

    On motion that the Committee now rise Agreed to by voice vote.

  24. FloorH32340

    Mr. Bishop (UT) moved that the Committee now rise.

  25. FloorH8D000

    GENERAL DEBATE - The Committee of the Whole proceeded with one hour of general debate on H.R. 2647.

  26. FloorH32400

    The Speaker designated the Honorable George Holding to act as Chairman of the Committee.

  27. FloorH32020

    House resolved itself into the Committee of the Whole House on the state of the Union pursuant to H. Res. 347 and Rule XVIII.

  28. FloorH8D000

    Previous question shall be considered as ordered without intervening motions except motion to recommit with or without instructions. Providing for consideration of H.R. 5 and H.R. 2647.

  29. FloorH30000

    Considered under the provisions of rule H. Res. 347. (consideration: CR H4985-4986)

  30. FloorH1L220

    Rule H. Res. 347 passed House.

  31. FloorH1L210

    Rules Committee Resolution H. Res. 347 Reported to House. Previous question shall be considered as ordered without intervening motions except motion to recommit with or without instructions. Providing for consideration of H.R. 5 and H.R. 2647.

  32. CalendarsH12410

    Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 137.

  33. CommitteeH12200

    Reported (Amended) by the Committee on Natural Resources. H. Rept. 114-185, Part II.

    Natural Resources Committee
  34. Committee5000

    Reported (Amended) by the Committee on Natural Resources. H. Rept. 114-185, Part II.

    Natural Resources Committee
  35. CommitteeH12200

    Reported (Amended) by the Committee on Agriculture. H. Rept. 114-185, Part I.

    Agriculture Committee
  36. Committee5000

    Reported (Amended) by the Committee on Agriculture. H. Rept. 114-185, Part I.

    Agriculture Committee
  37. Committee

    Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by Voice Vote.

    Agriculture Committee
  38. Committee

    Committee Consideration and Mark-up Session Held.

    Agriculture Committee
  39. Committee

    Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by the Yeas and Nays: 22 - 15.

    Natural Resources Committee
  40. Committee

    Committee Consideration and Mark-up Session Held.

    Natural Resources Committee
  41. Committee

    Subcommittee on Indian, Insular and Alaska Native Affairs Discharged.

    Natural Resources Committee
  42. Committee

    Subcommittee on Federal Lands Discharged.

    Natural Resources Committee
  43. Committee

    Committee Consideration and Mark-up Session Held.

    Natural Resources Committee
  44. Committee

    Referred to the Subcommittee on Indian, Insular and Alaska Native Affairs.

    Indian and Insular Affairs Subcommittee
  45. Committee

    Referred to the Subcommittee on Federal Lands.

    Federal Lands Subcommittee
  46. IntroReferralH11100

    Referred to the Committee on Agriculture, and in addition to the Committee on Natural Resources, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.

    Natural Resources Committee
  47. IntroReferralH11100-A

    Referred to the Committee on Agriculture, and in addition to the Committee on Natural Resources, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.

  48. IntroReferralH11100

    Referred to the Committee on Agriculture, and in addition to the Committee on Natural Resources, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.

    Agriculture Committee
  49. IntroReferralIntro-H

    Introduced in House

  50. IntroReferral1000

    Introduced in House

Sep 19, 20161

Emergency Wildfire and Forest Management Act of 2016

TITLE I--MAJOR DISASTER FOR WILDFIRE ON FEDERAL LAND

(Sec. 101) The Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act is amended to define "major disaster for wildfire on federal lands" to mean any wildfire or wildfires that warrant assistance to supplement the efforts and resources of the Department of the Interior or the Department of Agriculture (USDA) on federal lands or on nonfederal lands pursuant to a fire protection agreement or cooperative agreement.

(Sec. 102) A process is established for declaration of a major disaster for wildfire on federal lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), the National Park Service, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Forest Service. Either Interior (for federal land under its jurisdiction) or USDA (for Forest Service land) may request the President to start such a process, and the President in turn may transfer funds to them to conduct wildfire suppression operations on the lands affected.

The President shall establish a wildfire suppression operations account for wildfires on federal lands, whose funds shall be transferred to the wildfire suppression subactivity of the Wildland Fire Management Account.

If transferred amounts are used to conduct wildfire suppression operations on non-federal land, the appropriate Department shall secure reimbursement for the cost of such operations and transfer the amounts received to the wildfire suppression operations account.

The appropriate Department shall report to Congress annually on:

  • the risk-based factors that influenced management decisions regarding wildfire suppression operations of the federal land management agencies under its jurisdiction;
  • a statistically significant sample of large fires;
  • total expenditures for wildfire suppression operations of the federal land management agencies under its jurisdiction, and
  • lessons learned.

(Sec. 103) No funds may be transferred to or from the wildfire suppression subactivity of the Wildland Fire Management account or the FLAME Wildfire Suppression Reserve Fund account of the federal land management agencies to or from any other account or subactivity of those agencies that is not used to cover the cost of wildfire suppression operations.

TITLE II--EXPEDITED ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS AND AVAILABILITY OF CATEGORICAL EXCLUSIONS TO EXPEDITE FOREST MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES

(Sec. 201) This section shall apply whenever the Department concerned, either USDA with respect to National Forest System (NFS) land or Interior with respect to public lands, prepares an environmental assessment or an environmental impact statement pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) for a forest management activity that:

  • is developed through a collaborative process; or
  • is covered by a community wildfire protection plan.

The primary purpose of which is:

  • the reduction of hazardous fuels,
  • the reduction of fuel connectivity through the installation of fuel and fire breaks,
  • the restoration of forest health and resilience,
  • the protection of a municipal water supply system, or
  • a combination of two or more such purposes.

In such an environmental assessment or environmental impact statement, the Department concerned shall study, develop, and describe only these two alternatives:

  • the forest management activity proposed, and
  • the alternative of no action.

In the case of the alternative of no action, the Department concerned shall evaluate:

  • the effect of no action on forest health, habitat diversity, wildfire potential, insect and disease potential, and other economic and social factors; and
  • the implications of a resulting decline in forest health, loss of habitat diversity, wildfire, or insect or disease infestation on domestic water costs, wildlife habitat loss, and other economic and social factors.

(Sec. 202) A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to propose a forest management activity on NFS land or public land when the activity is developed and implemented through a collaborative process and the primary purpose of the activity is to:

  • address an insect or disease infestation;
  • reduce hazardous fuels;
  • protect a municipal water supply system;
  • maintain, enhance, or modify critical habitat to protect it from catastrophic events;
  • increase water yield; or
  • any combination of such purposes.

(A "categorical exclusion" is defined under this bill as an exclusion from further analysis and documentation in an environmental assessment or an environmental impact statement under the NEPA for a project or activity relating to the management of NFS land or public land.)

A forest management activity covered by this categorical exclusion may not contain harvest units exceeding a total of 3,000 acres.

A forest management activity covered by this categorical exclusion shall be based upon the best available scientific information and subject to section 206 of this bill (consideration of resource conditions for extraordinary circumstances).

(Sec. 203) A categorical exclusion is also made available to the Department concerned to carry out a salvage operation as part of the restoration of NFS land or public land following a catastrophic event.

This kind of salvage operation may not contain harvest units exceeding a total of 3,000 acres either, nor may it exceed one-third of the area impacted by the catastrophic event.

This kind of salvage operation shall be subject to section 206.

(Sec. 204) A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to carry out a forest management activity on NFS land or public land which is developed and implemented through a collaborative process and when its primary purpose is to modify, improve, enhance, or create early successional forests for wildlife habitat improvement and other purposes, consistent with the applicable forest plan.

The Department concerned shall design a forest management activity under this section to meet early successional forest goals so as to maximize production and regeneration of priority species, as identified in the forest plan and consistent with the capability of the activity site.

A forest management activity covered by such a categorical exclusion may not contain harvest units exceeding a total of 3,000 acres.

A forest management activity covered by this categorical exclusion shall be:

  • based on the best available scientific information, and
  • subject to section 206.

(Sec. 205) A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to carry out specified forest management activities on NFS land or public land which are developed and implemented through a collaborative process and whose primary purpose is to:

  • improve forest health,
  • restore forest health,
  • reduce the risk of wildfire, or
  • achieve state wildlife population goals.

A forest management activity covered by this categorical exclusion:

  • may not contain harvest units exceeding a total of 3,000 acres, and
  • shall be based on the best available scientific information.

A forest management activity covered by this categorical exclusion shall be subject to section 206.

