timber sale federal land

Timber Sale "Fundraiser" Will Lose Millions
corporate welfare privilege

To Boost Corporate Welfare Giveaways, U.S. Forest Service Tells Lies

A new report finds widespread corruption and lying at the U.S. Forest Service as it strives to give away public resources, not just at below their market value, but actually at a cost to the taxpayers.

The 2002 Biscuit Fire was the largest and most expensive fire in Oregon history. The fire burned across nearly 500,000 acres in the Pacific Northwest , the vast majority within the boundaries of the Siskiyou National Forest in Southwestern Oregon. Long after the fire's smoke has cleared, the Biscuit debate continues to rage.

While taxpayers have suffered from money losing timber sales from the national forests in the past, the Biscuit Fire timber sale is poised to be one of the biggest money losers in our nation's history.

The most contentious issue is a post-fire logging project proposed by the U.S. Forest Service to remove burned timber from the forest. In an effort to offset the costs of the fire, "salvageable" burned timber would be sold to neighboring timber mills. Unfortunately, a new economic analysis reveals that current Forest Service proposals will add to - not offset - federal taxpayer costs resulting from the Biscuit fire.

In the Biscuit Fire Recovery Project Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS), the Forest Service predicts incredibly lucrative profits from the sale -- more than $24 million from a sale of 518 million board feet (mmbf) on 27,000 acres of the Siskiyou National Forest. In reality, all proposed Biscuit timber sales would end up money losers for taxpayers:

How did the Forest Service come up with such horribly wrong predictions? The agency assumes hopelessly optimistic sale values for burned timber, low-balls historical administrative costs for sale preparation and clean up, and essentially ignores normal costs associated with regional and national overhead for timber sales.

In developing their DEIS for the Biscuit post-fire logging project , the Forest Service fails to account for several key factors:

As a result, even at the lowest logging level evaluated, 96.7 mmbf, federal taxpayers still end up losers if the Biscuit timber sale is given the green light. After taking into account price effect, overhead, and other administrative costs, the sale would return $4 million. However, the Forest Service must also return 25% of the logging receipts (before overhead and administrative costs are subtracted) to Oregon, resulting in a federal taxpayer loss of nearly $3.5 million.

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Thanks to Taxpayers for Common Sense for circulating this news. The full text of the report, by ECONorthwest, is available in PDF format here.

Also see the WWW's most-visited site on Corporate Welfare:
The Corporate Welfare Shame Site

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