Advocacy Victory on Wildfire Funding Fix
Yesterday, after weeks of intense negotiations, Congressional leaders, released their FY2018 Appropriations Bill, including a comprehensive wildfire funding fix to the budgetary challenges within the U.S. Forest Service and Department of the Interior. We anticipate Congress will pass this legislation later this week.
![Western Wildfire-Shutterstock](http://images.ctfassets.net/4mlen87uc8f3/3NQWWeVqTQZAvKNDevRUAQ/4fc4aa7742183c9899ec97d77e2adac6/western_wildfire_2-web.png?fm=jpg&q=80&w=600)
This is a milestone victory for family forest owners, the forestry community and our partners nationwide who care for our forests. This bi-partisan fix will address both the budgetary erosion that has shrunk many U.S. Forest Service programs over the last 10 years, as well as the ‘fire borrowing’ from other programs when funds have been exhausted.
For all of you that have helped with advocacy to make the case for this long-awaited fix—thank you. This policy change would not have happened without support from Members of Congress on Capitol Hill, governors and the hardworking Congressional staff that have put in hours upon hours of time in negotiations. These leaders on both sides of the aisle were spurred into action by your calls, Hill visits, letters, tweets and more.
While most Americans think of our wildfire and wildfire funding challenges as a public lands issue, it also, very much, affects private lands and private and family forest owners. Before this policy change, funds to fight wildfires were eating up more than 50 percent of the U.S. Forest Service budget, causing other programs, such as those that support family forest owners, to suffer. This comprehensive fix will ensure we can fight wildfires without reducing funds from other programs each year. This will help to end the ‘fire borrowing’ habit, which robs non-wildfire programs mid-year of funding, causing sporadic land management. This fix will also allow the U.S. Forest Service and Department of the Interior to treat catastrophic wildfires as the natural disasters they are, using disaster funding to help pay for a portion of their suppression costs.
Ultimately, this policy fix will mean vital assistance programs for family forest owners that are part of the U.S. Forest Service budget, can operate as needed to help owners implement important forest practices that will get ahead of the wildfires, insects and disease, and the many other challenges we face.
Finally, while this is huge progress, we at AFF will continue to work with Members of Congress on programs and policies that will help family forest owners in addressing our continued forest challenges—such as invasive species, insect epidemics and the overwhelming costs of forest treatments to help reduce fuel loads in our forests. We envision a day when all forest owners have the tools needed to keep their forest healthy and resilient so that these forests continue to provide the clean water, wildlife habitat and sustainable wood supply all Americans need.
Thank you again for your effort on this issue. It is well deserved.
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