Rep. Jared Huffman, left, meets with rural California superintendents in his Capitol Hill office. (Photo by Kent Nishimura, Los Angeles Times) |
Historically, "schools like Swanstrom’s, surrounded by national forest land that cannot be taxed, have depended upon modest payments through the U.S. Forest Service to stay afloat. . . .That money has come primarily from logging," Branson-Pitts notes. "Counties with national forests — mostly in the rural West — received 25% of what the federal government made from timber sales off that land. . . . But by the early 1990s, the once-thriving logging industry cratered. So did the school funding. In 2000, Congress enacted the Secure Rural Schools & Community Self-Determination Act. Congress never made the program permanent, instead reauthorizing versions of it by tacking it onto other bills — nine times." Those have used "increasingly bizarre funding sources," saidBill Imbergamo, executive director of the Federal Forest Resource Coalition, a timber trade group that supports increased logging on federal land.
The funds needed are "what lawmakers call 'budget dust' in a federal budget that is trillions of dollars," Branson-Pitts writes. "Last year, the Secure Rural Schools program gave $238 million to 742 counties in 41 states and Puerto Rico. The latest version of the rural schools program is set to expire in October. . . . Calls for permanent funding abound. From Republicans and Democrats. From environmentalists and the timber industry. A solution inevitably falls victim to partisan bickering. Liberals don’t want to cut down trees. Conservatives want to slash spending."
Atfter meeting privately with the superintendents, Rep. Jared Huffman, D-Calif., said the program has "become a political football . . . kind of been used as a prop for folks with a different agenda, folks who want to roll back environmental protections, who want to do mandatory logging quotas in national forests. . . . I’d like to see the federal government just embrace this as an ongoing financial responsibility."
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