(Sec. 206) The extraordinary circumstances procedures under a specified federal regulation (or a successor regulation) shall apply to a proposal for:

  • a forest management activity that is categorically excluded under this title, or
  • a project that is categorically excluded under the Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2013.

In determining whether extraordinary circumstances preclude a proposal for such an activity or project, the Department concerned shall consider the beneficial effect of the proposed activity or project on sensitive species.

The Department concerned shall not determine that extraordinary circumstances preclude such a proposal from being categorically excluded if there is a reasonable beneficial effect or reasonably foreseeable beneficial effect of the proposed activity or project on sensitive species.

Uncertainty with respect to the degree of the beneficial effect of a proposed activity or project on sensitive species shall not preclude the use of a categorical exclusion.

(Sec. 207) A forest management activity covered by a categorical exclusion granted by this title shall be conducted consistent with the forest plan applicable to the NFS land or public land covered by that activity.

(Sec. 208) Forest management activities carried out under this title shall not include the construction of any new permanent roads.

The Department concerned may carry out necessary maintenance of, repairs to, or reconstruction of, an existing permanent road for purposes of this title.

The Department concerned shall decommission any temporary road constructed under this title within three years of the completion of the project.

(Sec. 209) This title does not apply to:

  • a component of the National Wilderness Preservation System,
  • any federal land on which the removal of vegetation is prohibited by an Act of Congress,
  • a congressionally designated wilderness study area, or
  • an area in which the activities authorized under this title would be inconsistent with the applicable resource management plan.

TITLE III--TRIBAL FORESTRY PARTICIPATION AND PROTECTION

(Sec. 301) Interior shall take specified administrative action under the Tribal Forest Protection Act of 2004 within 120 days of receiving a request from an Indian Tribe to enter into an agreement or contract to carry out a project to protect Indian forest land or rangeland (including bordering or adjacent federal land). Interior shall (under current law, may) issue a notice of denial to the Tribe if the request is denied.

(Sec. 302) The Department concerned, at the request of an Indian Tribe, may treat federal forest land as Indian forest land for purposes of planning and conducting forest land management activities under the National Indian Forest Resources Management Act if the federal forest land is located within, or mostly within, a geographic area presenting a feature or involving circumstances principally relevant to that Indian tribe.

The Department concerned and the Tribe, as part of an agreement to treat federal land as Indian forest land, shall:

  • provide for continued public access (with possible exceptions),
  • continue sharing revenue generated by the federal forest land with state and local governments,
  • comply with applicable prohibitions on the export of unprocessed logs harvested from the federal forest land,
  • recognize all right-of way agreements in effect on federal forest land before tribal forest land management activities commence, and
  • ensure that any commercial timber removed from the federal forest land is sold on a competitive bid basis.

(Sec. 303) Interior and USDA may carry out demonstration projects under which federally recognized Indian tribes or tribal organizations may contract to perform administrative, management, and other functions of programs of the Tribal Forest Protection Act of 2004 through contracts entered into under the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act.

TITLE IV--MISCELLANEOUS FOREST MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES

(Sec. 402) The State-Supported Forest Management Fund is established in the Treasury to cover costs to plan, carry out, and monitor a forest management activity on NFS land or public land that is developed through a collaborative process, proposed by a resource advisory committee, or covered by a community wildfire protection plan.

The Fund shall consist of such amounts as may be: (1) contributed by an eligible entity for deposit into the Fund, (2) appropriated to the Fund, or (3) generated by forest management activities carried out using amounts in the Fund.

An "eligible entity" is:

  • a state or political subdivision containing NFS land or public land,
  • a publicly chartered utility serving at least one state or its political subdivision,
  • a rural electric company, and
  • any other entity appropriate for participation in the Fund.

In making a contribution, an eligible entity may:

  • specify the NFS land or public land for which the contribution may be expended; and
  • limit the types of forest management activities for which the contribution may be expended.

The Knutson-Vandenberg Act shall apply to any forest management activity carried out using amounts from the Fund.

The Fund shall terminate on September 30, 2018.

(Sec. 403) Courts reviewing an agency action shall balance short- and long-term impacts of forest management activities in considering injunctive relief.

(Sec. 404) USDA shall establish a competitive grant program to provide financial and technical assistance to:

  • encourage active forest management on cross-boundary priority forest landscapes, including land owned by beginning and previously unengaged forest owners, in order to maintain forest health;
  • protect forests from natural threats and wildfire;
  • enhance public benefits from forests;
  • conserve and manage working forest landscapes for multiple values and uses; and
  • advance priorities in statewide forest assessment and resource strategies.

To become eligible to receive a grant, an applicant shall submit to USDA, through the state forester or appropriate state agency, a state and private forest landscape-scale restoration proposal (that includes specified criteria) based on a restoration strategy that is:

  • complete or substantially complete,
  • for a multiyear period,
  • composed of nonindustrial private forest land or state forest land,
  • accessible by wood-processing infrastructure, and
  • based on the best available science.

In making grants under the program, USDA shall give priority to plans that:

  • further a statewide forest assessment and resource strategy;
  • promote cross boundary landscape collaboration; and
  • leverage public and private resources.

The Forest Service, the Natural Resources Conservation Service, and relevant stakeholders shall collaborate and consult on an ongoing basis regarding the administration of the program and identify other applicable resources towards landscape-scale restoration.

As a condition for receiving a grant under the program, USDA shall require the grant recipient to furnish funds or in-kind support from nonfederal sources in an amount that is at least equal to the amount furnished by the federal government.

USDA may, in making grants under the program, consider coordination with and proximity to other landscape-scale projects on other land under its jurisdiction, the jurisdiction of Interior, or the jurisdiction of a state governor.

USDA shall report to Congress on the status of the development, execution, and administration of selected projects, accounting of program funding expenditures, and specific accomplishments that have resulted from landscape-scale projects.

The State and Private Forest Landscape-Scale Restoration Fund is established in the Treasury to be used by USDA to make grants.

The bill authorizes appropriations for such Fund through FY2018.

(Sec. 405) USDA shall establish within the Forest Service a pilot arbitration program to designate specified projects for an alternative dispute resolution process to replace the judicial review of those projects.

USDA shall establish a process for the designation of projects under the program and publish a description of that process in the Federal Register.

No more than 10 projects may be designated for the program in any applicable calendar year.

The authority of USDA to designate a project under the program terminates on October 1, 2018.

An individual or entity:

  • may file a demand for arbitration of a project that has been designated for the program in accordance with specified federal law; and
  • if such a demand for arbitration is filed, shall include in the demand a proposal for an alternative to the project describing each modification sought with respect to the project.

A demand for arbitration may only be filed by an individual or entity that has participated in a collaborative process or has proposed the project with a resource advisory committee.

An arbitrator shall make a decision on each demand for arbitration by selecting only:

  • the project, as approved by USDA; or
  • a proposal submitted by an individual or entity for an alternative to the project, as described in this section.

An arbitrator may not modify any proposal contained in a demand for arbitration under the program.

A decision made by an arbitrator under the program shall be:

  • based only on the administrative record of the project;
  • within the authority of USDA;
  • consistent with each applicable forest plan; and
  • binding;

Arbitration under the program shall be conducted according to the rules and procedures of the American Arbitration Association.

A decision made by an arbitrator under the program shall not be considered to be a major federal action and shall not be subject to judicial review, except as provided under specified federal law.

(Sec. 406) USDA shall establish a NFS accelerated landscape restoration pilot program for the restoration or maintenance of designated landscapes.

The Forest Service shall designate at least 10 landscape-scale areas within the NFS for the program.

Each designated landscape shall:

  • include at least 75,000 acres, but not more than 1 million acres;
  • be identified by a collaborative group;
  • not include any inventoried roadless area; and
  • include forests that are not in a state of forest health, are at an increased risk of high-severity wildfire, or are at an increased risk of an insect or disease infection.

In designating landscape-scale areas for the program, USDA shall:

  • prioritize landscape-scale areas in which social, ecological, and economic conditions support landscape-scale restoration; and
  • consider certain ecological and economic factors and other specified factors.

USDA shall publish in the Federal Register:

  • a notice of the process for the designation of landscape-scale areas under the program, and
  • a specified final notice with respect to each designated landscape.

USDA shall prepare a specified landscape-scale environmental impact statement for each designated landscape for purposes of complying with the NEPA.

The bill authorizes appropriations through FY2018.

(Sec. 407) The bill designates specified federal lands in the Cherokee National Forest in Tennessee as wilderness and as additions to the National Wilderness Preservation System.

