Nature and Politics
by Jeffrey St. Clair and Alexander Cockburn
Terry Lynn's Fire?
If you believe what the Forest Service interrogators say, Terry Lynn Barton
started the big fire in Colorado's Pike National Forest by burning a letter
from her estranged husband. Maybe so, and possibly the jury will be
forgiving when they hear more details of Ms. Barton's married life. But a
jury might well be equally forgiving if it turns out Terry Lynn started the
fire by setting fire to her pay stub.
After 18 years of dedicated service Terry Lynn Barton's monthly pay was
$1,485, which totes up to $17,820 a year. Try raising two kids on that in
the greater metropolitan area of Denver. She's being described in the press
as "a Forest Service technician" which is FS-speak for all-purpose manual
laborer cleaning up camp grounds, trail maintenance, and kindred grunt
work.
Forget the Edward Abbeys, Jack Kerouacs, and Gary Snyders of the forest
fire watches, turning out literature while communing with nature and
scanning the ridge lines for tell-tale plumes. The Forest Service, part of
the USDA, has long been notorious for exploiting its bottom-rung workers
more than any other agency. The laborers are often forced to live in
squalid housing under fairly harsh conditions with scant benefits.
These grunts are the ones who have to deal with visitors angered at having
to pay as much as $40 in annual passes for visits to forests in a
particular area. Having ponied up the money, these visitors often find
nature's temple criss-crossed with logging roads, scarred by clearcuts or
the new, RV friendly rec sites blessed by recent administrations.
>From the anguish and outrage of Barton's superiors you'd think that the
Forest Service has always regarded fire as the devil's work.
A little perspective: this particular Colorado fire has so far burned
through something over 100,000 acres. The implication is that all these
acres are blackened zones of ash and carbonized stumps. Not so. Many of
those acres will have suffered minor scorching. And of course healthy
forests need fires as a natural and frequent catalyst to regeneration,
particularly in the conifer forests in Colorado.
But the Forest Service's policy has been to suppress fires. In the middle
and long term this policy leads to huge fuel loads which, when the
inevitable conflagration does come, then burst out into the kinds of large
scale burns that we are now seeing across the West.
Responsibility for fires stretches far higher up the bureaucratic chain
than poor Ms. Barton. Since the days of Gifford Pinchot the Forest Service
has seen fire suppression as a sure way to get a blank check from Congress.
Fire suppression gets the Service the big ticket items--planes,
helicopters, and so forth. Fire suppression is used to justify the
Service's road building budget and even logging programs.
The Forest Service says all fires are bad and need to be suppressed with
the help of huge disbursements from Congress, plus public vigilance. All
children have the ursine, self-righteous smirk of Smokey the Bear dinned
into their psyches, said bear being conjured into icon status 60 years ago
after the incredible popularity of that noted fire-fugitive, Bambi.
So the Forest Service needs fires, and diligently sets them each year,
under the rubric of "Controlled Burn" or "Prescribed Fire." These regularly
surge out of control, as in the Los Alamos forests a couple of years ago,
started by the Park Service in Bandolier National Monument. The Forest
Service bigwigs okay fires and then summon ill-paid fighters to do the
dangerous work. Far more prudent would be to let the fires run, but that of
course would leave idle all the costly fire-fighting machinery and expose
the Forest Service to the wrath of the real estate industry, which has
raised million dollar homes in areas certain to see a blaze some day.
Terry Lynn Barton faces 20 years in prison while the timber industry licks
its lips at the prospect of "salvage logging" the Colorado forests. "Light
it and log it," as the old phrase goes. Once a forest burns, existing
restrictions go out the window, the Forest Service offers up 100,000 acres
for salvaging, and in go the timber companies, hauling out the timber,
immune to environmental restrictions. You don't think timber companies have
been setting fires for years, often with Forest Service complicity?
We sure hope Terry Lynn Barton gets a good lawyer. He might start by asking
a few pointed questions about her treatment. Is the Forest Service trying
to paint her as the John Walker Lindh of Colorado?
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