Opinion

Time for General Assembly to Finally Act on Forest Conservation

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What can provide Rhode Island with clean and safe air to breathe and water to drink, create jobs, fight climate change, moderate stifling hot temperatures, protect native wildlife, provide a multitude of recreational opportunities, and add an invaluable sense of place to communities? The answer is Rhode Island’s forests.

Conserving them is essential to sustain our quality of life. That’s why we must act now to adopt the Forest Conservation Act (H5760 and S0470), to conserve what’s left of our forests before it’s too late.

Rhode Island’s forests have been referred to as the invisible green giant for too long. Meaning they provide immeasurable values but have been taken for granted as something that’s just a green backdrop until they are cleared for another use. However, the forest is an ecosystem where the sum of all its values is far greater than any single attribute no matter how impressive these attributes might be.

This was a key finding in The Value of Rhode Island Forests, a report by the Rhode Island Tree Council and Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) published in 2020. Grow Smart Rhode Island helped to coordinate the forest advisory committee that provided input into the 133-page report.

Rhode Island is about 56 percent forested, an impressive figure in the second-most densely populated state. But our forests are being fragmented as they are cut into smaller segments at an alarming rate. Between 2011 and 2017, Rhode Island lost some 2,000 acres of our most important or core forest, which is unfragmented forest 250 acres and greater. As the forest continues to be fragmented some values are impaired and others can be lost completely.

The need to prevent forest conversion to other uses is critical. Trees are the best technology for carbon removal and, according to the New England Forestry Foundation, the forests in New England have the potential to achieve 33 percent of our necessary carbon reductions to comply with the recently adopted Act On Climate law.

Grow Smart Rhode Island respectfully urges the House and the Senate to adopt the Forest Conservation Act (H5760 and S470). We commend the sponsors of this important legislation and the leadership of DEM to take on this challenging but critical goal.

We support the Forest Conservation Act for the following reasons:

The act clearly recognizes that forestland has many important values, cites these values, and establishes policy that these values be maintained for future generations to enjoy. This is the first time that Rhode Island’s forest values have been recognized in state law. Other natural resources including but not limited to farms have all been previously recognized.

The act establishes a broad-based forest conservation commission to be staffed by DEM. The intent is to help landowners conserve forests in perpetuity, encourage better forest management, promote forest conservation as a means to mitigate climate change, create jobs in the forest products industry, and expand urban and community forestry programs.

The act uses incentives, not new regulations or restrictions, to encourage positive outcomes. This will establish a strong foundation to improve forest conservation in Rhode Island.

Legislation to encourage forest conservation is long overdue.

We must act now to pass the forest conservation act or the special forest values that benefit all Rhode Islanders can be lost and gone forever. We need to stop the death by a thousand cuts.

Scott Millar is the director of community assistance and conservation for Grow Smart Rhode Island. He assisted the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management in preparing this legislation, coordinated the Value of Rhode Island Forests advisory committee, and owns 45 acres of forest.

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  1. Thanks for your work on this critically important issue, Scott. I have been in strong support of conserving our forest land for many years, for all of the reasons stated above and many more. We have already lost too many acres of forest in Rhode Island, but hopefully this legislation will be passed soon and the very important work of forest conservation can begin!
    Cindy Gianfrancesco
    Scituate Land Trust

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