(Sec. 408) The bill amends the Small Tracts Act of 1983 (the Act) to permit the sale, exchange, or interchange under such Act of NFS lands the sale or exchange of which is not practicable under any other authority of the USDA which have a value determined to be not more than $500,000.

Those lands permitted to be sold, exchanged, or interchanged under the Act include:

  • parcels of 40 acres or less which are determined to be physically isolated, to be inaccessible, or to have lost their National Forest character;
  • parcels of 10 acres or less which are not eligible for conveyance under such Act, but which are encroached upon by permanent habitable improvements for which there is no evidence that the encroachment was intentional or negligent; and
  • parcels used as a cemetery (including a parcel of at least one acre adjacent to the parcel used as a cemetery), a landfill, or a sewage treatment plant under a special use authorization issued by the USDA.

Any proceeds under this section shall be deposited in the special fund established under the Sisk Act and made available for:

  • the acquisition of land or interests in land for administrative sites for the NFS in the state from which the amounts were derived;
  • the acquisition of land or interests in land for inclusion in the NFS in that state, including those which enhance opportunities for recreational access;
  • the performance of deferred maintenance on administrative sites for the NFS in that state or other deferred maintenance activities in that state which enhance opportunities for recreational access; and
  • the reimbursement of the USDA for costs incurred in preparing a competitive sale conducted under the authority of the Act.

(Sec. 409) The bill amends the Forest Service Facility Realignment and Enhancement Act of 2005 to extend the authority of the USDA to initiate conveyances of Forest Service administrative sites under such Act through FY2018.

(Sec. 410) Federal agencies shall not authorize a prescribed burn on federal lands if, for the county or contiguous county in which the federal land is located, the national fire danger rating system indicates an extreme fire danger level.

However, a federal agency may authorize a prescribed burn under such a condition if the agency coordinates it with applicable state government and local fire officials.

At the end of every fiscal year, the Forest Service shall submit a report that describes:

  • the number and locations of prescribed burns during that fiscal year, and
  • each prescribed burn during that year that was authorized by a federal agency pursuant to this section.

(Sec. 411) USDA shall not designate any land in the Nantahala National Forest or the Pisgah National Forest in North Carolina as a wilderness study area until the affected counties approve the designation.

TITLE V--KISATCHIE NATIONAL FOREST LAND CONVEYANCE

Kisatchie National Forest Land Conveyance Act of 2016

(Sec. 502) This section sets forth a finding of Congress that it is in the public interest to authorize the conveyance of certain federal land in the Kisatchie National Forest in Louisiana for market value consideration.

(Sec. 504) USDA may convey, by quitclaim deed, specified federal land in Winn Parish, Louisiana, at public or private sale, including competitive sale by auction, bid, or other methods.

USDA shall convey, by quitclaim deed, portions of such land to Collins Camp Properties, Inc.

USDA may:

  • configure the federal land to be conveyed so as to maximize the marketability of the conveyance or to achieve management objectives, and
  • establish any terms and conditions for conveyances under this title that are in the public interest.

Consideration for a conveyance of federal land under this title shall be in cash and in an amount that is equal to the market value of the land being conveyed.

The market value of the federal land to be conveyed shall be determined as follows:

  • for the federal land to be conveyed to Collins Camp Properties, by a specified appraisal; or
  • if conveyed by a method other than the methods specified in this section, by competitive sale.

In any conveyance of federal land under this title to Collins Camp Properties, or any occupant residing on the federal land under a special use permit issued by the Forest Service, USDA shall meet disclosure requirements for hazardous substances, pollutants, and contaminants, but shall not otherwise be required to remediate or abate them.

As a condition of the conveyance, Collins Camp Properties, or any such occupant that acquires the federal land shall agree to indemnify and hold harmless the United States for costs associated with the remediation or abatement of any hazardous substances, pollutants, or contaminants on the acquired land.

Nothing in this section otherwise affects the application of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 to conveyances of federal lands under this title.

(Sec. 505) USDA shall deposit the proceeds from the conveyances of the federal lands in the fund established under the Sisk Act.

USDA may use the deposited amounts from such fund for the acquisition of land and interests in land in the Kisatchie National Forest in Louisiana.

(Sec. 506) As a condition of a conveyance of federal land to Collins Camp Properties, USDA shall require Collins Camp Properties to pay at closing reasonable appraisal costs and the cost of any administrative and environmental analyses required by law.

An offer by Collins Camp Properties for acquiring the federal land must be accompanied by a written statement from each holder of a Forest Service special use authorization with respect to such land specifying that the holder agrees to relinquish that authorization upon the conveyance of such land to Collins Camp Properties.

If a holder of such a special use authorization fails to furnish such a written statement, USDA shall require, as a condition of the conveyance, that Collins Camp Properties administer that authorization in accordance with its terms until it expires.

TITLE VI--CHATTAHOOCHEE-OCONEE NATIONAL FOREST LAND ADJUSTMENT

Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest Land Adjustment Act of 2016

(Sec. 602) This title sets forth findings with respect to certain NFS land in Georgia.

(Sec. 604) USDA may: (1) sell or exchange all right, title, and interest of the United States in 30 tracts of NFS land in Georgia totaling approximately 3,841 acres; (2) modify the boundaries of such lands based on land management considerations; and (3) reserve any rights-of-way or other rights or interests in land sold or exchanged under this section that is considered necessary for management purposes or to protect the public interest.

USDA shall convey by quitclaim deed land sold or exchanged under in this section.

USDA may not sell or exchange land under this section for less than market value, as determined by an appraisal or through a competitive bidding process.

Such an appraisal shall be:

  • consistent with the Uniform Appraisal Standards for Federal Land Acquisitions or the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice, and
  • subject to USDA's approval.

Consideration for sales of land or equalization of exchanges under this section shall be paid in cash.

USDA may accept a cash equalization payment that exceeds 25% of the value of the land to be exchanged.

USDA may:

  • sell land under this section at public or private sale, including competitive sale by auction, bid, or otherwise, according to any terms, conditions, or procedures that are in the best interest of the United States;
  • make public or private solicitations for the sale or exchange of land;
  • reject any offer that is not adequate or in the public interest;
  • use a broker or other third party in the sales or exchanges of land; and
  • from the proceeds of such a sale or exchange, pay reasonable commissions or fees, if applicable.

(Sec. 605) USDA shall deposit the proceeds or a cash equalization payment of a sale or exchange of land in the fund established under the Sisk Act.

Amounts deposited into such fund shall be made available to USDA only for the acquisition of land for the NFS in Georgia.

Nothing in this title authorizes the use of the amounts deposited into such fund for the acquisition of land without the landowner's written consent.

Jul 9, 201536

Resilient Federal Forests Act of 2015

TITLE I--EXPEDITED ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS AND AVAILABILITY OF CATEGORICAL EXCLUSIONS TO EXPEDITE FOREST MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES

(Sec. 101) This bill shall apply whenever the Department concerned, either the Department of Agriculture (USDA) with respect to National Forest System land or the Department of the Interior with respect to public lands, prepares an environmental assessment or an environmental impact statement pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) for a forest management activity that:

  • is developed through a collaborative process;
  • is proposed by a resource advisory committee; or
  • is covered by a community wildfire protection plan.

In such an environmental assessment or environmental impact statement, the Department concerned shall study, develop, and describe only these two alternatives:

  • the forest management activity proposed, and
  • the alternative of no action.

In the case of the alternative of no action, the Department concerned shall evaluate:

  • the effect of no action on forest health, habitat diversity, wildfire potential, and insect and disease potential; and
  • the implications of a resulting decline in forest health, loss of habitat diversity, wildfire, or insect or disease infestation on domestic water costs, wildlife habitat loss, and other economic and social factors.

(Sec. 102) A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to carry out a forest management activity on System or public lands when the primary purpose of the activity is to:

  • address an insect or disease infestation;
  • reduce hazardous fuel loads;
  • protect a municipal water source;
  • maintain, enhance, or modify critical habitat to protect it from catastrophic disturbances;
  • increase water yield; or
  • any combination of such purposes.

(A "categorical exclusion" under NEPA is a category of actions which do not individually or cumulatively have a significant effect on the human environment and which have been found to have no such effect in procedures adopted by a federal agency in implementing environmental regulations and for which, therefore, neither an Environmental Assessment nor an Environmental Impact Statement is required.)

A forest management activity covered by this categorical exclusion may not contain harvest units exceeding a total of 5,000 acres.

Such a forest management activity, furthermore, may contain harvest units totaling up to 15,000 acres if it is developed through a collaborative process, proposed by a resource advisory committee, or covered by a community wildfire protection plan.

