TITLE IV
(web source: Thomas )
THE
HERGER-FEINSTEIN QUINCY LIBRARY GROUP
FOREST RECOVERY ACT
Sec. 401. Pilot Project for Plumas,
Lassen, and Tahoe
National Forests to Implement Quincy Library Group
Proposal.
(a) Definition.--For purposes of this section, the term
"Quincy Library Group-Community Stability
Proposal" means
the agreement by a coalition of representatives of
fisheries,
timber, environmental, county government, citizen groups,
and
local communities that formed in northern California to
develop a resource management program that promotes
ecologic
and economic health for certain Federal lands and
communities
in the Sierra Nevada area. Such proposal includes the map
entitled "QUINCY LIBRARY GROUP Community Stability
Proposal", dated October 12, 1993, and prepared by
VESTRA
Resources of Redding, California.
(b) Pilot Project Required.--
(1) Pilot project and purpose.--The
Secretary of
Agriculture (in this section referred to as the
"Secretary"), acting through the Forest Service
and after
completion of an environmental impact statement (a record
of
decision for which shall be adopted within 300 days),
shall
conduct a pilot project on the Federal lands described in
paragraph (2) to implement and demonstrate the
effectiveness
of the resource management activities described in
subsection
(d) and the other requirements of this section, as
recommended in the Quincy Library Group-Community
Stability
Proposal.
(2) Pilot project area.--The Secretary
shall conduct the
pilot project on the Federal lands within Plumas National
Forest, Lassen National Forest, and the Sierraville
Ranger
District of Tahoe National Forest in the State of
California designated as "Available for Group
Selection"
on the map entitled "QUINCY LIBRARY GROUP Community
Stability Proposal", dated October 12, 1993 (in this
section referred to as the "pilot project
area"). Such
map shall be on file and available for inspection in the
appropriate offices of the Forest Service.
(c) Exclusion of Certain Lands,
Riparian Protection and
Compliance.--
(1) Exclusion.--All spotted owl habitat
areas and protected
activity centers located within the pilot project area
designated under subsection (b)(2) will be deferred from
resource management activities required under subsection
(d)
and timber harvesting during the term of the pilot
project.
(2) Riparian protection.--
(A) In general.--The Scientific
Analysis Team guidelines
for riparian system protection described in subparagraph
(B)
shall apply to all resource management activities
conducted
under subsection (d) and all timber harvesting activities
that occur in the pilot project area during the term of
the
pilot project.
(B) Guidelines described.--The
guidelines referred to in
subparagraph (A) are those in the document entitled
"Viability Assessments and Management Considerations
for
Species Associated with Late-Successional and Old-Growth
Forests of the Pacific Northwest", a Forest Service
research
document dated March 1993 and co-authored by the
Scientific
Analysis Team, including Dr. Jack Ward Thomas.
(C) Limitation.--Nothing in this
section shall be construed
to require the application of the Scientific Analysis
Team
guidelines to any livestock grazing in the pilot project
area
during the term of the pilot project, unless the
livestock
grazing is being conducted in the specific location at
which
the Scientific Analysis Team guidelines are being applied
to
an activity under subsection (d).
(3) Compliance.--All resource
management activities
required by subsection (d) shall be implemented to the
extent
consistent with applicable Federal law and the standards
and
guidelines for the conservation of the California spotted
owl
as set forth in the California Spotted Owl Sierran
Provence
Interim Guidelines or the subsequently issued guidelines,
whichever are in effect.
(4) Roadless area protection.--The
Regional Forester for
Region 5 shall direct that any resource management
activity
required by subsection (d)(1) and (2), all road building,
all
timber harvesting activities, and any riparian management
under subsection (d)(4) that utilizes road construction
or
timber harvesting shall not be conducted on Federal lands
within the Plumas National Forest, Lassen National
Forest,
and the Sierraville Ranger District of the Tahoe National
Forest that are designated as either "Off Base"
or
"Deferred" on the map referred to in subsection
(a). Such
direction shall be effective during the term of the pilot
project.
(d) Resource Management
Activities.--During the term of the
pilot project, the Secretary shall implement and carry
out
the following resource management activities on an
acreage
basis on the Federal lands included within the pilot
project
area designated under subsection (b)(2):
(1) Fuelbreak
construction.--Construction of a strategic
system of defensible fuel profile zones, including shaded
fuelbreaks, utilizing thinning, individual tree
selection,
and other methods of vegetation management consistent
with
the Quincy Library Group-Community Stability Proposal, on
not less than 40,000, but not more than 60,000, acres per
year.
