summary
Introduced
03/21/2013
03/21/2013
In Committee
04/23/2013
04/23/2013
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/03/2015
01/03/2015
Introduced Session
113th Congress
Bill Summary
Catastrophic Wildfire Prevention Act of 2013 - Extends through FY2023 the authority for the Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to enter into stewardship end result contracting projects with private persons or other public or private entities to perform services to achieve land management goals for national forests and public lands that meet local and rural community needs. Prohibits a multiyear stewardship contract from exceeding a 20-year period (under current law, a 10-year period). Bars the Secretary of Agriculture (USDA) and the Secretary of the Interior (the Secretaries) from being required to obligate funds for covering the costs of the cancellation or termination of multiyear stewardship contracts or agreements until they are cancelled or terminated. Specifies the funding sources from where the costs of the cancellation or termination of a multiyear stewardship contract may be paid from. Requires 25% of timber sale receipts from a multiyear stewardship contract or agreement to be paid to the county within whose boundaries the receipts are derived. Authorizes the Secretaries to enter into cooperative agreements and contracts with state foresters to provide forest, rangeland, and watershed restoration and protection services. Permits state foresters to enter into subcontracts to provide such restoration and protection services. Prohibits the extension of such an agreement or contract beyond a 20-year period. Amends the Federal Land Assistance, Management, and Enhancement (FLAME) Act of 2009 to make FLAME Funds available to cover the costs of burn area responses, including flood prevention. Authorizes the Secretaries to implement eligible wildfire prevention projects in at-risk forests and threatened and endangered species in a manner that focuses on surface, ladder, and canopy fuels reduction activities. Requires projects carried out on threatened and endangered species habitat to provide enhanced protection from wildfire, including unnatural wildfire, for the endangered species, threatened species, or their habitat. Requires projects carried out in at-risk forests to move the federal land from condition class II or III toward condition class I. Permits use in a project of: (1) domestic livestock grazing to reduce surface fuel loads and to recover burned areas, and (2) timber harvesting and thinning to reduce ladder and canopy fuel loads for the prevention of unnatural fire. Requires the Secretaries, for each proposed eligible project, to: (1) study and develop the proposed action and the no action alternative, and (2) prepare an environmental assessment or an environmental impact statement under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA). Deems the duration of the environmental assessment of an authorized practice used in an eligible project sufficient for a minimum of: (1) 10 years for a livestock grazing project, and (2) 20 years for a timber harvest project.
AI Summary
This bill, the Catastrophic Wildfire Prevention Act of 2013, aims to reduce the risk of wildfires by expanding and expediting forest management projects on federal lands managed by the Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). Key provisions include extending the authority for "stewardship end result contracting" projects, which are agreements with private entities to manage land for specific outcomes like reducing hazardous fuels, from 2013 to 2023 and increasing the maximum contract duration from 10 to 20 years. The bill also allows for cooperative agreements with state foresters to carry out restoration and protection services on federal lands, with state foresters able to enter into subcontracts. Furthermore, it clarifies that funds for canceling or terminating these multiyear contracts won't be obligated until cancellation occurs and specifies that 25% of timber sale receipts from these contracts will go to the county where the timber was harvested. The bill also amends the Federal Land Assistance, Management, and Enhancement (FLAME) Act to allow its funds to cover costs associated with burn area responses, including flood prevention. Importantly, it authorizes the implementation of wildfire prevention projects in "at-risk forests" and areas with threatened and endangered species habitat, focusing on reducing surface, ladder, and canopy fuels, and allows for the use of domestic livestock grazing and timber harvesting for these purposes. The bill also streamlines environmental reviews for these projects, setting deadlines for environmental assessments and impact statements and deeming them sufficient for 10 years for grazing projects and 20 years for timber harvest projects, while also providing for expedited review processes in wildfire emergencies.
Committee Categories
Agriculture and Natural Resources
Sponsors (17)
Paul Gosar (R)*,
Mark Amodei (R),
K. Michael Conaway (R),
Kevin Cramer (R),
Trent Franks (R),
Ann Kirkpatrick (D),
Cynthia Lummis (R),
Jim Matheson (D),
Tom McClintock (R),
Mark Meadows (R),
Stevan Pearce (R),
Ted Poe (R),
Matt Salmon (R),
David Schweikert (R),
Chris Stewart (R),
G.T. Thompson (R),
Greg Walden (R),
Last Action
Referred to the Subcommittee on Conservation, Energy, and Forestry. (on 04/23/2013)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.congress.gov/bill/113th-congress/house-bill/1345/all-info |
| BillText | http://gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-113hr1345ih/pdf/BILLS-113hr1345ih.pdf |
| Bill | http://gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-113hr1345ih/pdf/BILLS-113hr1345ih.pdf.pdf |
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