To bad we cannot sell off 26,000 people instead.<br> <br> _DJA<br><br><b><i>Tom Hansen <thansen@moscow.com></i></b> wrote:<blockquote class="replbq" style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;"> >From today's (February 11, 2006) Spokesman Review.<br><br>If Representative Otter wants to make points with the voters of Idaho, he<br>would fight against this sale.<br><br>---------------------------------------------------------------------------<br><br>For sale: 26,000 Idaho acres <br>Details of Forest Service plan raise concerns in region<br>By the numbers <br><br>Proposed acreage up for sale in Inland Northwest national forests:<br>St. Joe: 1,142<br>Colville: 1,877<br>Coeur d'Alene: 3,090<br>Kaniksu: 6,936<br> <br>James Hagengruber<br>Staff writer<br>February 11, 2006<br><br>FSBO: 309,421 acres of prime undeveloped forest land. Includes trails,<br>campgrounds and sacred sites. Pristine views. Massive debt forces fast
sale.<br><br><br>All satire aside, details on the largest sale of national forest in decades<br>were announced Friday, including about 26,000 acres in Idaho and 7,500 acres<br>in Washington. The Bush administration is proposing the sale to help reduce<br>budget cuts for rural schools and roads.<br><br>Included in the sale are prime recreation sites near Coeur d'Alene,<br>including the entire English Point trail network and Mokins Bay campground<br>along Hayden Lake. The proposal also includes 160 mountainous acres near the<br>St. Joe River once used by Indian tribes for sacred vision quests. <br><br>Local Forest Service employees said they had been directed not to comment on<br>the proposal, but all expressed surprise at the properties included. Perhaps<br>the biggest shock was the inclusion of 360 acres of developed trails at<br>Hayden Lake's English Point. The area is about 15 minutes from Coeur d'Alene<br>and is a popular spot for hikers, skiers and horseback riders, said
retired<br>Brig. Gen. Clyde Denniston, who owns land nearby. <br><br>"I'm really surprised it would be put up for sale," said Denniston, former<br>commander of Fairchild Air Force Base. "That's a beautiful piece of land. It<br>gets a lot of public use - it's not like it's raw land somewhere out in the<br>boondocks."<br><br>In Colville National Forest, several large tracts are being considered for<br>sale in the Bald Peak area north of Republic, Wash., as well as about 500<br>acres near Eagle Mountain northeast of Chewelah. The Forest Service has<br>supplied only legal descriptions of the parcels, but the agency will release<br>digitized maps by the end of the month. When the maps are released, the<br>agency will take 30 days of public comment. <br><br>The vast majority of the tracts are isolated parcels of national forest that<br>are expensive to manage, according to Agriculture Undersecretary Mark Rey,<br>who spoke to reporters Friday in a conference call. <br><br>"These a!
re not
the crown jewels we're talking about," Rey said. "This is a<br>reasonable proposal to take a small fraction of a percentage of national<br>land, which is the least necessary, and use it for those in need."<br><br>California stands to have 85,000 acres of national forest sold. Idaho comes<br>in second in terms of acreage, with more than 11,000 acres - about 17 square<br>miles - of the Panhandle making the sale list. If approved, the land would<br>be appraised and put on the market.<br><br>The Bush administration hopes to raise as muich as $1 billion through the<br>program, which it will use to help wean rural counties off the so-called<br>Craig-Wyden "county payments" law over the next five years. The program has<br>been in place since 2000 to help communities with timber-based economies<br>weather large scale decreases in logging on national forest land. <br><br>The program sent $41.8 million to Washington last year and $21 million to<br>Idaho. <br><br>Many Western lawmaker!
s,
sportsmen groups and environmentalists are reacting<br>with outrage to the land sale and phasing-out of the Craig-Wyden payments.<br>Some have compared the sale with a farmer eating his supply of seed corn.<br><br>Rey rejected such comparisons, saying the money was needed to help rural<br>counties fund education and transportation projects. About $4 million last<br>year went to Shoshone County in North Idaho. Nearly $1 million went to Ferry<br>County in northeast Washington. <br><br>"I don't think assuring the education of schoolchildren is an ephemeral<br>purpose," Rey said. <br><br>Critics say even isolated parcels of national forest are valuable. The<br>Forest Service often uses the tracts in land swaps to secure wildlife<br>habitat. Surrounded by private land, the acreage also provides recreation<br>opportunities for some communities. <br><br>Sen. Larry Craig, R-Idaho, has not had a chance to evaluate the list of<br>parcels, said spokesman Mike Tracy. "He obviously has !
concerns.
. He's never<br>been real supportive of the wholesale sale of public lands, but he does look<br>at individual projects on a case-by-case basis."<br><br>Idaho Congressman and governor-hopeful Butch Otter issued a statement<br>saying, "I do not believe the president's proposal will be well-received in<br>Congress." Last month, the Republican representative came under fire for<br>co-sponsoring a plan to sell public land to pay for Hurricane Katrina relief<br>efforts. Otter later reversed his support and apologized to state residents.<br><br><br>Rey, who oversees the Forest Service, said certain tracts could be taken off<br>the sale list, depending on public comment. Ultimately, only 200,000 acres<br>will likely be put up for sale, he said, amounting to less than 1 percent of<br>193 million acres of national forest and grassland. Rey also pointed out the<br>agency acquires about 100,000 acres of new land
annually.<br><br>---------------------------------------------------------------------------<br><br>See you at the polls, Moscow.<br><br>Tom Hansen<br>Moscow, Idaho<br><br>****************************************************************************<br><br>"A bad cause will ever be supported by bad means and bad men." <br><br>- Thomas Paine (English Writer, 1737-1809)<br><br>****************************************************************************<br><br><br><br>_____________________________________________________<br> List services made available by First Step Internet, <br> serving the communities of the Palouse since 1994. <br> http://www.fsr.net <br> mailto:Vision2020@moscow.com<br>ŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻ<br></blockquote><br><p>
        
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