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United States Department of Agriculture
April 1959
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Miscellaneous Publication No. 794
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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Wasuineton D.C., March 24, 1959.
The PREsIDENT OF THE SENATE,
U.S. Senate.
Dear Mr. PRESIDENT:
A report entitled “Program for the National Forests” is transmitted
herewith for information of the Congress and appropriate reference.
President Eisenhower in his State of the Union message in February
1953 called attention to the vast importance to this Nation, now and
in the future, of our soil and water, our forests and minerals, and our
wildlife resources. He indicated the need for a strong Federal
program in the field of resource development.
On July 31, 1953, the President supplemented that message by send-
ing to the Congress a special message relative to a program designed
to conserve and improve the Nation’s natural resources.
In referring to the national forests administered by this Depart-
ment and to other public lands, the President stated in that special
message that the Federal Government has a responsibility to manage
wisely those public lands and forests under its jurisdiction necessary
in the interest of the public as a whole. Important values exist in
these lands for forest and mineral products, grazing, fish, and wild-
life, and for recreation. Moreover, it is imperative to the welfare of
thousands of communities and millions of acres of irrigated land
that such lands be managed to protect the water supply and water
quality which comes from them. In their utilization of these lands,
the people are entitled to expect that their timber, minerals, streams
and water supply, wildlife and recreational values should be safe-
guarded, improved and made available not only for this but for future
generations. At the same time public lands should be made available
for their best use under conditions that promote stability for com-
munities and individuals and encourage full development of the
resources involved.
Accordingly, provisions for a marked increase in management ac-
tivities on the national forests have been made in recent years. These
Federal properties have been substantially improved. The flow of
values stemming from them has markedly increased. Our manage-
ment experience clearly dictated the need for still more intensive
development and management.
lil
As a result, in 1956 I asked the Forest Service to develop a long-
range conservation program for national-forest resources. The first
result of this request was a 5-year program, “Operation Outdoors”;
the second is the enclosed “Program for the National Forests.”
This conservation program embraces all the renewable resources
of the national-forest system—water, timber, recreation, forage, and
wildlife habitat. It includes both long-range objectives and interim
proposals. The program provides for the continued, orderly use and
development of the renewable resources of these Federal lands in
accordance with the basic conservation principles of sustained yield
and multiple use. What is done in the next 10 to 15 years will largely
determine whether these vastly important public lands will contribute
by the year 2000 their fair share to a greatly expanded national
economy.
The national forests are widely scattered throughout the United
States, occurring in all but 10 States and in Puerto Rico. They are
of direct benefit to millions of people. From them are derived an
impressive portion of the Nation’s supply of meat, fiber, shelter, water
for irrigation, industrial, and domestic purposes, hydroelectric power,
feed for livestock and wildlife, and outdoor recreation.
These national forests belong to all American citizens. Their re-
sources and services are available for use by everyone. In recent
years the use of these lands has been increasing steadily. Demands
are now such that a comprehensive program for the orderly growth
of development and management activities is of demonstrated urgency.
Our rapidly growing population and expanding economy indicate
mounting and competitive pressures for national-forest resources.
Legislative authorities for the recommended program are generally
adequate. Supplemental legislation will be proposed as the need
arises. Appropriation requests to implement the program will be
submitted to the Congress in future years in connection with budget
presentations after due consideration of the overall fiscal needs and
resources of the Federal Government.
A similar letter is being sent to the Speaker of the House of Rep-
resentatives.
Sincerely yours,
Ezra Tarr BENsoN,
Secretary.
CONTENTS
Page
Miemmational-forestisystem 2 25 5. 22a a 1
iNetional forests in-a, changing world= 2292222 2222 222 i 3
National-forest progress since 1953________________________ 5
A national-forest conservation program___________________- 9
Resource development and management_______________- 9
apIMDeT TOSOURCES a aee eles See 9
WeiGersKesOUnCeSe= asia ee eee ee oe 11
Rane meSOURCES <6 ae ek sean Se WY
Recreation and wildlife habitat resources__________- 14
eROCeCtIOMmpera teenie eT or WS eee Le 15
Mrompinsects amd disease. =22. 225 22 eee 16
Onna hie eters nelle Pah i eS ee Ee i 17
nomeothersdamacve- =e see 19
Roadsundetnallem eee.) ON Se Nl 19
Eandeadustmentssand-usess2 = 22222025 20
Administrative structures and equipment_______________ 21
VeSCORC auger ec metemen ee Sh oe ee AS 22
eROtkaMmabencitss Wee ee ts ee 25
F—483565 |
The national forests belong to all American citizens
Program for the
NATIONAL FORESTS
There are presented herein long-range objectives and a short-term
conservation program for the national forests and associated lands.
The long-range objectives are related to the year 2000 and the short-
term program to what needs to be done in the next 10 to 15 years toward
meeting current needs and attaining long-range objectives.
This program has been developed after much study. The Depart-
ment of Agriculture has recently completed an exhaustive study of the
U.S. timber situation entitled “Timber Resources for America’s Fu-
ture.” “Operation Outdoors” is a 5-year recreation program for the
national forests. Research needs are based in part on the findings of a
Departmental Committee on Research Evaluation. The Forest Service
has long maintained a project work inventory for the national forests.
These and other studies are the background for the objectives and
program herein developed.
The statutory authorities under which the national forests and
associated lands are administered, and under which research is con-
ducted, are generally adequate to permit carrying out the program
subsequently outlined. Additional legislation which would be helpful
in carrying out the program will be recommended as needed, particu-
larly legislation to facilitate development of an adequate road system.
THE NATIONAL-FOREST SYSTEM
The national forests of the United States are invaluable national
assets. These Federal properties, consisting of forest and range lands
and high mountain watersheds, occur in 39 States and Puerto Rico.