(2) Group selection and individual tree
selection.--
Utilization of group selection and individual tree
selection
uneven-aged forest management prescriptions described in
the
Quincy Library Group-Community Stability Proposal to
achieve
a desired future condition of all-age, multistory, fire
resilient forests as follows:
(A) Group selection.--Group selection
on an average acreage
of .57 percent of the pilot project area land each year
of
the pilot project.
(B) Individual tree
selection.--Individual tree selection
may also be utilized within the pilot project area.
(3) Total acreage.--The total acreage
on which resource
management activities are implemented under this
subsection
shall not exceed 70,000 acres each year.
(4) Riparian management.--A program of
riparian management,
including wide protection zones and riparian restoration
projects, consistent with riparian protection guidelines
in
subsection (c)(2)(B).
(e) Cost-Effectiveness.--In conducting
the pilot project,
Secretary shall use the most cost-effective means
available,
as determined by the Secretary, to implement resource
management activities described in subsection (d).
(f) Funding.--
(1) Source of funds.--In conducting the
pilot project, the
Secretary shall use, subject to the relevant
reprogramming
guidelines of the House and Senate Committees on
Appropriations--
(A) those funds specifically provided
to the Forest Service
by the Secretary to implement resource management
activities
according to the Quincy Library Group-Community Stability
Proposal; and
(B) year-end excess funds that are
allocated for the
administration and management of Plumas National Forest,
Lassen National Forest, and the Sierraville Ranger
District
of Tahoe National Forest.
(2) Prohibition on use of certain
funds.--The Secretary may
not conduct the pilot project
[[Page H11127]]
using funds appropriated for any other unit of the
National
Forest System.
(3) Flexibility.--Subject to normal
reprogramming
guidelines, during the term of the pilot project, the
forest
supervisors of Plumas National Forest, Lassen National
Forest, and Tahoe National Forest may allocate and use
all
accounts that contain year-end excess funds and all
available
excess funds for the administration and management of
Plumas
National Forest, Lassen National Forest, and the
Sierraville
Ranger District of Tahoe National Forest to perform the
resource management activities described in subsection
(d).
(4) Restriction.--The Secretary or the
forest supervisors,
as the case may be, shall not utilize authority provided
under paragraphs (1)(B) and (3) if, in their judgment,
doing
so will limit other nontimber related multiple use
activities
for which such funds were available.
(5) Overhead.--The Secretary shall seek
to ensure that of
amounts available to carry out this section--
(A) not more than 12 percent is used or
allocated for
general administration or other overhead; and
(B) at least 88 percent is used to
implement and carry out
activities required by this section.
(6) Authorized supplemental
funds.--There are authorized to
be appropriated to implement and carry out the pilot
project
such sums as are necessary.
(7) Baseline funds.--Amounts available
for resource
management activities authorized under subsection (d)
shall
at a minimum include existing baseline funding levels.
(g) Term of Pilot Project.--The
Secretary shall conduct the
pilot project until the earlier of: (1) the date on which
the
Secretary completes amendment or revision of the land and
resource management plans directed under and in
compliance
with subsection (i) for the Plumas National Forest,
Lassen
National Forest, and Tahoe National Forest; or (2) five
years
after the date of the commencement of the pilot project.
(h) Consultation.--(1) The statement
required by subsection
(b)(1) shall be prepared in consultation with interested
members of the public, including the Quincy Library
Group.
(2) Contracting.--The Forest Service,
subject to the
availability of appropriations, may carry out any (or
all) of
the requirements of this section using private contracts.
(i) Corresponding Forest Plan
Amendments.--Within 2 years
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Regional
Forester for Region 5 shall initiate the process to amend
or
revise the land and resource management plans for Plumas
National Forest, Lassen National Forest, and Tahoe
National
Forest. The process shall include preparation of at least
one
alternative that--
(1) incorporates the pilot project and
area designations
made by subsection (b), the resource management
activities
described in subsection (d), and other aspects of the
Quincy
Library Group-Community Stability Proposal; and
(2) makes other changes warranted by
the analyses conducted
in compliance with section 102(2) of the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4332(2)),
section
6 of the Forest and Rangeland Renewable Resources
Planning
Act of 1974 (16 U.S.C. 1604), and other applicable laws.
