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The Senate this week told the Obama administration to stop spending stimulus bill wildland firefighting money on urban parks in the nation's capital - the first time either chamber has voted to reject one of the administration's stimulus spending decisions.
With fires raging out West, lawmakers said, it was ridiculous to spend firefighting money in Washington, which has no national forests and isn't considered a forest fire danger spot. In a voice vote Tuesday, senators voted unanimously to prohibit the U.S. Forest Service to spend any of its $500 million in wildland fire money in the city.
"This is ridiculous, it is outrageous, and we should not stand for it," said Sen. John Barrasso, the Wyoming Republican who sponsored the amendment to the Interior Department spending bill.
The money, part of the $787 billion stimulus bill, came from a $500 million fund the Forest Service was given for "wildland fire mitigation."
Earlier this month, the Forest Service announced that among its wildland fire grants were two D.C. programs: $90,000 for a city government summer green job corps program and $2.7 million for Washington Parks & People, a nonprofit, to start a green job corps.
The grants, first reported by The Washington Times, drew condemnation from lawmakers, who said forest fire money should be spent on stopping forest fires.
But Caleb Weaver, press secretary at the Agriculture Department, which oversees the Forest Service, said the money going to Washington is part of a fund set aside for state and private land, not national forests. Even though the money was in the "wildland fire mitigation" section of the stimulus bill, he said, Congress allowed it to be spent on healthy forest and ecosystem improvement activities.
"The point of these economic recovery funds was principally to create jobs, especially in areas that were struggling. The District of Columbia has one of the highest unemployment rates in the country," Mr. Weaver said.
Stephen W. Coleman, executive director of Washington Parks & People, said his grant was filed under a program aimed at boosting forest health.
"There was never anything about firefighting. We have fought fires in parks in D.C., but that's not what this is about," Mr. Coleman said. "Obviously everybody recognizes there are urgent needs in firefighting, but there are also urgent needs in urban neglected green spaces."








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