There are 181 million acres of national-forest land grouped into 148
national forests. Eighty-seven percent of national-forest land occurs
in the West.
Of the land area of the continental United States, 1 acre out of every
12 is in national forest. In the West it is about 1 acre out of every
do. Every citizen owns a share of the national-forest system. It might
be said that every man, woman, and child in the United States owns
1 acre of national-forest land.
The national forests consist largely of land reserved from the public
domain by Presidential proclamation under the Act of March 3, 1891.
These lands have always been in Federal ownership. President Theo-
dore Roosevelt proclaimed 148 million acres of public domain as forest
reserves—far more than any other President. In 1905, the forest
reserves were placed under the administration of the Secretary of
Agriculture and the Forest Service was created to administer them.
Later their name was changed to national forests to reflect a conserva-
tion policy of resource utilization rather than of preservation.
Most of the national-forest land in the East was purchased under
the Weeks Law of 1911, as amended in 1924, which authorized pur- |
chase of lands to protect the watersheds of navigable streams and for |}
timber production. |
Pursuant to the Act of June 4, 1897, the 1911 Act, and others, the |
national forests have been administered under the dual policies of |
sustained yield and multiple use of resources. Research has been |
conducted mainly under the Act of May 22, 1928, as amended.
The national forests yield water, timber, forage, recreation, game |
and other wildlife, and minerals. Western agriculture and industry ~
are dependent on water flowing from national-forest watersheds; |)
hundreds of thousands of people earn their livelihood processing —
timber grown on national forests; millions of domestic livestock graze |
national-forest ranges; and many millions of people seek the national
forests for rest, relaxation, and spiritual uplift. All of the re- |
newable resources are to be utilized at a high sustained level of pro-
ductivity and in harmonious relationship each with the other. This —
is the basic policy.
Most national-forest resources and services, such as recreation, wild-
life habitat, waterflow, and scenery cannot be evaluated in monetary |)
terms. There is no known way to measure the multiple intangible 7
values and services of the national forests; but the timber, forage, |)
and land alone are appraised at well over 7 billion dollars.
The national forests are revenue-producing properties. Twenty-
five percent of such revenues is distributed to counties in which 7
national-forest lands are located in lieu of direct taxes. Current an-
nual revenues are about 100 million dollars and more than a billion |
dollars has been received in total from the sale of national-forestl ,
goods and services. National-forest payments received by the counties, |
coupled with Federal expenditures for roads and fire control which | ~
States or counties would otherwise make, substantially exceed the) —
taxes that the national forests would pay if subjected to ordinary
assessment and levy. .
In addition to the national forests, the Forest Service administers ma
some 65 land-utilization projects totaling over 4.5 million acres in 27_
States. These are largely forest and range lands, submarginal for pri-
q
2
_ vate ownership and acquired by the Federal Government during the
1930’s for purposes of conservation and rehabilitation. The lands are
administered under Title III of the Bankhead-Jones Farm Tenant Act
of July 22, 19387, and with the same general sustained-yield and
multiple-use objectives as the national forests.*
NATIONAL FORESTS IN A CHANGING WORLD
Rapid change in the United States is everywhere evident. Highway
construction, housing developments, and expanding urban areas are
prevalent throughout the land. The two foremost economic indicators
of these and other changes are population and gross national product.
In the 13 years since the end of World War II population in the
United States has increased 32 percent. An estimate of 332 million
| persons by the end of the century is more than double the 1950 census.
_ Inthe same half century, gross national product is expected to increase
more than 5 times. Furthermore, in the West, where most national
forests are located, population growth is even more phenomenal. The
estimate for the 11 Western States is for a tripling of population in
the last half of the 20th century.
| Another indicator of special significance from the standpoint of rec-
| reational impact on the national forests is the increase in leisure time.
| The average individual today has about 50 percent more leisure time
' than in 1920. By the turn of the century an individual may have a
. third more leisure time than he has today.
The impact of this national growth upon the national forests already
_ has been tremendous as evidenced by recent trends in use. The impact
will be even greater in the future. No longer are the national forests
| the inaccessible and distant hinterlands they were when the system was
|, first established. No longer can the Forest Service be primarily a
_ custodian whose principal function is protection of national forests
from fire. Barriers of time, distance, and inaccessibility have been fast
| fading, especially in the last two decades. The people have found
| the national forests; and their vast resources are in great demand.
_ Management must become progressively more intense and more ade-
| quately supported by research findings if the national forests are to
| keep pace with economic needs and national growth.
_ The role of the national forests in the national economy, and
| especially in that of the Western States, cannot be discounted. Nearly
_ half of all softwood sawtimber in the Nation and more than half the
_ commercial forest land in the West is found in the national forests.
502100 O—59—__2 3
Nearly one-fifth of the 11 Western States is national-forest land
and these lands, because of their mountainous character and generally
high elevation, receive one-third of the precipitation and furnish over
half the streamflow. Western national forests are major sources of
water for 1,800 towns and cities including such major metropolitan
areas as Salt Lake City, Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles,
and Phoenix. Over 600 hydroelectrical developments depend on the
national forests for water.
Irrigation accounts for one-half of the Nation’s consumption of
fresh water. By 1975 daily use of water is expected to nearly double,
an increase which would be equivalent to the daily flow of over 13
Colorado Rivers. Inevitably, western national forests will continue
GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT—,
billions of _
1957 we
“RECREATION VISITS
~ millions”
20 ~— 30 40 50 qn 2000
Recreation use is increasing at a faster rate than either population or gross national product
their indispensable role as regulators of the kind and amount of fresh
water available to western people.
Similarly in recreation the national forests are of increasing im-
portance because of more leisure time, greater mobility of the average
family, increased accessibility of the national forests, and the rela-
tively low cost of a national-forest vacation.