(Sec. 103) A categorical exclusion is also made available to the Department concerned to carry out a salvage operation as part of the restoration of System or public lands following a catastrophic event.

This kind of salvage operation may not contain harvest units exceeding a total of 5,000 acres either, nor may they exceed one-third of the area impacted by the catastrophic event.

This kind of salvage operation may not include any new permanent roads, and any temporary roads constructed as part of the salvage operation must be retired within five fiscal years after completion of the operation.

A covered salvage operation must comply with the standards and guidelines for stream buffers in the applicable forest plan unless waived.

A reforestation plan must be developed under the Knutson-Vandenberg Act as part of the salvage operation.

(Sec. 104) A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to carry out a forest management activity on up to 5,000 acres of System or public lands when its primary purpose is to modify, improve, enhance, or create early successional forests for wildlife habitat improvement and other purposes, consistent with the applicable forest plan.

(Sec. 105) The Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2003 is amended to add to the areas to which a collaborative restoration project outside the wildland-urban interface is limited Condition Classes 2 or 3 (Insect & Disease Categorical Exclusions) in Fire Regime IV (lodgepole pine).

(Sec. 106) A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to carry out specified forest management activities on up to 5,000 acres of System or public lands whose primary purpose is to improve, restore, or reduce the risk of wildfire on those lands.

(Sec. 107) A forest management activity covered by a categorical exclusion granted by this title shall be conducted consistent with the forest plan applicable to the System or public lands covered by that activity.

TITLE II--SALVAGE AND REFORESTATION IN RESPONSE TO CATASTROPHIC EVENTS

(Sec. 201) Any environmental assessment for a proposed salvage operation or reforestation activity on System or public lands impacted by a large-scale catastrophic event must be completed within three months after the event.

Reforestation of at least 75% of the impacted lands must be achieved within five years after that event.

The special fund under the Knutson-Vandenberg Act shall be available to USDA for reforestation activities.

In the case of a salvage operation or reforestation activity proposed for System or public lands adversely impacted by a large-scale catastrophic event, the Department concerned shall allow a specified length of time for public scoping and comment, objections, and agency response. The Department concerned shall implement the project immediately upon completion of this process and expiration of the three-month period.

(Sec. 202) A salvage operation or reforestation activity authorized by this title shall be conducted consistent with the forest plan applicable to the System lands or public lands covered by that operation or activity.

(Sec. 203) No restraining order, preliminary injunction, or injunction pending appeal shall be issued by any U.S. court with respect to any decision to prepare or conduct a salvage operation or reforestation activity in response to a large-scale catastrophic event.

(Sec. 204) In applying this title, the Department concerned may not carry out salvage operations or reforestation activities on System or public lands:

  • included in the National Wilderness Preservation System,
  • located within an inventoried roadless area unless the activity is consistent with the forest plan, or
  • on which timber harvesting for any purpose is prohibited by statute.

TITLE III--COLLABORATIVE PROJECT LITIGATION REQUIREMENT

(Sec. 302) Any plaintiffs challenging a forest management activity developed through a collaborative process or proposed by a resource advisory committee shall be required to post a bond or other security equal to the anticipated costs, expenses, and attorneys fees of the Department concerned as defendant.

If the Department concerned prevails in such an action, the losing plaintiff shall pay the Department's reasonable costs, expenses, and attorneys fees up to but not in excess of the amount of the bond or other security posted.

Any bond or security funds remaining after payment to the Department shall be returned to the plaintiff or plaintiffs, and the entire amount of the bond or security shall be returned to a prevailing plaintiff.

Any settlement agreement between plaintiff and the Department shall provide for sharing of the costs, expenses, and attorneys fees incurred by the parties.

No amounts may be obligated or expended from the Claims and Judgment Fund of the Treasury to pay any fees or other expenses to any such plaintiff.

TITLE IV--SECURE RURAL SCHOOLS AND COMMUNITY SELF-DETERMINATION ACT AMENDMENTS

(Sec. 401) Repealed is the Merchantable Timber Contracting Pilot Program under the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act of 2000.

The Department concerned shall ensure that at least 50% of the project funds reserved by a participating county for carrying out a special project on federal land or certain nonfederal land under the same Act shall be made available only for projects that:

  • include the sale of timber or other forest products, reduce fire risks, or improve water supplies; and
  • implement stewardship objectives that enhance forest ecosystems or restore and improve land health and water quality.

(Sec. 402) The membership of a new resource advisory committee may lower from 15 to a minimum of 9 during a specified period ending September 30, 2020.

The members of a new resource advisory committee shall reside within the county or counties in which the committee has jurisdiction or an adjacent county.

(Sec. 403) The Forest Service shall conduct a self-sustaining resource advisory committee (RAC) program under which 10 RACs will propose projects intended to:

  • accomplish forest management objectives or support community development, and
  • generate receipts.

Each RAC must have a minimum of six members.

The authority to initiate a project under the RAC program shall terminate on September 30, 2020.

(Sec. 404) A participating county shall be allowed to use certain funds to: (1) reimburse the county for law enforcement patrols performed on federal land, and (2) cover training costs and equipment purchases directly related to emergency services.

(Sec. 405) None of the funds made available to a beneficiary county or other political subdivision of a state under the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act of 2000 shall be used in lieu of or otherwise to offset state funding sources for local schools, facilities, or educational purposes.

TITLE V--STEWARDSHIP END RESULT CONTRACTING

(Sec. 501) The Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2003 is amended to authorize the Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to obligate funds to cover potential cancellation or termination costs for an agreement or contract for stewardship end result contracting projects.

The Forest Service and the BLM shall notify Congress at least 30 days before entering into a multipurpose agreement or contract for a stewardship contracting project that includes a cancellation ceiling exceeding $25 million but does not include proposed funding for cancellation costs up to such cancellation ceiling.

(Sec. 502) If the offset value of the forest products to be removed under a contract for a stewardship contracting project exceeds the value of the resource improvement treatments, the Forest Service and the BLM may: (1) use the excess to satisfy any outstanding liabilities for cancelled agreements or contracts; or (2) if there are no outstanding liabilities, apply the excess to other authorized stewardship projects, as under current law.

(Sec. 503) The value of in-kind resources (and services, as under current law) received by the Forest Service or the BLM under a stewardship contract project shall not be considered monies received from the National Forest System or the public lands (as under current law), but any payments made by the contractor to the Forest Service or the BLM under the project shall be considered monies received from the System or the public lands.

(Sec. 505) Upon the request of a contractor, a contract or agreement for a stewardship contracting project awarded before February 7, 2014, shall be modified by the Forest Service or the BLM to include certain fire liability provisions.

TITLE VI--ADDITIONAL FUNDING SOURCES FOR FOREST MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES

(Sec. 602) Monies from an agreement or contract for a stewardship contracting project shall be available for expenditure without further appropriation to cover up to 25% of the cost of planning additional stewardship end result contracting projects.

The Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Fund shall be used to pay up to 50% of the costs of planning, as well as carrying out and monitoring, ecological restoration treatments on National Forest System land for each proposal selected under the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program.

(Sec. 603) The State-Supported Forest Management Fund is established in the Treasury to cover the costs of the Department concerned to plan, carry out, and monitor a forest management activity on System or public land that is developed through a collaborative process, proposed by a resource advisory committee, or covered by a community wildfire protection plan.

The Fund shall consist of such amounts as may be: (1) contributed by an eligible entity for deposit into the Fund, (2) appropriated to the Fund, or (3) generated by forest management activities carried out using amounts in the Fund.

An "eligible entity" is:

  • a state or political subdivision containing National Forest System lands or public lands,
  • a publicly chartered utility serving at least one state or political subdivision,
  • a rural electric company, and
  • any other entity appropriate for participation in the Fund.

In making a contribution, an eligible entity may:

  • specify the System or public lands for which the contribution may be expended; and
  • limit the types of forest management activities for which the contribution may be expended.

The Knutson-Vandenberg Act shall apply to any forest management activity carried out using amounts from the Fund.

The Fund shall terminate 10 years after the enactment of this Act.

TITLE VII--TRIBAL FORESTRY PARTICIPATION AND PROTECTION

(Sec. 701) Interior shall take specified administrative action under the Tribal Forest Protection Act of 2004 within 120 days of receiving a request from an Indian Tribe to enter into an agreement or contract to carry out a project to protect Indian forest land or rangeland (including bordering or adjacent federal land). Interior shall (under current law, may) issue a notice of denial to the Tribe if the request is denied.

