HJR 49 - NAT'L FOREST ROAD-BUILDING MORATORIUM CHAIRMAN HALFORD announced HJR 49 to be up for consideration. MR. PETER ECKLUND, Staff to Representative Williams, sponsor of HJR 49, read the sponsor statement. The Forest Service recently announced a sweeping two-year moratorium on development of roadless areas in national forests. Although the announced land freeze appears to have exempted the Tongass National Forest from the policy, that is not necessarily the case. The public has 30 days to comment on this after which the Tongass could be included in the moratorium. Also, the Chief of the Forest Service, Mr. Mike Dombeck, has said that the final long-term policy will apply to all forests. The resolution speaks to the inappropriate manner in which the White House is dictating management of our national forests. The Forest Service has turned the public process upside down by announcing their policy first, then searching for scientific evidence to support their position and reaching out for public participation. The resolution also speaks to the Tongass Land Management Plan revised over 10 years and costing $13 million. It would be wrong to come back later with a unilateral amendment which alters the balance struck in the plan. CHAIRMAN HALFORD said that Mr. Lyle Lundberg of Ketchikan and Mr. Mark Stahl of Anchorage were ready to testify and asked if anyone wanted to testify against this resolution. There was no response. He asked if anyone needed to testify on it before it passed from this committee. There was no response. He said he would accept a motion to move it with the concurrence of Mr. Lundberg, Mr. Stahl, and Mr. Jack Phelps. MR. MARK STAHL, Manager, Lands and Resources, Chugach Alaska Corporation, suggested adding a whereas statement dealing with the Chugach National Forest saying, "Whereas the Chugach National Forest land management land plan revision was initiated in April of 1997, and this plan revision process is the appropriate venue for addressing road building and roadless area management issues in the Chugach National Forest." He suggested putting it between the fourth and fifth whereas statements. CHAIRMAN HALFORD said he thought it would go better after the third whereas. TAPE 98-11, SIDE B SENATOR LEMAN moved to amendment HJR 49 to add "Whereas Chugach National Forest land management plan revision was initiated in April 1997 and this plan revision process is the appropriate venue for changes to the Chugach Land Management Plan (or words to that effect)." There were no objections and it was so ordered. MR. JACK PHELPS, Executive Director, Alaska Forest Association, said it was important to recognize that this moratorium will have a disproportionate effect on Alaska relative to the rest of the country. He said the process is lousy and a compromise of every major law that affects national forest management. The effects of this on Alaska in terms of the allowable cut for timber on our national forests is more than double that of any other national forest region in the country. SENATOR LEMAN moved to pass SCS CSSSHJR 49(RES) from committee with individual recommendations. There were no objections and it was so ordered.