In the West, despite downward adjustments in the numbers of
permitted livestock, over one-fifth of the sheep and one-eighth of the
cattle graze national-forest ranges. Over one-third of all big game
in the Nation is found on the national forests along with 81 thousand
miles of fishing streams and over 2 million acres of natural lakes and
impounded waters.
NATIONAL-FOREST PROGRESS SINCE 1953
In his first State of the Union message on February 2, 1953, the
President called attention to the vast importance to this Nation now
and in the future of the soil and water, the forests and minerals, and
the wildlife resources. It was recognized that the Federal respon-
sibility in the field of resource development called for a strong
program.
Since that time, substantial and gratifying progress has been made,
both financially and physically, in the development and management
of the national forests and associated lands.? Some of the outstanding
achievements that have been accomplished since 1953 should be
mentioned.
In timber resource management, the funds available for sales ad-
ministration and management have risen from 5.9 million dollars in
fiscal year 1953 to 13.5 million dollars in fiscal year 1959, and those
for reforestation and stand improvement have risen from 1.2 million
dollars to 3.0 million dollars. In 1953, 5.2 billion board feet of timber
with a stumpage value of 70.6 million dollars were cut. After reach-
ing a previous peak in 1957, 8.0 billion board feet with a stumpage
value of more than 100 million dollars are expected to be cut in 1959.
At the same time, the number of timber sales rose from 24,300 to an
estimated 36,000 in 1959. In 1953, the area planted or seeded to trees
was 51,200 acres. Almost double that amount is now being planted
annually. Timber stand improvement work was done on 387,300 acres
in 1958. Today this work is being carried out on approximately
800,000 acres annually.
In 19538, the sum of 2.4 million dollars was available for range re-
source management: 1.0 million dollars being for range management,
$763,000 for range revegetation, and $658,000 for range improvements.
In fiscal year 1959, the sum of 4.8 million dollars is available: 1.7
million dollars being for range management, 1.5 million dollars for
range revegetation, and 1.6 million dollars for range improvements.
* Hereinafter referred to as the national-forest system.
3
During this period, reanalyses and revised range management plans
were completed on 2,150 or nearly one-fourth of the 8,790 range allot-
ments. The rate of range reseeding has practically doubled the 53,600
acres reseeded in 1953. During the period 1953 through 1958 nearly
a half million acres have been reseeded. During the period 1953 to
1958 inclusive, about 1,600 range water developments have been con-
structed. Annual rate of construction is double what it was in 1953.
The Federal financing of the construction, rehabilitation, and main-
tenance of recreational developments has increased from 3.1 million
dollars in fiscal year 1953 to almost 10.0 million dollars for fiscal year
1959 and the amounts for wildlife habitat management increased from
$223,000 to $805,000. During this same period, the recreation visits
rose from 35.4 million in 1953 to 68.5 million in 1958, one-fourth of
these being visits from hunters and fishermen. The number of devel-
oped campground and picnic sites in 1953 was approximately 4,600,
containing 41,100 family units. Most of these were constructed in
the mid-1930’s and were badly in need of rehabilitation. Although the
work of rehabilitating these areas had begun a few years earlier, the
program for the recreational development of the national forests,
called “Operation Outdoors,” was prepared and initiated in 1957. As
a result, good headway has already been made in the rehabilitation
of the developed campground and picnic sites and some new sites have
been developed. There are now 5,100 developed campground and
picnic sites containing 46,700 family units.
For soil and water management the sum of $137,000 was available in
1953. This has been increased to 1.4 million dollars in fiscal year 1959.
The number of national-forest watershed rehabilitation projects in-
creased from 12 in 1953 to 145 in 1958. This work is done specifically
to improve and protect watersheds, lessen flood damage, or restore
damaged and eroding lands, over and above that normally being done
in connection with other national-forest activities.
In fiscal year 1953, there were 22.0 million dollars of Federal funds
available for the construction and maintenance of forest development
roads and trails. The amount for fiscal year 1959 for this purpose is
35.4 million dollars. In 1953, there were constructed with Federal
funds 728 miles of forest development roads. In the 1953 through 1958
period, 5,289 miles have been constructed and it is estimated that
1,062 miles will be constructed in fiscal year 1959. In addition, pur-
chasers of national-forest timber during the period 1953 through 1958
constructed 12,570 miles of forest development roads, with allowances
therefor in timber appraisals.
One of the most troublesome problems was the need for housing,
particularly to provide suitable housing for field personnel. In 1953,
the amount available for structural improvements for fire and general
purposes was 3.1 million dollars, practically all of which was for
6
maintenance. This has more than trebled and for fiscal year 1959,
the amount is 10.6 million dollars. Since 1953, there have been con-
structed 602 dwellings and related improvements, 769 service build-
ings, and 139 lookout structures.
In 1953, the total receipts from the sale of timber and from the use
of the range and other surface resources was 76.0 million dollars. It
is anticipated that these receipts for fiscal year 1959 will be about 110
million dollars. With these anticipated receipts for 1959, almost 600
million dollars will have been received by the Federal Government
since the close of 1953. This is almost 60 percent of the first billion
dollars of national-forest receipts reached on November 21, 1958 after
the national forests were placed under the administration of the Secre-
tary of Agriculture in 1905. Twenty-five percent of these revenues
were distributed for the benefit of schools and roads in the counties.
Federal financing of research bearing on national-forest problems
in 1953 was 6.2 million dollars. In 1959, it was 16.5 million dollars,
including 2.5 million dollars for construction of research facilities.