(Sec. 702) The Department concerned, at the request of an Indian Tribe, may treat federal forest land as Indian forest land for purposes of planning and conducting forest land management activities under the National Indian Forest Resources Management Act if the federal forest land is located within, or mostly within, a geographic area presenting a feature or involving circumstances principally relevant to that Indian tribe.

The Department concerned and the Tribe, as part of an agreement to treat federal land as Indian forest land, shall:

  • provide for continued public access (with possible exceptions),
  • continue sharing revenue generated by the federal forest land with state and local governments,
  • comply with applicable prohibitions on the export of unprocessed logs harvested from the federal forest land,
  • recognize all right-of way agreements in place on federal forest land before tribal management activities commence; and
  • ensure that all commercial timber removed from the federal forest land is sold on a competitive bid basis.

(Sec. 703) Interior and USDA may carry out demonstration projects by which federally recognized Indian tribes or tribal organizations may contract to perform administrative, management, and other functions of programs of the Tribal Forest Protection Act of 2004 through contracts entered into under the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act.

TITLE VIII--MISCELLANEOUS FOREST MANAGEMENT PROVISIONS

(Sec. 801) Courts reviewing an agency action shall balance short- and long-term effects of forest management activities in considering injunctive relief.

(Sec. 802) The Forest Supervisor of a National Forest System unit must perform certain tasks when considering whether to decommission a defined maintenance level one or two system road within a designated high fire-prone area. No Forest Service road may be decommissioned without advance approval of the Regional Forester.

(Sec. 803) USDA may not apply to National Forest System lands any of the amendments to forest plans adopted in the Eastside Screens requirements.

(Sec. 804) If the Department concerned determines that, in order to conduct a project or to carry out an activity implementing a forest plan, an amendment to that plan is required, the Department shall execute that amendment as a nonsignificant plan amendment through the record of decision or decision notice for the project or activity.

(Sec. 805) USDA shall (currently, may) require, under the Knutson-Vandenberg Act, each purchaser of national-forest timber to make certain deposits of money in addition to the payments for the timber to cover the cost to the federal government of certain forest land management activities.

Amounts in the special fund: (1) shall be used exclusively to implement such forest land management activities, but (2) may be used anywhere within the Forest Service Region from which the original deposits were collected.

(Sec. 806) Unless specifically provided by a provision of titles I through VIII of this Act, the authorities by such titles do not apply with respect to any System or public lands:

  • included in the National Wilderness Preservation System,
  • located within an inventoried roadless area unless the forest management activity is consistent with the forest plan, or
  • on which timber harvesting for any purpose is prohibited by statute.

(Sec. 807) The Northwest Forest Plan Survey and Manage Mitigation Measure Standard and Guidelines shall not apply to any System or public lands.

(Sec. 808) All of the public land managed by the BLM in the Salem District, Eugene District, Roseburg District, Coos Bay District, Medford District, and the Klamath Resource Area of the Lakeview District in Oregon shall be managed pursuant to federal law relating to management of the revested Oregon and California Railroad and reconveyed Coos Bay Wagon Road grant lands under Interior jurisdiction and classified as timberlands and power-site lands valuable for timber. All of the revenue produced from such lands shall be deposited into the Oregon and California land-grant fund, except any revenue required to be deposited into the Coos Bay Wagon Road grant fund.

(Sec. 809) Interior shall develop and consider, a reference analysis and two additional alternatives as part of the revisions of the resource management plans for the BLM's Salem, Eugene, Coos Bay, Roseburg, and Medford Districts and the Klamath Resource Area of the Lakeview District.

This reference analysis shall measure and assume the harvest of the annual growth net of natural mortality for all forested land in the planning area in order to determine the maximum sustained yield capacity of the forested land base and to establish a baseline by which Interior shall measure incremental effects on the sustained yield capacity and environmental impacts from management prescriptions in all other alternatives.

Interior shall develop and consider:

  • one additional alternative with the goal of maximizing the total carbon benefits from forest storage and wood product storage; and
  • a second additional alternative that produces the greater of 500 million board feet or the annual net growth on the acres classified as timberland, excluding any congressionally reserved areas.

Interior shall publish the reference analysis and additional alternatives and analyze their environmental and economic consequences in a supplemental draft environmental impact statement.

(Sec. 810) USDA shall develop through a collaborative process and implement at least one landscape-scale forest restoration project that includes the generation of material that will be used to promote advanced wood products.

TITLE IX--MAJOR DISASTER FOR WILDFIRE ON FEDERAL LAND

(Sec. 901) The Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act is amended to define "major disaster for wildfire on federal lands" to mean any wildfire or wildfires that warrant assistance to supplement the efforts and resources of Interior or USDA on federal lands or on nonfederal lands pursuant to a fire protection agreement or cooperative agreement.

(Sec. 902) A process is established for declaration of a major disaster for wildfire on federal lands managed by the BLM, the National Park Service, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Forest Service.

Either Interior (respecting federal land under its jurisdiction) or USDA (respecting Forest Service land) may request the President to start such a process, and the President in turn may transfer funds to them to conduct wildfire suppression operations on the lands affected.

The President shall establish a wildfire suppression operations account for wildfires on federal lands, whose funds shall be transferred to the wildfire suppression subactivity of the Wildland Fire Management Account.

If transferred amounts are used to conduct wildfire suppression operations on non-federal land, the respective Department shall secure reimbursement for the cost of such operations.

The respective Department shall report to Congress annually on:

  • the risk-based factors that influenced management decisions regarding wildfire suppression operations of the federal land management agencies under its jurisdiction;
  • a statistically significant sample of large fires;
  • total expenditures for wildfire suppression operations of the federal land management agencies under its jurisdiction, and
  • lessons learned.

(Sec. 903) No funds may be transferred to or from the federal land management agencies' wildfire suppression operations accounts to or from any account or subactivity of the federal land management agencies that is not used to cover the cost of wildfire suppression operations.

Jun 25, 201518

Resilient Federal Forests Act of 2015

TITLE I--EXPEDITED ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS AND AVAILABILITY OF CATEGORICAL EXCLUSIONS TO EXPEDITE FOREST MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES

(Sec. 101) This bill shall apply whenever the Department concerned, either the Department of Agriculture (USDA) with respect to National Forest System land or the Department of the Interior with respect to public lands, prepares an environmental assessment or an environmental impact statement pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) for a forest management activity that:

  • is developed through a collaborative process;
  • is proposed by a resource advisory committee; or
  • is covered by a community wildfire protection plan.

In such an environmental assessment or environmental impact statement, the Department concerned shall study, develop, and describe only these two alternatives:

  • the forest management activity proposed, and
  • the alternative of no action.

In the case of the alternative of no action, the Department concerned shall evaluate:

  • the effect of no action on forest health, habitat diversity, wildfire potential, and insect and disease potential; and
  • the implications of a resulting decline in forest health, loss of habitat diversity, wildfire, or insect or disease infestation on domestic water costs, wildlife habitat loss, and other economic and social factors.

(Sec. 102) A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to carry out a forest management activity on System or public lands when the primary purpose of the activity is to:

  • address an insect or disease infestation;
  • reduce hazardous fuel loads;
  • protect a municipal water source;
  • maintain, enhance, or modify critical habitat to protect it from catastrophic disturbances;
  • increase water yield; or
  • any combination of such purposes.

(A "categorical exclusion" under NEPA is a category of actions which do not individually or cumulatively have a significant effect on the human environment and which have been found to have no such effect in procedures adopted by a federal agency in implementing environmental regulations and for which, therefore, neither an Environmental Assessment nor an Environmental Impact Statement is required.)

A forest management activity covered by this categorical exclusion may not contain harvest units exceeding a total of 5,000 acres.

Such a forest management activity, furthermore, may contain harvest units totaling up to 15,000 acres if it is developed through a collaborative process, proposed by a resource advisory committee, or covered by a community wildfire protection plan.

(Sec. 103) A categorical exclusion is also made available to the Department concerned to carry out a salvage operation as part of the restoration of System or public lands following a catastrophic event.

This kind of salvage operation may not contain harvest units exceeding a total of 5,000 acres either, nor may they exceed one-third of the area impacted by the catastrophic event.

This kind of salvage operation may not include any new permanent roads, and any temporary roads constructed as part of the salvage operation must be retired within two years after completion of the operation.

A covered salvage operation must comply with the standards and guidelines for stream buffers in the applicable forest plan unless waived.

A reforestation plan must be developed under the Knutson-Vandenberg Act as part of the salvage operation.

