Restoration creates thousands of jobs, protects communities from wildfire
A Forest Service restoration program created and maintained more than 4,500 jobs in Fiscal Year 2012 and improved the fire-resiliency of 380,000 acres of forestland near communities from 2010-2012, according to a new report.
The Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration program was created in 2009 to restore priority forested landscapes, promote job stability, create a reliable wood supply, improve forest health and reduce emergency wildfire costs across the United States.
All of the projects managed under this program are on track to meet their 10-year goals, which cumulatively include treating more than 4 million acres of forest to make them more resilient to wildfire and producing 670 million cubic feet of timber. The projects will also restore 1.6 million acres of wildlife habitat and 3,000 miles of streams.
“The people and communities involved in this program should take great pride in the work they accomplished this year,” said USDA Under Secretary Harris Sherman. “These projects represent real progress in bolstering rural economies while conserving our forests for future generations of Americans.”[[{"type":"media","view_mode":"media_original","fid":"36647","attributes":{"height":"375","width":"500","style":"width: 335px; height: 251px; margin: 5px; float: right;","title":"Hikers walk along the edge of Horton Creek on the Tonto National Forest. As part of the Four Forests Restoration Initiative, 2.4 million acres of the Kaibab, Coconino, Apache-Sitgreaves and Tonto national forests are being identified for a landscape scale assessment to improve forest health and sustainability. (Forest Service photo)","class":"file-fs-wysiwyg-width-360px media-element"}," ":{"format":"fs_wysiwyg_width_360px","field_file_image_alt_text[und][0][value]":null}}]]
In addition to creating jobs and protecting communities from wildfire, the 23 projects managed under the program:
- sold some 94.1 million cubic feet of timber
- produced 1.2 green tons of woody biomass for energy use
- generated $320 million of labor income
- reduced fuel for megafire on 229,000 acres away from communities
- improved 537,000 acres of wildlife habitat
- restored 394 miles of fish habitat
- enhanced clean water supplies by improving or decommissioning 6,000 miles of eroding roads
- Arkansas: Ozark Highlands Ecosystem Collaborative Landscape Restoration
- Missouri: Pine-Oak Woodlands Collaborative Landscape Restoration
- Washington: Northeast WA Forest Vision 2020 Collaborative Landscape Restoration
The 20 Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration projects are:
- Arizona:
- Colorado:
- Florida:
- Montana:
- Washington:
- Arkansas and Oklahoma:
- California:
- Idaho:
- Mississippi:
- New Mexico:
- North Carolina:
- Oregon: