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Giant
Sequoia Protection Bill Gets Boost in Washington DC Trip
by
Paul Hughes, executive director of Forests Forever
Forests
Forever’s executive director, Paul Hughes, visited Washington,
DC this September to meet with our political representatives in
Congress and let them know about urgent forest issues in California
and nationwide. Here is a report of his trip: |
Stopping
the destruction of ancient forests was either a distraction or a relief
from the crises of the hour for the congressmembers and their staffs
with whom we met in my recent trip to the nation's capital.
I arrived
in Washington on Tue., Sept. 27, 2005, after a connecting flight was
canceled due to storms. The next day I began the first of 27 separate
meetings with members of Congress and their staffs. These meetings
took place over a three-day period, through Sept. 30. Accompanying
me on the rounds was Carl Ross, executive director of the Washington,
D.C.-based group Save America's Forests.
Our topic was new legislation to transfer management of the Giant
Sequoia National
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The
Capitol Building, home of the U.S. Congress. |

Carl
Ross and Paul Hughes confer in a House office building. |
Monument
from the Forest Service to the protective care of the National Park
Service. (Click here for our action
alert on the issue.) Forests Forever is supporting the introduction
of this legislation as a new section of Rep. Anna Eshoo's (D-Atherton)
Act to Save America's Forests, most recently introduced as
H.R. 5312 in the 108th Congress. Carl's
group has been a long-time champion of the Eshoo bill.
In the midst of news and fast-breaking developments concerning hurricane
relief and reauthorization of the Endangered Species Act, it was gratifying
to see the sympathy expressed on Capitol Hill toward stopping the
pillaging of the giant sequoias by the U.S. Forest Service. (Visit
"Chainsaws
in the Cathedral" for a photo gallery showing the destructive
logging now going on in the monument.) |
| My daily
routine began with a 5:45 a.m. wakeup call followed by a shuttle to
the Metro station at Foggy Bottom in Georgetown. There I caught the
commuter train (very similar to the San Francisco Bay Area's BART
system) to the Capitol South stop, about two blocks from Capitol Mall.
After a quick breakfast I met Carl at his spartan two-story office–
piled to the rafters with books and papers and looking very much like
a converted garage– located in an alleyway just a block or two
from the Library of Congress. |
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Except
for one morning thundershower the weather was mild the whole week,
with blue cloudless skies. We carried too much paper, of course. But
our most valuable lobbying tool turned out to be a photo album prepared
by sequoia activist and Forests Forever Advisory Council member Martin
Litton. It depicted many giant sequoias in the recently designated
monument and, just as importantly, their destruction through clearcutting.
In its Orwellian jargon the Forest Service disguises these industrial
logging operations as "fuels reduction" and "hazard
tree removal" and even, most brazenly, as "grove enhancement"
work.
Martin's book of eye-popping color photos served us well in presenting
the issue to the staffers with whom we met. We plied the corridors
of the Longworth, Russell, Rayburn and Cannon office buildings all
week, resorting to the labyrinth of underground tunnels that connect
the buildings and allow visitors to circumvent time-consuming security
checkpoints located at the outside entrance to each of the buildings. |
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The
members themselves were busy these days, but we personally met–
or at least bumped into– Reps. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), Silvestre
Reyes (D-TX), Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), Mike Thompson (D-CA), and Henry
Waxman (D-CA). Our meeting with Rep. Pelosi's chief environmental
aide took place in the historical, plush Rayburn Room of the U.S.
Capitol. Due to heavy security and construction of a four-story below-ground
museum and security complex on the Capitol's east grounds, meetings
with legislative staff in the Capitol are rare these days, so that
appointment was a particular treat. |
We
had a satisfying conversation with Rep. Eshoo herself at a campaign
fundraiser on Thursday morning. Held at the Democratic National Committee
headquarters near Capitol Mall, the breakfast event attracted about
two dozen backers of Rep. Eshoo, from California and outside the state.
When I told her about Forests Forever’s entry into the campaign
for her bill, Rep. Eshoo became very excited– she readily understood
the power that our statewide grassroots organizing effort could lend
to the Act’s prospects for passage. At the event I also met
Rep. Mike Thompson, whose Northern California Coastal Wild Heritage
Wilderness bill Forests Forever has supported since its introduction. |

In the Capitol's Rayburn Room: Paul with Lara Levison,
policy advisor to Rep. Nancy Pelosi. |

Paul
and Carl Ross with Rep. Anna Eshoo. |
As
we were meeting with staffers in several offices on succeeding days,
live C-SPAN broadcasts of the Endangered Species Act debates on the
House floor were playing on the office TV monitors. This added a surreal
note to our meetings. Rep. Richard Pombo's (R-Tracy) ESA-weakening
bill, H.R. 3824, passed the House on Sept. 29 and now heads to the
Senate.
In other meetings we saw the staffs of representatives from Connecticut,
Illinois, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, New York, Missouri and even
American Samoa. As Forests Forever is a California organization, we
met with staffs of Xavier Becerra (D-Los |
Angeles),
Jim Costa (D-Fresno), Zoe Lofgren (D-San Jose), Linda Sanchez (D-Lakewood),
Doris Matsui (D-Sacramento), Loretta Sanchez (D-Garden Grove), Jane
Harman (D-El Segundo), Diane Watson (D-Los Angeles), and Dennis Cardoza
(D-Merced) beyond those California representatives already mentioned.
In addition to renewing the co-sponsorship of many previous supporters
of the bill, we garnered the sponsorship of several new members; we
are still compiling results and confirming commitments. The bill,
we hope, will be reintroduced sometime during the week of Oct. 3.
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FORESTS
FOREVER
San
Francisco
50 First Street, Suite 401 • San Francisco, CA 94105 •
phone 415.974.3636 • fax 415.974.3664
mail@forestsforever.org
© 2008 Forests Forever
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