(Sec. 104) A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to carry out a forest management activity on up to 5,000 acres of System or public lands when its primary purpose is to modify, improve, enhance, or create early successional forests for wildlife habitat improvement and other purposes, consistent with the applicable forest plan.

(Sec. 105) The Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2003 is amended to add to the areas to which a collaborative restoration project outside the wildland-urban interface is limited Condition Classes 2 or 3 (Insect & Disease Categorical Exclusions) in Fire Regime IV (lodgepole pine).

(Sec. 106) A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to carry out specified forest management activities on up to 5,000 acres of System or public lands whose primary purpose is to improve, restore, or reduce the risk of wildfire on those lands.

(Sec. 107) A forest management activity covered by a categorical exclusion granted by this title shall be conducted consistent with the forest plan applicable to the System or public lands covered by that activity.

TITLE II--SALVAGE AND REFORESTATION IN RESPONSE TO CATASTROPHIC EVENTS

(Sec. 201) Any environmental assessment for a proposed salvage operation or reforestation activity on System or public lands impacted by a large-scale catastrophic event must be completed within three months after the event.

Reforestation of at least 75% of the impacted lands must be achieved within five years after that event.

The special fund under the Knutson-Vandenberg Act shall be available to USDA for reforestation activities.

(Sec. 202) A salvage operation or reforestation activity authorized by this title shall be conducted consistent with the forest plan applicable to the System lands or public lands covered by that operation or activity.

(Sec. 203) No restraining order, preliminary injunction, or injunction pending appeal shall be issued by any U.S. court with respect to any decision to prepare or conduct a salvage operation or reforestation activity in response to a large-scale catastrophic event.

(Sec. 204) In applying this title, the Department concerned may not carry out salvage operations or reforestation activities on System or public lands:

  • included in the National Wilderness Preservation System,
  • located within an inventoried roadless area unless the activity is consistent with the forest plan, or
  • on which timber harvesting for any purpose is prohibited by statute.

TITLE III--COLLABORATIVE PROJECT LITIGATION REQUIREMENT

(Sec. 302) Any plaintiffs challenging a forest management activity developed through a collaborative process or proposed by a resource advisory committee shall be required to post a bond or other security equal to the anticipated costs, expenses, and attorneys fees of the Department concerned as defendant.

If the Department concerned prevails in such an action, the losing plaintiff shall pay the Department's reasonable costs, expenses, and attorneys fees up to but not in excess of the amount of the bond or other security posted.

Any bond or security funds remaining after payment to the Department shall be returned to the plaintiff or plaintiffs, and the entire amount of the bond or security shall be returned to a prevailing plaintiff.

Any settlement agreement between plaintiff and the Department shall provide for sharing of the costs, expenses, and attorneys fees incurred by the parties.

No amounts may be obligated or expended from the Claims and Judgment Fund of the U.S. Treasury to pay any fees or other expenses to any such plaintiff.

TITLE IV--SECURE RURAL SCHOOLS AND COMMUNITY SELF-DETERMINATION ACT AMENDMENTS

(Sec. 401) Repealed is the Merchantable Timber Contracting Pilot Program under the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act of 2000.

The Department concerned shall ensure that at least 50% of the project funds reserved by a participating county for carrying out a special project on federal land or certain nonfederal land under the same Act shall be made available only for projects that:

  • include the sale of timber or other forest products; and
  • implement stewardship objectives that enhance forest ecosystems or restore and improve land health and water quality.

(Sec. 402) The membership of a new resource advisory committee may lower from 15 to a minimum of 6 during a specified period ending September 30, 2020.

The members of a new resource advisory committee shall reside within the county or counties in which the committee has jurisdiction or an adjacent county.

(Sec. 403) The USDA Forest Service shall conduct a self-sustaining resource advisory committee (RAC) program under which 10 RACs will propose projects intended to:

  • accomplish forest management objectives or support community development, and
  • generate receipts.

Each RAC must have a minimum of six members.

The authority to initiate a project under the RAC program shall terminate on September 30, 2020.

(Sec. 404) A participating county shall be allowed to use certain funds to: (1) reimburse the county for law enforcement patrols performed on federal land, and (2) cover training costs and equipment purchases directly related to emergency services.

TITLE V--STEWARDSHIP END RESULT CONTRACTING

(Sec. 501) The Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2003 is amended to authorize the Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) of the Department of the Interior to obligate funds to cover potential cancellation or termination costs for an agreement or contract for stewardship end result contracting projects.

The Forest Service and the BLM shall notify Congress at least 30 days before entering into a multipurpose agreement or contract for a stewardship contracting project that includes a cancellation ceiling exceeding $25 million but does not include proposed funding for cancellation costs up to such cancellation ceiling.

(Sec. 502) If the offset value of the forest products to be removed under a contract for a stewardship contracting project exceeds the value of the resource improvement treatments, the Forest Service and the BLM may: (1) use the excess to satisfy any outstanding liabilities for cancelled agreements or contracts; or (2) if there are no outstanding liabilities, apply the excess to other authorized stewardship projects, as under current law.

(Sec. 503) The value of in-kind resources (and services, as under current law) received by the Forest Service or the BLM under a stewardship contract project shall not be considered monies received from the National Forest System or the public lands (as under current law), but any payments made by the contractor to the Forest Service or the BLM under the project shall be considered monies received from the System or the public lands.

TITLE VI--ADDITIONAL FUNDING SOURCES FOR FOREST MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES

(Sec. 602) Monies from an agreement or contract for a stewardship contracting project shall be available for expenditure without further appropriation to cover up to 25% of the cost of planning additional stewardship end result contracting projects.

The Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Fund shall be used to pay up to 50% of the costs of planning, as well as carrying out and monitoring, ecological restoration treatments on National Forest System land for each proposal selected under the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program.

(Sec. 603) The State-Supported Forest Management Fund is established in the Treasury to cover the costs of the Department concerned to plan, carry out, and monitor a forest management activity on System or public land that is developed through a collaborative process, proposed by a resource advisory committee, or covered by a community wildfire protection plan.

The Fund shall consist of such amounts as may be: (1) contributed by an eligible entity for deposit into the Fund, (2) appropriated to the Fund, or (3) generated by forest management activities carried out using amounts in the Fund.

An "eligible entity" is:

  • a state or political subdivision containing National Forest System lands or public lands,
  • a publicly chartered utility serving at least one state or political subdivision,
  • a rural electric company, and
  • any other entity appropriate for participation in the Fund.

In making a contribution, an eligible entity may:

  • specify the System or public lands for which the contribution may be expended; and
  • limit the types of forest management activities for which the contribution may be expended.

The Knutson-Vandenberg Act shall apply to any forest management activity carried out using amounts from the Fund.

The Fund shall terminate 10 years after the enactment of this Act.

TITLE VII--TRIBAL FORESTRY PARTICIPATION AND PROTECTION

(Sec. 701) The Department of the Interior shall take specified administrative action under the Tribal Forest Protection Act of 2004 within 120 days of receiving a request from an Indian Tribe to enter into an agreement or contract to carry out a project to protect Indian forest land or rangeland (including bordering or adjacent federal land). Interior shall (under current law, may) issue a notice of denial to the Tribe if the request is denied.

(Sec. 702) The Department concerned, at the request of an Indian Tribe, may treat federal forest land as Indian forest land for purposes of planning and conducting forest land management activities under the National Indian Forest Resources Management Act if the federal forest land is located within, or mostly within, a geographic area presenting a feature or involving circumstances principally relevant to that Indian tribe.

The Department concerned and the Tribe, as part of an agreement to treat federal land as Indian forest land, shall:

  • provide for continued public access (with possible exceptions),
  • continue sharing revenue generated by the federal forest land with state and local governments,
  • comply with applicable prohibitions on the export of unprocessed logs harvested from the federal forest land, and
  • recognize all right-of way agreements in place on federal forest land before tribal management activities commence.

TITLE VIII--MISCELLANEOUS FOREST MANAGEMENT PROVISIONS

(Sec. 801) Courts reviewing an agency action shall balance short- and long-term effects of forest management activities in considering injunctive relief.

(Sec. 802) The Forest Supervisor of a National Forest System unit must perform certain tasks when considering whether to decommission a defined maintenance level one or two system road within a designated high fire-prone area. No Forest Service road may be decommissioned without advance approval of the Regional Forester.

(Sec. 803) USDA may not apply to National Forest System lands any of the amendments to forest plans adopted in the Eastside Screens requirements.

(Sec. 804) If the Department concerned determines that, in order to conduct a project or to carry out an activity implementing a forest plan, an amendment to that plan is required, the Department shall execute that amendment as a nonsignificant plan amendment through the record of decision or decision notice for the project or activity.