(j) Status Reports.--
(1) In general.--Not later than
February 28 of each year
during the term of the pilot project, the Secretary shall
submit to Congress a report on the status of the pilot
project. The report shall include at least the following:
(A) A complete accounting of the use of
funds made
available under subsection (f)(1)(A) until such funds are
fully expended.
(B) A complete accounting of the use of
funds and accounts
made available under subsection (f)(1) for the previous
fiscal year, including a schedule of the amounts drawn
from
each account used to perform resource management
activities
described in subsection (d).
(C) A description of total acres
treated for each of the
resource management activities required under subsection
(d),
forest health improvements, fire risk reductions, water
yield
increases, and other natural resources-related benefits
achieved by the implementation of the resource management
activities described in subsection (d).
(D) A description of the economic
benefits to local
communities achieved by the implementation of the pilot
project.
(E) A comparison of the revenues
generated by, and costs
incurred in, the implementation of the resource
management
activities described in subsection (d) on the Federal
lands
included in the pilot project area with the revenues and
costs during each of the fiscal years 1992 through 1997
for timber management of such lands before their
inclusion
in the pilot project.
(F) A proposed schedule for the
resource management
activities to be undertaken in the pilot project area
during
the 1-year period beginning on the date of submittal of
the
report.
(G) A description of any adverse
environmental impacts from
the pilot project.
(2) Limitation on expenditures.--The
amount of Federal
funds expended on each annual report under this
subsection
shall not exceed $125,000.
(k) Final Report.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall
establish an
independent scientific panel to review and report on
whether,
and to what extent, implementation of the pilot project
under
this section achieved the goals stated in the Quincy
Library
Group-Community Stability Proposal, including improved
ecological health and community stability. The membership
of
the panel shall reflect expertise in diverse disciplines
in
order to adequately address all of those goals.
(2) Preparation.--The panel shall
initiate such review no
sooner than 18 months after the first day of the term of
the
pilot project under subsection (g). The panel shall
prepare
the report in consultation with interested members of the
public, including the Quincy Library Group. The report
shall
include, but not be limited to, the following:
(A) A description of any adverse
environmental impacts
resulting from implementation of the pilot project.
(B) An assessment of watershed
monitoring data on lands
treated pursuant to this section. Such assessment shall
address the following issues on a priority basis: timing
of
water releases; water quality changes; and water yield
changes over the short- and long-term in the pilot
project
area.
(3) Submission to the congress.--The
panel shall submit the
final report to the Congress as soon as practicable, but
in
no case later than 18 months after completion of the
pilot
project.
(4) Limitation on expenditures.--The
amount of Federal
funds expended for the report under this subsection,
other
than for watershed monitoring, shall not exceed $350,000.
The
amount of Federal funds expended for watershed monitoring
under this subsection shall not exceed $175,000 for each
fiscal year in which the report is prepared.
(l) Relationship to Other
Laws.--Nothing in this section
exempts the pilot project from any Federal environmental
law.
(m) Loans for Demonstration Projects
for Wood Waste or Low-
Quality Wood Byproducts.--
(1) Evaluation of loan
advisability.--The Alternative
Agricultural Research and Commercialization Corporation
established under section 1658 of the Food, Agriculture,
Conservation, and Trade Act of 1990 (7 U.S.C. 5902) (in
this
section referred to as the "Corporation") shall
evaluate
the advisability of making commercialization assistance
loans
under section 1661 of such Act (7 U.S.C. 5905) to support
a
minimum of 2 demonstration projects for the development
and
demonstration of commercial application of technology to
convert wood waste or low-quality wood byproducts into
usable, higher value products.
(2) Location of demonstration
projects.--If the Corporation
determines to make loans under this subsection to support
the
development and demonstration of commercial application
of
technology to convert wood waste or low-quality wood
byproducts into usable, higher value products, the
Corporation shall consider making one loan with regard to
a demonstration project to be conducted in the pilot
project area and one loan with regard to a demonstration
project to be conducted in southeast Alaska.
(3) Eligibility requirements.--To be
eligible for a loan
under this subsection, a demonstration project shall be
required to satisfy the eligibility requirements imposed
by
the Corporation under section 1661 of the Food,
Agriculture,
Conservation, and Trade Act of 1990 (7 U.S.C. 5905).
Sec. 402. Short Title. Section 401 of this title may be
cited as the "Herger-Feinstein Quincy Library Group
Forest
Recovery Act".
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