Any precise allocation of the benefits of forestry research to the
support of management and development of the national-forest system
is difficult. Generally research projects benefit anyone who protects
and manages forest resources regardless of landownership. Thus it
serves private as well as public forestry. During this period, forestry
research has made substantial and significant contributions to the
development, management, and protection of the national-forest
system. These include, to name only three, (a) development of a new
aerial forest fire control method, with the result that in 1958 more
than 1.4 million gallons of chemical fire retardant were dropped on
320 fires in the national forests with a high degree of success; (b)
a new technique for fumigating tree nursery soils was perfected in
1957, increasing the efficiency and effectiveness of seedling production;
and (c) a patch-type of cutting for lodgepole pine timber was
developed for high, mountainous national-forest areas of the Rocky
Mountains which increases late spring water yield by 25 to 30 percent
because of its influence on snow accumulation and rate of melt.
There have been many other major conservation accomplishments in
the management of the national-forest system. New or revised policies
have been adopted since 1953 in order that the management of the na-
tional forests would be more responsive to the needs of the users. Asa
result of cooperative effort with both the forest and mining industries,
authority was enacted in 1955 and procedures developed to provide for
the multiple use of the mineral and surface resources. In 1958,
“Timber Resources for America’s Future,” the most comprehensive
study of the timber resources of the Nation, was published and as a
result the timber goals for the national forests have been raised sub-
stantially. Changes have been made in national-forest grazing policies
C
to give permittees increased stability in the utilization of the grazing
resources. The number of public advisory committees at State, re-
gional, and local levels, advisory to the Forest Service on activities
covered by this program, has been increased to 170.
The national forests are clearly national in significance because of
their impact on our people in both their work and their play. Wood
and livestock products from the national forests enter into the com-
merce of every State; waters flowing from the national forests cross
State boundaries; and the millions who hunt, fish, camp, picnic, and ski
on the national forests come from every State and every walk of life.
The national forests are federally owned and their multiple-use
management to produce a sustained yield of services and products
is a Federal responsibility. Despite the splendid progress that has
been made since 1953, these properties with their current assets and
enormous potential must be responsive to national needs. In addition,
there are opportunities for development primarily of localized signifi-
cance in collaboration with non-Federal groups, both public and
private.
Past trends, present use, and future expectations indicate clearly
the need for a planned program of development and use supported
by essential research. Resource development is a long-time propo-
sition. What is done in the next 10 to 15 years will largely determine
the heritage that our children and their children will receive from
the national-forest system.
F—437462
Long-range timber goal—annual sawtimber harvest, on a sustained-yield basis, of 21.1
billion board feet by the year 2000
8
A NATIONAL-FOREST CONSERVATION PROGRAM
The program presented herein is geared to meeting the needs of
this short-term period and to preparing the national-forest system
to contribute its fair share to the national well-being at the end of
the century.
The program is described in terms of both long-range resource
objectives to be accomplished by the year 2000, and the specific work
which will need to be done in the short-term period to attain these
objectives. The program will be carried out as rapidly as possible
within the overall budgetary requirements and fmancial resources of
the Federal Government.
Resource Development and Management
The basic renewable natural resources of the national-forest system
upon which the Nation will rely to an increasing extent in the years
to come are the timber, water, range, and the recreation and wildlife
habitat resources. Their intensive development and management is
truly a conservation program of great significance to the continued
development, prosperity, and welfare of the Nation.
Timber Resources
The long-range timber goal for the national-forest system is an
annual harvest on a sustained-yield basis of 21.1 billion board feet
of sawtimber by the year 2000. This goal is about 3 times the 1957
timber cut. Total sawtimber growth estimated to be needed in the
year 2000 to meet national demands is 105.4 billion board feet. The
national-forest goal is that portion of the national need which the
national forests could reasonably be expected to produce under in-
tensified management.
The objective is to reach this goal by: (a) Intensifying the manage-
ment of existing stands, including measures to assure stand improve-
ment and regeneration; (b) growing more and better trees on the
lands that are not producing their full capacity today; (c) reducing
losses from disease, insects, and fire; and (d) improving utilization.
The short-term program steps to further items (c) and (d) are cov-
ered later under the headings Protection and Research.
The program proposals for the short-term period are—
1. Harvesting will be increased toward the goal of full sustained-
yield cut on all working circles so that annual cut will reach 11
billion board feet.
2. Harvesting will be developed in a manner that will, to the
extent possible: (a) Accelerate cutting of stagnant stands, release
advance reproduction by removing overstory of old growth, and
increase the salvage of dead, dying, and diseased trees; and (b)
encourage reasonable distribution of sales among small, medium,
and larger operators.
3. Develop and apply on sale areas higher standards of regenera-
tion, hazard reduction, salvage, and erosion control.
4. Up-to-date inventories will be obtained for all commercial
forest lands and timber management plans will be completed for all
working circles. When completed, they will be maintained by
periodic reinventories and revisions.
5. Approximately three-fourths of the 4.4 million acres of non-
stocked and poorly stocked plantable lands will be seeded or planted.
6. The productive condition of over 11 million of the 30 million
acres of less than saw-log size stands will be substantially improved
ae oe Ts =
F—482967 —
More than 4 million acres of nonstocked and Poorly stocked national-forest lands should — ,,
be seeded or planted
10
by plantation care, pruning, weeding, thinning, release cutting,
reinforcement planting of lightly stocked areas, and planting new
burns in these stands.
Water Resources
In continuing their role as regulator of waterflows, national-forest
watersheds will continue to be managed in accord with two principal
long-range objectives: (a) Protection of the watershed by stabilizing
the soil and thereby preserving and improving water quality; and (b)
management of the area to increase the quantity of water.
Protection of the watershed and water quality will continue to be
a primary objective. Quantity of water yielded will receive major
consideration in the multiple-use management of national forests.
To accomplish these objectives, an accelerated program of watershed
management, rehabilitation, and protection will need to be carried
out, including the application of new methods and practices as they
are developed and proved.
