COLORADO
MAJORITY COMMUNICATIONS
STATE CAPITOL
*** Both lawmakers are available for phone interviews this afternoon ***
“Let us make no mistake: this is not just a local issue. The bark beetle epidemic
poses an immediate threat to the United States’ overall security.” said Rep.
Scanlan. “Tens of millions of people across the west depend on the water that
flows downstream from Colorado, and the electricity that travels over impacted
lands.”
Sen.Gibbs, who joined Rep. Scanlan at the hearing, echoed the testimony: “Colorado
lawmakers are committed to fighting the fire threat and restoring our forests.
However, the need has simply outpaced our financial resources on the state level.
It is now incumbent upon the federal government to act.”
In her remarks before the House Subcommittee on National Parks, Forest and Public
Lands, Rep. Scanlan called on Congress to:
Increase funding for local, state and federal officials to apply toward fire
prevention and suppression
Send President Obama a strong version of the FLAME Act, which would decouple fire
prevention and suppression funding, and would continue the “good neighbor” policy
that has been so effective
Follow Colorado’s lead to introduce legislation that removes barriers to cross-
jurisdictional cooperation, and that encourages public-private collaboration.
Over the next two days, the pair also plan to meet with key members of Congress
and their staffs to encourage expanding federal action and developing a viable
market for “blue wood” beetle-killed products.
# # #
David Oppenheim
Legislative Director
Colorado House Majority
(303) 866-2302 Direct
(303) 725-6271 Cell
david.oppenheim@state.co.us
www.coloradohouse.org