(Sec. 805) USDA shall (currently, may) require, under the Knutson-Vandenberg Act, each purchaser of national-forest timber to make certain deposits of money in addition to the payments for the timber to cover the cost to the federal government of certain forest land management activities.

Amounts in the special fund: (1) shall be used exclusively to implement such forest land management activities, but (2) may be used anywhere within the Forest Service Region from which the original deposits were collected.

(Sec. 806) The authorities provided by this Act, unless otherwise specified, do not apply with respect to System lands or public lands:

  • included in the National Wilderness Preservation System,
  • located within an inventoried roadless area unless the forest management activity is consistent with the forest plan, or
  • on which timber harvesting for any purpose is prohibited by statute.
Jun 25, 201519

Resilient Federal Forests Act of 2015

TITLE I--EXPEDITED ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS AND AVAILABILITY OF CATEGORICAL EXCLUSIONS TO EXPEDITE FOREST MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES

(Sec. 101) This bill shall apply whenever the Department concerned, either the Department of Agriculture (USDA) with respect to National Forest System land or the Department of the Interior with respect to public lands, prepares an environmental assessment or an environmental impact statement pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) for a forest management activity that:

  • is developed through a collaborative process;
  • is proposed by a resource advisory committee; or
  • is covered by a community wildfire protection plan.

In such an environmental assessment or environmental impact statement, the Department concerned shall study, develop, and describe only these two alternatives:

  • the forest management activity proposed, and
  • the alternative of no action.

In the case of the alternative of no action, the Department concerned shall evaluate:

  • the effect of no action on forest health, habitat diversity, wildfire potential, and insect and disease potential; and
  • the implications of a resulting decline in forest health, loss of habitat diversity, wildfire, or insect or disease infestation on domestic water costs, wildlife habitat loss, and other economic and social factors.

(Sec. 102) A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to carry out a forest management activity on System or public lands when the primary purpose of the activity is to:

  • address an insect or disease infestation;
  • reduce hazardous fuel loads;
  • protect a municipal water source;
  • maintain, enhance, or modify critical habitat to protect it from catastrophic disturbances;
  • increase water yield; or
  • any combination of such purposes.

(A "categorical exclusion" under NEPA is a category of actions which do not individually or cumulatively have a significant effect on the human environment and which have been found to have no such effect in procedures adopted by a federal agency in implementing environmental regulations and for which, therefore, neither an Environmental Assessment nor an Environmental Impact Statement is required.)

A forest management activity covered by this categorical exclusion may not contain harvest units exceeding a total of 5,000 acres.

Such a forest management activity, furthermore, may contain harvest units totaling up to 15,000 acres if it is developed through a collaborative process, proposed by a resource advisory committee, or covered by a community wildfire protection plan.

(Sec. 103) A categorical exclusion is also made available to the Department concerned to carry out a salvage operation as part of the restoration of System or public lands following a catastrophic event.

This kind of salvage operation may not contain harvest units exceeding a total of 5,000 acres either, nor may they exceed one-third of the area impacted by the catastrophic event.

This kind of salvage operation may not include any new permanent roads, and any temporary roads constructed as part of the salvage operation must be retired within two years after completion of the operation.

A covered salvage operation must comply with the standards and guidelines for stream buffers in the applicable forest plan unless waived.

A reforestation plan must be developed under the Knutson-Vandenberg Act as part of the salvage operation.

(Sec. 104) A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to carry out a forest management activity on up to 5,000 acres of System or public lands when its primary purpose is to modify, improve, enhance, or create early successional forests for wildlife habitat improvement and other purposes, consistent with the applicable forest plan.

(Sec. 105) The Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2003 is amended to add to the areas to which a collaborative restoration project outside the wildland-urban interface is limited Condition Classes 2 or 3 (Insect & Disease Categorical Exclusions) in Fire Regime IV (lodgepole pine).

(Sec. 106) A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to carry out specified forest management activities on up to 5,000 acres of System or public lands whose primary purpose is to improve, restore, or reduce the risk of wildfire on those lands.

(Sec. 107) A forest management activity covered by a categorical exclusion granted by this title shall be conducted consistent with the forest plan applicable to the System or public lands covered by that activity.

TITLE II--SALVAGE AND REFORESTATION IN RESPONSE TO CATASTROPHIC EVENTS

(Sec. 201) Any environmental assessment for a proposed salvage operation or reforestation activity on System or public lands impacted by a large-scale catastrophic event must be completed within three months after the event.

Reforestation of at least 75% of the impacted lands must be achieved within five years after that event.

The special fund under the Knutson-Vandenberg Act shall be available to USDA for reforestation activities.

(Sec. 202) A salvage operation or reforestation activity authorized by this title shall be conducted consistent with the forest plan applicable to the System lands or public lands covered by that operation or activity.

(Sec. 203) No restraining order, preliminary injunction, or injunction pending appeal shall be issued by any U.S. court with respect to any decision to prepare or conduct a salvage operation or reforestation activity in response to a large-scale catastrophic event.

(Sec. 204) In applying this title, the Department concerned may not carry out salvage operations or reforestation activities on System or public lands:

  • included in the National Wilderness Preservation System,
  • located within an inventoried roadless area unless the activity is consistent with the forest plan, or
  • on which timber harvesting for any purpose is prohibited by statute.

TITLE III--COLLABORATIVE PROJECT LITIGATION REQUIREMENT

(Sec. 302) Any plaintiffs challenging a forest management activity developed through a collaborative process or proposed by a resource advisory committee shall be required to post a bond or other security equal to the anticipated costs, expenses, and attorneys fees of the Department concerned as defendant.

If the Department concerned prevails in such an action, the losing plaintiff shall pay the Department's reasonable costs, expenses, and attorneys fees up to but not in excess of the amount of the bond or other security posted.

Any bond or security funds remaining after payment to the Department shall be returned to the plaintiff or plaintiffs, and the entire amount of the bond or security shall be returned to a prevailing plaintiff.

Any settlement agreement between plaintiff and the Department shall provide for sharing of the costs, expenses, and attorneys fees incurred by the parties.

No amounts may be obligated or expended from the Claims and Judgment Fund of the U.S. Treasury to pay any fees or other expenses to any such plaintiff.

TITLE IV--SECURE RURAL SCHOOLS AND COMMUNITY SELF-DETERMINATION ACT AMENDMENTS

(Sec. 401) Repealed is the Merchantable Timber Contracting Pilot Program under the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act of 2000.

The Department concerned shall ensure that at least 50% of the project funds reserved by a participating county for carrying out a special project on federal land or certain nonfederal land under the same Act shall be made available only for projects that:

  • include the sale of timber or other forest products; and
  • implement stewardship objectives that enhance forest ecosystems or restore and improve land health and water quality.

(Sec. 402) The membership of a new resource advisory committee may lower from 15 to a minimum of 6 during a specified period ending September 30, 2020.

The members of a new resource advisory committee shall reside within the county or counties in which the committee has jurisdiction or an adjacent county.

(Sec. 403) The USDA Forest Service shall conduct a self-sustaining resource advisory committee (RAC) program under which 10 RACs will propose projects intended to:

  • accomplish forest management objectives or support community development, and
  • generate receipts.

Each RAC must have a minimum of six members.

The authority to initiate a project under the RAC program shall terminate on September 30, 2020.

(Sec. 404) A participating county shall be allowed to use certain funds to: (1) reimburse the county for law enforcement patrols performed on federal land, and (2) cover training costs and equipment purchases directly related to emergency services.

TITLE V--STEWARDSHIP END RESULT CONTRACTING

(Sec. 501) The Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2003 is amended to authorize the Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) of the Department of the Interior to obligate funds to cover potential cancellation or termination costs for an agreement or contract for stewardship end result contracting projects.

The Forest Service and the BLM shall notify Congress at least 30 days before entering into a multipurpose agreement or contract for a stewardship contracting project that includes a cancellation ceiling exceeding $25 million but does not include proposed funding for cancellation costs up to such cancellation ceiling.

(Sec. 502) If the offset value of the forest products to be removed under a contract for a stewardship contracting project exceeds the value of the resource improvement treatments, the Forest Service and the BLM may: (1) use the excess to satisfy any outstanding liabilities for cancelled agreements or contracts; or (2) if there are no outstanding liabilities, apply the excess to other authorized stewardship projects, as under current law.

(Sec. 503) The value of in-kind resources (and services, as under current law) received by the Forest Service or the BLM under a stewardship contract project shall not be considered monies received from the National Forest System or the public lands (as under current law), but any payments made by the contractor to the Forest Service or the BLM under the project shall be considered monies received from the System or the public lands.

