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CA Gov. Jerry Brown Vetoed 2016 Wildfire
Management Bill While CA Burned

Every governor has signed regretful legislation,
or made a disastrous pardon he or she would like a
chance to re-do. California’s whacky outgoing
Democrat governor has spent the last eight years
trying to convince the people of California that
we are to blame for droughts, wildfires and
“extreme weather,” and that climate change is an
existential threat to the California way of life.
Showing no regrets, Gov. Jerry Brown calls the
people “freeloaders,” and “deniers,” and has
mocked our “little green lawns.” Brown even
spitefully signed legislation subjecting every
man, woman and child to 50 gallons of water a day
in the near future… despite the state’s 189,454
miles of rivers, and that large body of
water California sits on.
Last year, as California residents were burned
out of their towns, homes, neighborhoods, schols,
hospitals and businesses, Gov. Jerry Brown was jetting
around the world spouting climate change
propaganda, and calling the fires California’s
“new normal.” Gov. Brown had many chances to
sincerely and realistically address California’s
increasing wildfires since his election in 2011,
but instead chose to play politics, placing his
new friends at the United Nations over the people
of California.
RELATED:
California’s whacky outgoing Democrat governor
has spent the last eight years trying to convince
the people of California that we are to blame for
droughts, wildfires and “extreme weather,”
What many do not know, is that California Gov.
Jerry Brown vetoed
a bipartisan wildfire management bill in
2016, despite unanimous passage by the
Legislature, 75-0 in the Assembly and 39-0 in the
Senate. SB
1463 would have given local governments
more say in fire-prevention efforts through the
Public Utilities Commission proceeding making maps
of fire hazard areas around utility lines. In a
gross display of politics, this is especially
pertinent given that Cal
Fire and the state’s media are now blaming
the largest utility in the state for the latest
wildfires.
While hindsight is always 20-20, California was
on fire when this bill made its way through the
Legislature and on to Jerry Brown’s desk.
The 129
million dead trees throughout California’s
state and national forests are now serving as
matchsticks and kindling.
With California on
fire once again in the North and the South
parts of the state, Gov. Jerry Brown continues his
bizarre claims that devastating fires are the “new
normal” and a result of climate change. Only Brown
updated his phrase: “‘This
is not the new normal,’ he said, employing a
phrase that state leaders have used to describe
the past two deadly, prolonged California fire
seasons,” the Sacramento Bee reported.
“‘This
is the new abnormal, and this new abnormal
will continue certainly in the next 10 to 15
years.’”
Yet, the same climate change impacts private
lands as public lands, but private forests are not
burning down because they are properly managed.
Gov. Brown doubled down on his “man-made climate
change” blame
Responding to President Donald Trump’s Tweet:
Gov. Brown doubled down on his “man-made climate
change” blame, discounting the lack of forest
management as the cause of the frequent forest and
wildfires across the state.
McClintock said for decades, traditional forest
management was scientific and successful
In August, I interviewed Rep. Tom
McClintock (R-CA), whose
district includes the Yosemite Valley and
the Tahoe National Forest in El Dorado County,
both areas which have suffered greatly under
recent wildfires.
McClintock said for decades, traditional forest
management was scientific and successful—that is
until ideological, preservationist zealots wormed
their way into government and began the overhaul
of sound federal forest management through abuse
of the Endangered Species Act and the “re-wilding,
no-use movement.”
Traditional forest management had simple
guidelines: thin the forest when it becomes too
difficult to walk through; too many trees in the
woods will compete with one another, because the
best trees will grow at a slower rate.
Continued below...
The U.S. Forest Service used to be a profitable
federal agency, McClintock said. “Up until the
mid-1970s, we managed our National Forests
according to well-established and time-tested
forest management practices.”
“But 40 years ago, we replaced these sound
management practices with what can only be
described as a doctrine of benign neglect,”
McClintock said. “Ponderous, byzantine laws and
regulations administered by a growing cadre of
ideological zealots in our land management
agencies promised to ‘save the environment.’
The advocates of this doctrine have dominated our
law, our policies, our courts and our federal
agencies ever since.”
In August, Megan
Barth and I wrote an article California
burns: The “new normal” thanks to Obama Era
Environmental Regulations,
specifically addressing why forest management has
been put on the back burner. We explained how
Obama-Era and Clinton-Era radical eco-terrorism
thrived, made possible through drastic
environmental regulations, and those “ponderous,
byzantine laws and regulations” Rep. McClintock
spoke of, which prevent any significant and
important forest clearing, brush clearing, and
dead tree removal, leaving all public forests
vulnerable to wildfires.
Today, only privately managed forests are
maintained through the traditional forest
management practices: thinning, cutting, clearing,
prescribed burns, and the disposal of the
resulting woody waste. And notably, privately
managed lands are not on fire.
Those Eco-Terrorism Regulations
In the early 1990s, immediately following the The
United Nations Conference on Environment and
Development, known as the Rio
Earth Summit, the Clinton administration
embraced the Forest
Stewardship Council, which set standards for
the timber industry covering “the conservation and
restoration of forests, indigenous rights, and the
economic and social well-being of workers,” among
other criteria, setting in motion the prevention
of forest management, and the further destruction
of the U.S. timber industry.
Prior to FSC Certification, environmentalists
refused to acknowledge that timber had been prized
as a renewable, recyclable natural resource, and
the timber industry prioritized proper care of
forests.
In 1998, the Clinton Administration and the
Forest Service implemented
a roadbuilding moratorium which restricted the use
of or building of roads near 50 million acres of
forest. “The nearly 50 million acres of roadless
areas in our National Forests are an American
treasure,” Earth Justice proclaims—apparently
because no one is allowed to see the National
Forests.
By 2001, President Clinton issued the Roadless
Area Conservation Policy directive, “ending
virtually all logging; roadbuilding; and coal,
gas, oil, and other mineral leasing in 58 million
acres of the wildest remaining undeveloped
national forests lands,” Earth Justice reported.
Fast forward to the George W. Bush
administration: “In June 2009, a federal judge
sided with environmentalists and threw out the
Bush planning rule that determines how 155
national forests and 20 national grasslands
develop individual forest plans, governing
activities from timber harvests to recreation and
protecting endangered plants and animals. Clinton
appointee, Judge Claudia Wilken of the U.S.
District Court for the Northern District of
California, ruled that the Forest Service
had failed to analyze the effects of removing
requirements guaranteeing viable wildlife
populations,” Greenwire
reported.
In 2012, the Obama administration issued a major
rewrite of all of the country’s forest rules and
guidelines.
In 2015, Washington D.C. District Court Judge
Ketanji Brown Jackson, an Obama appointee, rejected
claims from a coalition of timber, livestock, and
off-highway vehicle organizations that the Obama
sustainability provisions in the 2012 Planning
Rule would cause an economically harmful reduction
in timber harvest and land use and an increase
in forest fires.
Continued below...
No Forest Stewardship: California’s Catastrophic
Canard of Climate Change
Rep. McClintock said the forest service used to
auction surplus timber harvested from national
forests. This served two purposes: 1) clearing,
cleaning, and thinning the forest; 2) providing
usable timber for a myriad of industries. The
timber the forest service auctioned off more than
paid for the entire federal agency, and then some.
Local governments even received 25 percent of the
proceeds of the lumber auctions, while 75 percent
went to the federal government.
“Revenues that our forest management agencies
once produced—and that facilitated our forest
stewardship—have all but dried up,” McClintock
said. This has devastated rural communities
that once thrived from the forest economy.
McClintock said there were once 147 timber mills;
now, there are only 29 in the country.
McClintock also pointed out that despite the
growing population, visitation to national forests
has declined significantly as the health of our
forests has decayed. “We can no longer manage
lands to prevent fire or even salvage dead timber
once fire has destroyed it,” he said.
Private forests are still managed properly, but
not forests on public lands.
That sound practice grounded to a halt when the
most radical environmentalists took over. Now
thick, overgrown and diseased forests have become
tinder boxes and are burning down in California,
leaving a trail of death and destruction.
“Excess timber WILL come out of the forest in one
of only two ways. It is either carried out
or it burns out,” McClintock added.
McClintock was able to pass legislation
last year, which streamlined the environmental
reviews for the Tahoe Basin. McClintock added,
“The Forest Service regional manager told me it
will take their review from 800 pages to 40 pages,
and allow them to begin to get the forest there
back to a sustainable level.”