_ Program proposals for the short-term period include—
1. More intensive management activities to assure full protection
of the hydrologic condition of watersheds in the management and
use of other resources. Management plans for other resources that
involve manipulation of plant cover will adequately consider water-
shed management needs.
cad
i ‘
a -
ey oe * 47 - * “t* & ‘ se a a - i
a ~» 4 ee + 3 thes SiR
F—482073
An accelerated program of watershed management, rehabilitation, and protection needs to
be carried out
502100 O—59——3 11
2. Reasonable protection to, and minimizing damage from the
greatly increasing number of water development projects in and
adjacent to the national-forest system.
3. Preparing and maintaining watershed management plans for
areas which are the sole or major source of municipal water supplies.
4, Initiating field inventories of water supplies and yield with
comparative data as to effects on water yield and quality of range,
timber, and other uses and management practices.
5. Complete soil surveys on about 33 million acres, or 22 percent
of the total area in need of survey.
6. Watershed rehabilitation measures to stabilize gulles and
channels, control sheet erosion, stabilize dunes and earth slides, con-
trol erosion on roads and trails, and accomplish water spreading
will be done in varying degrees ranging from one-tenth to one-third
of the total work needed. Work scheduled includes 10,000 miles of
gully and channel stabilization; 1.38 million acres of sheet erosion
control; 20,000 acres of dune and blowout stabilization ; erosion con-
trol on 14,000 miles of substandard roads and trails; 5,600 acres of
water spreading; 535 structures for flood prevention ; and 170 stream
pollution control projects.
Range Resources
The development and management of the 68 million acres of range-
land in the national-forest system has two major long-range objectives:
(a) Proper stocking and improvement of the range resource to
achieve desirable watershed conditions and sustained high-level
production of forage. Over many years the Forest Service has
attempted to bring livestock numbers into balance with available
forage. This is being done by building up forage production
through reseeding, other range-improvement measures, and better
management. Where this is not sufficient, necessary adjustments
to grazing capacity have been made in either numbers of permitted
livestock or season of use.
(b) Making lands suitable for livestock grazing available for use
under conditions that promote stability for communities and indi-
viduals, and encourage full development of the range resource with
due regard to other resources and uses.
These policies can be furthered by intensifying management of all
range allotments; obtaining and maintaining desirable forage to
high capacity; constructing, rehabilitating, and maintaining range
improvements needed to attain intensive management on all ranges;
and making adjustments in numbers of livestock or seasons of use
when necessary.
12
F—472642
Proper use and full development of range resources will promote stability for individuals and
communities
In order to make substantial progress toward the long-range
objectives, the short-term program proposals are—
1. Complete and thereafter keep current range analyses and
management plans on all range allotments.
2. Where stocking adjustments are necessary to balance utilization
and available forage, these will be carried out as rapidly as practi-
cable bearing in mind the needs of the range and other factors.
3. Separation of cattle and sheep grazing on common use areas,
and substantial reduction of livestock trespass.
4, Properly coordinate all range use with other resource use.
5. Revegetation and control of noxious or poisonous range plants
and farm weeds will be undertaken on about 4.4 million acres of
rangelands needing one or both treatments.
6. Reconstruction or rehabilitation of presently deteriorated
range Improvements will be completed ; other improvements will be
maintained.
13
7. Construct 18,000 miles of fences and 9,500 water developments
to initiate programs of intensive range management for control
of livestock and more efficient use of forage.
Recreation and Wildlife Habitat Resources
As previously described, the growth and development of the Nation
already has had a terrific impact on the national forests in increased use
of the recreation and wildlife habitat resources. It is estimated that
these uses will rise from the 68.5 million recreation visits of 1958 to 130
million visits by 1969, with a continued rapid annual increase to a
possible 600 million visits by the year 2000. This expected increase to
nearly double the present use by 1969 and about nine times the present
use by the year 2000 is far in excess of the expected rate of increase in
population.
F—4831€9
Increasing demands are being made on national-forest recreation and fish and wildlife
resources
The long-range objective is that: (a) National-forest recreation re-
sources will be so developed and managed that the kind, quality, and
quantity of their development and maintenance will be sufficient to
keep abreast of this tremendously increased demand; and (b) the wild- |
life habitat will yield a fish and game population adequate to meet —
the equally tremendous increase in sportsman use. |
14. |
The program proposals for the short-term period are—
1. Complete “Part 1 of Operation Outdoors,” which is a 5-year
program initiated in 1957 to reconstruct and rehabilitate the then
existing recreation facilities consisting of 4,700 campgrounds and
picnic sites containing 42,400 family units, construct additional fa-
cilities, and adequately maintain and service these facilities to meet
the existing and predicted situation.
2. Complete inventory and evaluation of recreation and wildlife
habitat resources. This will be done partly in cooperation with the
Outdoor Recreation Resources Review Commission, and with respect
to wildlife habitat resources, in cooperation with the States.
3. Revise and complete recreation management plans for all ad-
ministrative units and thereafter keep them current.
4. Prepare and execute development plans on 10,000 new camp-
ground and picnic sites containing 102,000 family units.
5. Repair and reconstruct dams and spillways as necessary in
order to place them in a safe condition for recreational use.
6. Provide adequate sanitation, cleanup, safe water, fire preven-
tion, and public safety at all developed recreation sites and in heavily
used unimproved areas.
7. Protect and manage wilderness-type, roadside, and other
special areas.
8. Review at least 30 of the remaining 41 primitive areas as to
their wilderness characteristics and reclassify them accordingly.
9. Revise and complete wildlife habitat management plans for
all administrative units, assuring proper coordination between uses
of wildlife habitat resources and other resources.
10. Participate in planning, inspection, and control phases of all
habitat improvement projects conducted on lands of the national-
forest system by States and by other Federal agencies to insure
that the projects will benefit wildlife and be in harmony with other
resource values.
11. Improve food and cover on 1.5 million acres of key wildlife
areas.
12. Develop wildlife openings, food patches, and game walkways
in dense vegetation by clearing or controlled burning on about a
half million acres.
