Assemblymember
Nancy Skinner’s (D-Berkeley) “Carbon Sink Act,”
A.B. 1504, cleared the California Senate’s Committee
on Natural Resources and Water on a vote of 5-3 on Tuesday,
June 22.
Skinner’s
bill would, for the first time, declare that forest-management
goals of California should include the sequestration of
carbon dioxide, and would require the California Dept. of
Forestry (CDF), in consultation with the state Air Resources
Board, to determine to what extent existing forestry regulations
and programs are meeting California’s greenhouse gas
reduction goals.
Your
calls and emails to key committee members urging YES votes
made a big difference on Tuesday, helping to spur passage
of a worthy piece of legislation.
Meanwhile
two other measures that had been scheduled for a vote this
week – Assemblymember Wesley Chesbro’s (D-North
Coast) watersheds-focused A.B. 2575, and Assemblymember
Tony Mendoza’s (D-Norwalk) unfortunate timber give-away
A.B. 2163 – have been rescheduled for a vote at
the committee’s next hearing on June 29.
Present
for Tuesday’s vote was Forests Forever Legislative
Advocate Luke Breit, who said the win margin would have
been stronger in favor of A.B. 1504 but for the absence
of Sen. Christine Kehoe (D-San Diego), who likely would
have voted in favor of the measure. The bill also picked
up a vote from Sen. Alex Padilla (D-San Fernando Valley),
who had been only lukewarm on the matter but ended up giving
it his backing.
From
here A.B. 1504 moves on to the Senate’s Environmental
Quality Committee, chaired by Sen. Joe
Simitian (D-Palo Alto), likely within
the next week.
California’s
forests serve as a first-line defense against CO2 pollution
and climate change. Skinner and Forests Forever want
to recognize and codify that value so that forests are managed
in a way that enhances their capacity to keep the air clean.
“We
need to ensure that the CDF accurately monitors and assesses
carbon sequestration scenarios,” said Forest Forever
Legislative Advocate Luke Breit. “Otherwise we might
even make a bad situation worse instead of better. We think
A.B. 1504 will help achieve that goal.”
Forests
Forever is a sponsor of both A.B. 1504 and A.B. 2575. These
measures offer significant advances in forest protection
and watershed restoration.
Your
further calls in support of Chesbro’s A.B. 2575 before
Tuesday, June 29 could make an important difference in forest
management.
But the bad timber-industry bill is also poised to score
a win – unless we can block its path.
On June
29 the natural resources committee will be voting on Mendoza’s
A.B. 2163. As a follow-up to last year’s passage of
Mendoza’s A.B. 1066, A.B. 2163 offers an overbroad
and one-sided approach to lengthening the active period
of certain timber harvest plans (THPs) from three to five
years.
Please
urge a NO vote on A.B. 2163!
BACKGROUND:
As those
who have been following its progress through the legislative
process are well aware, Chesbro’s A.B. 2575 –
the Forests Forever-sponsored “Comprehensive Forest
Land Recovery and Restoration Act” – focuses
on two proposed pilot projects to be conducted by the CDF
to demonstrate sound techniques for assessing the effects
of logging operations on soil, air, water, wildlife and
climate, and to protect and repair salmon and steelhead
habitat.
The
cumulative impacts over time of multiple development projects
in close proximity are widely acknowledged to be devastating
watershed quality as well as critically endangered wildlife
such as salmon.
A.B. 2575 will begin the healing process by taking into
account all of these impacts, creating a consistent, over-arching
approach to protecting and restoring watersheds.
TAKE ACTION:
Contact
Assemblymember Wesley
Chesbro (D-North Coast) at
916-319-2001and
congratulate him on the success so far of A.B. 2575. Let
him know you support his effort to focus legislation on
the cumulative impacts of multiple logging projects in fragile
watersheds.
Contact
Assemblymember Nancy
Skinner
(D-Berkeley) at 916-319-2014and
thank her for authoring A.B. 1504, the “Carbon Sink
Act,” and advancing it to the Senate.
Contact
senators on the Committee
on Natural Resources and Water and thank them
for voting in favor of A.B. 1504. Urge them to cast another
another YES vote when A.B. 2575 come before them on June
29.
Also
ask senators to vote NO on A.B. 2163, an unnecessary
extension of THP timeframes.