National Forest Management

House Roll Call Vote 254

2004 Scorecard Vote

Pro-environment vote

Yes

Votes For

195

Votes Against

230

Not Voting

8

The U.S. national forest system encompasses 191 million acres of public lands, which harbor much of our nation’s biodiversity, provide habitat for more than 25 percent of the nation’s at-risk species and shelter more intact populations of rare wildlife than any other federal land system.

Unfortunately, more than half of America’s national forests have been destroyed or damaged by logging, oil and gas development, mining and other industrial uses. In 1976, Congress enacted the historic National Forest Management Act (NFMA) to bring accountability and sustainability to forest management, grounding it in sound science, public participation, and rational planning. The “population viability rule,” drafted by the Reagan Administration to carry out NFMA’s mandate to protect the diversity of national forest lands, requires that planners determine whether forest management practices are protecting individual species.

In 2002, the Bush Administration proposed sweeping new regulatory changes that would eliminate virtually all the standards to which the Forest Service could be held accountable. The proposed regulations, undertaken without scientific input and with the full cooperation of the timber industry, would weaken safeguards for wildlife and wildlife habitats. They would also exempt forest plans from NEPA environmental review, and place strict new limits on the ability of citizens to participate in the development of forest plans, make ecological sustainability of national forests a lower priority, and reduce the roles of science and monitoring in forest planning. During consideration of H.R. 4568, the Interior appropriations bill, Representative Tom Udall (D-NM) offered House Amendment 556 to prevent the Administration from finalizing or implementing these new regulations. On June 16, 2004, the House rejected the Udall amendment by a 195-230 vote (House roll call vote 254). YES is the pro-environment vote.

Votes

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Alabama
2004 State Scorecard Average

15%

Alaska
2004 State Scorecard Average

58%

Arizona
2004 State Scorecard Average

30%

Arkansas
2004 State Scorecard Average

4%

California
2004 State Scorecard Average

75%

Colorado
2004 State Scorecard Average

52%

Connecticut
2004 State Scorecard Average

97%

Delaware
2004 State Scorecard Average

100%

Florida
2004 State Scorecard Average

30%

Georgia
2004 State Scorecard Average

35%

Hawaii
2004 State Scorecard Average

98%

Idaho
2004 State Scorecard Average

5%

Illinois
2004 State Scorecard Average

81%

Indiana
2004 State Scorecard Average

24%

Iowa
2004 State Scorecard Average

5%

Kansas
2004 State Scorecard Average

25%

Kentucky
2004 State Scorecard Average

20%

Louisiana
2004 State Scorecard Average

21%

Maine
2004 State Scorecard Average

71%

Maryland
2004 State Scorecard Average

83%

Massachusetts
2004 State Scorecard Average

96%

Michigan
2004 State Scorecard Average

54%

Minnesota
2004 State Scorecard Average

47%

Mississippi
2004 State Scorecard Average

24%

Missouri
2004 State Scorecard Average

21%

Montana
2004 State Scorecard Average

2%

Nebraska
2004 State Scorecard Average

4%

Nevada
2004 State Scorecard Average

72%

New Hampshire
2004 State Scorecard Average

88%

New Jersey
2004 State Scorecard Average

78%

New Mexico
2004 State Scorecard Average

94%

New York
2004 State Scorecard Average

63%

North Carolina
2004 State Scorecard Average

47%

North Dakota
2004 State Scorecard Average

0%

Ohio
2004 State Scorecard Average

33%

Oklahoma
2004 State Scorecard Average

3%

Oregon
2004 State Scorecard Average

68%

Pennsylvania
2004 State Scorecard Average

56%

Rhode Island
2004 State Scorecard Average

100%

South Carolina
2004 State Scorecard Average

17%

South Dakota
2004 State Scorecard Average

0%

Tennessee
2004 State Scorecard Average

13%

Texas
2004 State Scorecard Average

33%

Utah
2004 State Scorecard Average

6%

Vermont
2004 State Scorecard Average

100%

Virginia
2004 State Scorecard Average

55%

Washington
2004 State Scorecard Average

72%

West Virginia
2004 State Scorecard Average

0%

Wisconsin
2004 State Scorecard Average

24%

Wyoming
2004 State Scorecard Average

3%