13. Improve 7,000 miles of the 81,000 miles of fishing streams
and 56,000 acres of lakes by stabilizing banks, planting streamside
cover, and constructing channel improvements.
- Protection
| The total adverse impact of disease, insects, fire, weather, destruc-
tive animals, and other forces on the uses and values of forest re-
_ sources 1s not generally recognized. They kill and destroy, retard or
15
prevent reproduction and growth, impair and damage values, and
disrupt uses.
The total growth impact on sawtimber from destructive agencies
in the continental United States and coastal Alaska in 1952 was
estimated to be equal to 92 percent of the net sawtimber growth.
Cause of the impact on sawtimber growth was distributed 45 percent
to disease, 20 percent to insects, 17 percent to fire, and 18 percent to all
others.
These destructive forces also have a seriously adverse effect upon
the watersheds and their life-supporting waterflows, and upon the
other renewable forest resources.
The long-range objective is to hold the damage from destructive
agencies below the level which would seriously interfere with intensive
management of the national-forest system under principles of mul-
tiple use and high-level sustained yield of products and services. This
can be accomplished substantially by a continued trend toward better
facilities and techniques for fire control and more resources to cope
with critical fire periods, and a more intensive application of a
program of prevention, detection, and control of insect and disease _
infestations. In addition to direct protection measures, more intensive |
management of timber resources will result in reduction of losses from |
insects and disease.
Protection From Insects and Disease
In the short-term period, it is proposed that insect and disease —
control on the national-forest system be stepped up to a level of pre-
vention, detection, and control of insect and disease infestations that —
will substantially reduce the occurrence of large infestations toward |
the end of the initial period. This will require about a 50 percent |
increase over the present level of protection. The work will consist of— —
1. Intensification of present activities through (a) quicker, more |
extensive, and more thorough surveys to detect incipient outbreaks; |
(b) more reliable evaluation of the potential of initial outbreaks to |
cause widespread damage; (c) quicker and more effective control |
action in the initial stages to prevent a large-scale epidemic. The |),
initial suppression activities would cover about twice the acreage 4),
currently being treated.
2. Continuation of present blister rust control work plus exten- 7
sion of control to 250,000 acres not now protected but which should |,
be managed for white pine production. The objective is to achieve ©)
sufficient effectiveness of control on all of the area now under treat- |),
ment plus the additional acres so that after the initial period only
maintenance control will be needed. |
3. Initiating a program to control dwarfmistletoe on several |
hundred thousand acres of selected better stands of young softwood |
sawtimber on better growing sites.
16
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Quicker and more effective control action in initial stages will prevent large-scale insect and
disease epidemics
4. Coordination of timber harvesting with pest control objec-
tives in order to reduce the loss from high-risk old-growth trees
and to reduce the possibility of old-growth stands serving as a focal
point of infection.
Protection From Fire
It is proposed that by the end of the initial period all commercial
timberlands, all critical watersheds, and other lands in the national-
forest system developed or proposed for intensive use will be given
protection from fire adequate to meet the fire situation in worst years
and under serious peak loads. This will include 125 million acres
compared to 23 million acres now receiving such protection. An
additional 15 million acres will be given a lesser degree of protection
but adequate to meet the average fire situation.
Meeting these levels of protection from fire calls for—
1, Expansion, modernization, and development of fire control
to a proficiency and strength of force which will prevent as many
fires as possible and suppress fires before they spread beyond per-
17
mitted standards. This is to be accomplished by nearly doubling
the present level of preventive effort, detection, skilled fire-fighting
crews, training, supervision, and equipment.
2. Development and use of new and modern techniques for pre-
vention, for suppression of fires while small, and for stopping large
fires while running and burning intensely.
3. Reduction of hazardous fuel conditions to minimize the chances
of large fires developing and spreading to high-value areas. This
work will cover the most serious one-fourth of all land needing
such treatment, and will consist of burning 300,000 acres of highly
hazardous debris concentration, felling snags on 320,000 acres of
high lightning-occurrence areas, prescribed burning on 3.5 million
acres, removing roadside fuel on 37,000 acres, and clearing and
maintaining 12,000 miles of firebreaks.
F—465765
Speed, up-to-date equipment, and modern techniques are required for more effective control
18
of forest fires
Protection From Other Damage
Rodent control work for the short-term period will be aimed at
control of the most serious infestations of harmful rodents, such as
porcupines and mice, on high-value areas of forage and commercial
timberlands. These areas comprise about half of the total area of ro-
dent infestation on the national forests. Approximately 1.8 million
acres of rangelands and 9.4 million acres of timberlands would be
treated in this period. Control would be limited to those rodents for
which economical means of control are known.
Roads and Trails
The road and trail system which serves the national-forest lands is
a complex of highways and access roads and trails under various
ownerships and jurisdictions. This transportation system is vital to
the multiple use of all the resources of the national-forest system.
For administrative purposes, the road and trail facilities are grouped
into a forest highway system and a forest development road and trail
system. All these facilities benefit the national forests. There are
now 24,400 miles of forest highways; 149,700 miles of forest develop-
ment roads, and 112,200 miles of trails. When fully installed, there
will be about 70,000 miles of forest highways; 542,000 miles of access
roads, and the trail network will be reduced to about 80,000 miles.
The forest highway program is administered by the Bureau of Pub-
lic Roads in the Department of Commerce. The forest highways are
therefore not included in the program herein outlined.
An adequate system of roads and trails is essential to proper manage-
ment of forest lands. The presence or lack of access roads has a direct
and controlling influence on many phases of forest management, such
as the volume of timber that can be marketed; the size, duration, and
distribution of sales within working circles; the level of salvage cut-
ting; protection of national-forest resources from fire, insects, and
disease; and recreational and forage use.