TITLE VI--ADDITIONAL FUNDING SOURCES FOR FOREST MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES

(Sec. 602) Monies from an agreement or contract for a stewardship contracting project shall be available for expenditure without further appropriation to cover up to 25% of the cost of planning additional stewardship end result contracting projects.

The Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Fund shall be used to pay up to 50% of the costs of planning, as well as carrying out and monitoring, ecological restoration treatments on National Forest System land for each proposal selected under the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program.

(Sec. 603) The State-Supported Forest Management Fund is established in the Treasury to cover the costs of the Department concerned to plan, carry out, and monitor a forest management activity on System or public land that is developed through a collaborative process, proposed by a resource advisory committee, or covered by a community wildfire protection plan.

The Fund shall consist of such amounts as may be: (1) contributed by an eligible entity for deposit into the Fund, (2) appropriated to the Fund, or (3) generated by forest management activities carried out using amounts in the Fund.

An "eligible entity" is:

  • a state or political subdivision containing National Forest System lands or public lands,
  • a publicly chartered utility serving at least one state or political subdivision,
  • a rural electric company, and
  • any other entity appropriate for participation in the Fund.

In making a contribution, an eligible entity may:

  • specify the System or public lands for which the contribution may be expended; and
  • limit the types of forest management activities for which the contribution may be expended.

The Knutson-Vandenberg Act shall apply to any forest management activity carried out using amounts from the Fund.

The Fund shall terminate 10 years after the enactment of this Act.

TITLE VII--TRIBAL FORESTRY PARTICIPATION AND PROTECTION

(Sec. 701) The Department of the Interior shall take specified administrative action under the Tribal Forest Protection Act of 2004 within 120 days of receiving a request from an Indian Tribe to enter into an agreement or contract to carry out a project to protect Indian forest land or rangeland (including bordering or adjacent federal land). Interior shall (under current law, may) issue a notice of denial to the Tribe if the request is denied.

(Sec. 702) The Department concerned, at the request of an Indian Tribe, may treat federal forest land as Indian forest land for purposes of planning and conducting forest land management activities under the National Indian Forest Resources Management Act if the federal forest land is located within, or mostly within, a geographic area presenting a feature or involving circumstances principally relevant to that Indian tribe.

The Department concerned and the Tribe, as part of an agreement to treat federal land as Indian forest land, shall:

  • provide for continued public access (with possible exceptions),
  • continue sharing revenue generated by the federal forest land with state and local governments,
  • comply with applicable prohibitions on the export of unprocessed logs harvested from the federal forest land, and
  • recognize all right-of way agreements in place on federal forest land before tribal management activities commence.

TITLE VIII--MISCELLANEOUS FOREST MANAGEMENT PROVISIONS

(Sec. 801) Courts reviewing an agency action shall balance short- and long-term effects of forest management activities in considering injunctive relief.

(Sec. 802) The Forest Supervisor of a National Forest System unit must perform certain tasks when considering whether to decommission a defined maintenance level one or two system road within a designated high fire-prone area. No Forest Service road may be decommissioned without advance approval of the Regional Forester.

(Sec. 803) USDA may not apply to National Forest System lands any of the amendments to forest plans adopted in the Eastside Screens requirements.

(Sec. 804) If the Department concerned determines that, in order to conduct a project or to carry out an activity implementing a forest plan, an amendment to that plan is required, the Department shall execute that amendment as a nonsignificant plan amendment through the record of decision or decision notice for the project or activity.

(Sec. 805) USDA shall (currently, may) require, under the Knutson-Vandenberg Act, each purchaser of national-forest timber to make certain deposits of money in addition to the payments for the timber to cover the cost to the federal government of certain forest land management activities.

Amounts in the special fund: (1) shall be used exclusively to implement such forest land management activities, but (2) may be used anywhere within the Forest Service Region from which the original deposits were collected.

(Sec. 806) The authorities provided by this Act, unless otherwise specified, do not apply with respect to System lands or public lands:

  • included in the National Wilderness Preservation System,
  • located within an inventoried roadless area unless the forest management activity is consistent with the forest plan, or
  • on which timber harvesting for any purpose is prohibited by statute.
Jun 4, 2015

Resilient Federal Forests Act of 2015

This bill shall apply whenever the Department concerned, either the Department of Agriculture (USDA) with respect to National Forest System land or the Department of the Interior with respect to public lands, prepares an environmental assessment or an environmental impact statement pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) for a forest management activity that:

  • is developed through a collaborative process;
  • is proposed by a resource advisory committee; or
  • is covered by a community wildfire protection plan.

In such an environmental assessment or environmental impact statement, the Department concerned shall study, develop, and describe only these two alternatives:

  • the forest management activity proposed, and
  • the alternative of no action.

In the case of the alternative of no action, the Department concerned shall evaluate:

  • the effect of no action on forest health, habitat diversity, wildfire potential, and insect and disease potential; and
  • the implications of a resulting decline in forest health, loss of habitat diversity, wildfire, or insect or disease infestation on domestic water costs, wildlife habitat loss, and other economic and social factors.

A categorical exclusion is made available to the Department concerned to: (1) expedite specified critical response actions, (2) expedite salvage operations in response to catastrophic events, and (3) meet forest plan goals for early successional forests.

(A "categorical exclusion" under NEPA is a category of actions which do not individually or cumulatively have a significant effect on the human environment and which have been found to have no such effect in procedures adopted by a federal agency in implementing environmental regulations and for which, therefore, neither an Environmental Assessment nor an Environmental Impact Statement is required.)

Any environmental assessment for a salvage operation or reforestation activity proposed to be conducted on National Forest System lands or public lands impacted by a large-scale catastrophic event shall be completed within three months after that event.

Any plaintiffs challenging a forest management activity developed through a collaborative process or proposed by a resource advisory committee shall be required to post a bond or other security.

Repeals the Merchantable Timber Contracting Pilot Program under the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act of 2000.

The Department concerned shall ensure that at least 50% of the project funds reserved by a participating county for carrying out a special project on federal land or certain nonfederal land under the same Act shall be made available only for projects that:

  • include the sale of timber or other forest products; and
  • implement stewardship objectives that enhance forest ecosystems or restore and improve land health and water quality.

The membership of a new resource advisory committee may lower from 15 to a minimum of six during a specified period ending September 30, 2020.

The Forest Service shall conduct a self-sustaining resource advisory committee (RAC) program under which 10 RACs will propose projects intended to:

  • accomplish forest management objectives or support community development, and
  • generate receipts.

A participating county shall be allowed to use certain funds to: (1) reimburse the county for law enforcement patrols performed on federal land, and (2) cover training costs and equipment purchases directly related to emergency services.

The Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management under the Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2003 may obligate funds to cover potential cancellation or termination costs for an agreement or contract for stewardship end result contracting projects.

Monies from an agreement or contract for a stewardship contracting project shall be available for expenditure without further appropriation to cover up to 25% of the cost of planning additional such projects.

The Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Fund shall be used to pay up to 50% of the costs of planning ecological restoration treatments on National Forest System land for each proposal selected under the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program.

The State-Supported Forest Management Fund is established in the Treasury to cover the costs of the Department concerned to plan, carry out, and monitor a forest management activity on National Forest System or public land which is developed through a collaborative process, proposed by a resource advisory committee, or covered by a community wildfire protection plan.

The Department of the Interior shall take specified administrative action under the Tribal Forest Protection Act of 2004 within 120 days of receiving a request from an Indian Tribe to enter into an agreement or contract to carry out a project to protect Indian forest land or rangeland (including bordering or adjacent federal land).

The Secretary concerned may treat federal forest land as Indian forest land for purposes of planning and conducting forest land management activities under the National Indian Forest Resources Management Act if the federal forest land is located within a specified area.

Courts reviewing an agency action shall balance short- and long-term effects of forest management activities in considering injunctive relief.

The Forest Supervisor of a National Forest System unit must perform certain tasks when considering whether to decommission a defined maintenance level one or two system road within a designated high fire-prone area.

USDA may not apply to National Forest System lands any of the amendments to forest plans adopted in the Eastside Screens requirements.

USDA shall require, under the Knutson-Vanderburg Act, each purchaser of national-forest timber to make certain deposits of money in addition to the payments for the timber to cover the cost to the federal government of certain forest land management activities.

National Wilderness Preservation System lands meeting certain criteria are exempt from this Act.

Emergency Wildfire and Forest Management Act of 2016 — Informed