Financial losses occur every year to the Federal Government through
inability to market mature timber now inaccessible but in need of har-
vesting, and to promptly and completely salvage losses resulting from
fire, windstorms, insects, and diseases. As the road and trail system
is expanded the revenue to the Government increases, primarily
through expanded timber sales. Timber access roads for the national-
forest system are investments which will pay their own way over a
period of years.
The long-range objective is to have and maintain a system of roads
and trails to service the national forests adequately at the levels needed
to meet expected demands. Such a system will not only make that pos-
sible, but will at the same time enhance the value of the timber and
other resources being utilized.
19
F—410272
An adequate system of roads and trails is essential to proper management and use of
national-forest lands
Construction of about 392,600 miles of new roads and 6,000 miles
of new trails will ultimately be needed, along with reconstruction of
about 112,600 miles of roads and 11,300 miles of trails. Also about
41,400 miles of existing trails will be replaced by construction of
new roads.
In the short-term period the program proposals are—
1. Complete construction and reconstruction of about 90,000 miles
of access roads and 8,000 miles of trails. This constitutes about
19 percent of roads and trails included in the long-range objectives.
Approximately half of the value of the work on timber access roads
planned for this period will be constructed by national-forest timber
purchasers, but paid for by the Government through adjustment
of stumpage prices.
2. Provide maintenance to full standards on the 261,900 miles
of existing development roads and trails and on 58,600 miles of
new construction.
Land Adjustment and Uses
Effective management of the national-forest system requires rea-
sonable consolidation of ownership where there are intermixed public
20
i
and private lands. Accomplishment of these ownership adjustments
will contribute much toward meeting resource demands by the year
2000 and will be largely accomplished by that time.
In the initial period, national-forest boundary and ownership
classification studies will be completed for all national-forest lands
as the basis for landownership adjustment. Such adjustments will
be brought about mainly by exchanging on a land-for-land basis ap-
proximately 1.4 million acres of scattered or checkerboard national-
forest parcels for other lands needed to consolidate the national-forest
land pattern. This will (a) enable national-forest boundaries to be
modified to exclude about 11 million acres of private and State land
from within national-forest boundaries; and (b) materially reduce the
checkerboard pattern of ownership. Special attention will be given
to completion of consolidation of national-forest ownership in the
Boundary Waters Canoe Area and in certain key watersheds of the
Cache National Forest in Utah. In addition, about 217,000 acres of
land utilization project lands will be exchanged in the initial period
to promote more effective management of such projects. Thereafter
there will be a continuing program in the national forests and related
areas to adjust ownership problems and further consolidate these
public properties.
There must also be accomplished in the short-term period: (a)
Development of an improved and more adequate land status record
system with provision for continuous maintenance; and (b) establish-
ment and marking of public property corners and the surveying and
posting of over 100,000 miles of property lines between national-
forest and other lands which now are inadequately located and marked.
The uses of national-forest lands for many special purposes, includ-
ing the extraction of mineral resources, will continue to increase at a
rapid rate. The supervision of these uses will need to keep pace in
order that such uses can be properly correlated into multiple-use
management of the national-forest system, and to prevent unauthor-
ized use. The program for the determination of surface rights which
has been under way since the approval of the Act of July 23, 1955,
will be completed.
Administrative Structures and Equipment
To facilitate the resource management and development work,
construction and maintenance of administrative and fire control
improvements will need to be provided at an increased rate in the short-
term period. This will consist of completing the present backlog of
housing needs for field officers and of administrative and fire improve-
ments, and the construction of additional housing and improvements.
New construction needs include 2,730 dwellings and related improve-
ments, 2,710 service buildings, and 530 lookout structures. Completion
21
of the communications system needed for protection and management
of the national forests will require 2,000 additional radios and replace-
ment of 9,000 radios and 3,000 miles of telephone lines. The increasing
use of aircraft as an efficient and economical means of transportation
for protection and management of wild lands will require an addi-
tional 25 landing fields and reconstruction of 37 existing fields.
2
Research
Forestry and allied research is needed to keep the national forests
and the utilization of their resources moving ahead on an efficient,
effective, and economical basis to play their proper role in the progress
and development of the Nation. Resource managers and adminis-
trators need answers to their everyday problems. Resource develop-
ment, management, protection, and utilization have an additional
need, and organized research has an additional objective to achieve
significant break-throughs that will show the way to new methods
and new horizons in the management of timber, soil and water, forage,
wildlife habitat, and recreation resources. The short-term research
program is needed to yield both quick results of applicability during
the initial period, and information of value in attaining long-range
objectives.
The research proposals for the initial nel embrace work that
should yield information of wide application and high value. These
proposals include—
1. Accelerated research in forest genetics to produce trees superior
to present ones—in growth rate, wood quality, resistance to insects
and diseases, and other special qualities—for use in the needed
planting programs on national forests.
2. Development of new cultural practices to increase the produc-
tion of high-quality seed through establishment and management of
seed orchards; better methods of harvesting, storing, and processing
of seed; and more efficient planting practices, including direct seed-
ing with aircraft.
3. Better implementation of the national-forest pest control pro-
gram by developing a broader knowledge of the life histories of
damaging insects and diseases and of new methods for controlling ~
them through use of diseases and predators of the pests themselves,
as well as through improved selective chemicals for use in direct
control action. |
4. Better implementation of the national-forest fire control pro- |
gram by developing a better understanding of fire behavior and new _
techniques and equipment needed to eliminate the runaway fires _
now responsible for 90 percent of fire losses in the national-forest —
system.
). Development of new and improved practices required to facili-
22
F—472642
Through research, high-quality, disease-resistant trees are being developed for the future
tate good watershed management so vitally important to the manage-
ment of national-forest timber and range resources. This will
include studies of water yields, both quality and quantity, and
management of snowpacks at high elevations and soil stabilization.
6. Design and evaluation of new and improved equipment for
logging without damage to watershed values—as by an overhead
cable system in order to extend harvesting operations into steep
mountainous slopes not now operable by ground skidding methods;
and equipment to increase the efficiency of woods-utilization of
forest products.
7. Improvement of volume and yield tables, rotation age data, and
other information for regulating timber growing-stock levels for
use in the national-forest timber-management plans.
8. Development of silvicultural bases to guide timber harvesting
and regeneration practices in new forest types and areas, particu-
23
F—469734
Watershed research helps the national-forest manager do a more effective and economical job
larly in Alaska and the more remote areas of the western national
forests to be newly reached in sustained-yield operations.
9. Continuing investigations of the physical and chemical proper-
ties of wood and of processing methods to increase the efficiency
of forest products utilization from national-forest timber-sale areas.
10. Development of new uses for the large volume of low-quality
timber, for logging and milling residues, and for thinnings in order
to broaden the utilization and market base, and to facilitate timber
sales and sustained-yield management.
11. Development of log and tree grades and other information
needed in the marketing of national-forest timber.
12. Development of improved livestock-grazing management
practices on the national forests to increase forage yields and to
protect watershed values.
13. Develop methods of improving national-forest wildlife habi-
tat through modified timber and range management practices, as
well as through development of special measures such as propaga-
tion of browse and other game foods.
14. Determination of the needs and preferences of recreational
uses of the national forests, and of the carrying capacities of camp-
grounds and other recreational areas in order to guide the develop-
ment and management of the recreational resources. |
15. Provision for laboratories, greenhouses, and other facilities,
including modern scientific equipment, required to adequately im-
plement the research program. This will consist of expansions
24
through new construction and betterment of existing facilities. The
needs include 17 specialized laboratories and related greenhouse and
service facilities for the basic research on forest insects and diseases,
tree genetics and physiology, forest soils and hydrology, forest fires,
and forest products, and for development of new equipment for fire
fighting and for harvesting timber; 5 office-laboratory buildings at
regional headquarters of forest and range experiment stations; 25
office-laboratories at centers of field research and minor structures,
fencing, stream gages, and other research installations that will be
required on about 100 experimental forests and ranges.
Program Benefits
Under the proposed program, management and utilization of
national-forest resources will keep pace with population growth and
national economic development and needs.
Many of the benefits from the program for the short-term period
will carry over or will be delayed until after the end of the period.
Investments in such measures as roadbuilding, tree planting, range
reseeding, water conservation, research, recreation, and other improve-
ments proposed in the initial period are geared not only to short-term
needs, but also to the longer range objectives of meeting expected
demands on the national forests during the remainder of the century.
Benefits include direct financial revenues, secondary benefits, and
intangible values.
Direct financial revenues from the national-forest system will rise
to about 210 million dollars annually by the time the short-term con-
servation program is completed, or double current receipts. Over 90
percent of such revenues will continue to come from the sale of stand-
ing timber. By the year 2000 national-forest timber sales should reach
21 billion board feet of sawtimber worth 350 million dollars at 1958
prices.
Payments from national-forest revenues for county schools and
roads will increase correspondingly. These increased payments to
counties, coupled with increased national-forest expenditures for roads
and fire control, will exceed the taxes that the national-forest system
would pay, if subject to local taxation, by an even greater margin at
the end of the initial period than at the present time.
The capital value of the timber, forage, and lands of the national-
forest system will have increased by about a billion dollars as a result
of the short-term conservation program.
In addition to direct financial income to the United States as a result
of the national-forest conservation program, there will be both sub-
' stantial secondary benefits and very real intangible benefits.
_ Secondary benefits include such things as numbers of people em-
ployed in the harvesting of national-forest timber and other products
and the value added to those products by manufacture, distribution,
and marketing.
25
In timber alone, it is estimated that for every dollar of national-
forest stumpage sold the end products will be worth 20 dollars by the
time they reach the ultimate consumer. This means that the annual
sale of 11 billion board feet of sawtimber expected to be reached by
the end of the short-term period will have a total consumer value
of 3.7 billion dollars.
Furthermore, some 620,000 people will derive their livelihood from
the harvesting, processing, hauling, and merchandising of national-
forest timber and the products made therefrom. This will be an in-
crease of 60 percent over the current level.
Similarly, the value of meat, hides, wool, and other livestock prod-
ucts increases with reprocessing and handling as do the numbers of
dependent people.
It is estimated that recreational use of the national-forest system
will reach 130 million visits by 1969, in contrast to the 68.5 million
visits in 1958, and a probable 600 million by 2000. The recreationists
making these 130 million visits will put into trade channels a total of
nearly a billion dollars for sporting equipment, transportation, li-
censes, lodging, and other items.
Most of the truly intangible values of the national forests are ex-
perienced by those millions of people who use the national forests for
reasons other than commercial utilization of resources. No measure
of value expresses the worth of the relaxation, pleasure, rest, spiritual
satisfaction and improvement in health derived from the national
forests.
No realistic dollar value can be placed on water from the national
forests. Water is already the most precious commodity in the West
and over half of all waterflow in the West originates on the national
forests. These lands will continue indefinitely to be indispensable
regulators of the kind and amount of fresh water available to western
people. The national-forest water conservation program will improve
soil stabilization, result in more regular streamflow, and enhance water
quality. It will foster infiltration of water in underground storage.
These results will lessen the need for construction of surface reservoirs,
settling basins, and other water construction works.
Nor can there be any complete assessment in dollars of the lives
saved, damage prevented, and resources preserved by improved accessi-
bility, suppression of insect and disease epidemics, fires prevented —
or controlled when small, and reduction and prevention of floods. All
of these are benefits of the conservation program proposed for the
national forests.
Substantial progress has been made. The foundation for progress
is in place. This program builds on that foundation. The result will
be full development of these extensive and valuable public properties.
26
U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1959 O—502100