New Mexico Sustainable Forestry Business Plan: Difference between revisions
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== Introduction == | |||
The '''New Mexico Sustainable Forestry Business Plan''' gathered diverse stakeholders to co-create a strategy for restoring and sustaining our burned and overly dense unburned forests. Together, we conceived a comprehensive approach in Colfax, Mora, and San Miguel Counties that serves long-term forest health, reduces wildfire threats, and is as carbon-negative as possible. This plan would improve the economic well-being of rural people while sustaining local and Indigenous values, communities, and cultures. Yes, we can do all this if we think, plan, and invest collaboratively for the common good. | The '''New Mexico Sustainable Forestry Business Plan''' gathered diverse stakeholders to co-create a strategy for restoring and sustaining our burned and overly dense unburned forests. Together, we conceived a comprehensive approach in Colfax, Mora, and San Miguel Counties that serves long-term forest health, reduces wildfire threats, and is as carbon-negative as possible. This plan would improve the economic well-being of rural people while sustaining local and Indigenous values, communities, and cultures. Yes, we can do all this if we think, plan, and invest collaboratively for the common good. | ||
Current recovery efforts, which primarily consist of compensation to individual households and businesses, do not recover the landscapes and livelihoods that communities and the region rely on. Many western rural communities still suffer in the aftermath of wildfires due to the absence of an integrated strategy. With a clear vision of a vital future and a road map for how to get there, we can ensure that the substantial funds now being deployed transform the conditions that led to the fires in the first place. | Current recovery efforts, which primarily consist of compensation to individual households and businesses, do not recover the landscapes and livelihoods that communities and the region rely on. Many western rural communities still suffer in the aftermath of wildfires due to the absence of an integrated strategy. With a clear vision of a vital future and a road map for how to get there, we can ensure that the substantial funds now being deployed transform the conditions that led to the fires in the first place. | ||
== What’s the challenge? == | |||
We need a new initiative style to facilitate collaboration and coordination to respond effectively to major ecological breakdowns. If we don’t act fast, within 18 to 24 months of the massive 2022 Hermits Peak and Calf Canyon wildfires, $100 million in the commercial value of sawlogs just on private lands will be lost through rot and deterioration. OnTrackNorthAmerica led stakeholders through a six-month game-planning process to coordinate businesses and governments to scale up the volume of harvesting, logistics, and processing of various forest materials into valuable products. This coordinated action and funding will empower the numerous public sector efforts now in gear to effectively expand the capacity of the local forestry materials industry with business-savvy capital for staffing, equipment, and new facilities coupled with more culturally and ecologically relevant practices. We can integrate funding and support from the public and private sectors to accomplish what neither government nor business can achieve independently. | We need a new initiative style to facilitate collaboration and coordination to respond effectively to major ecological breakdowns. If we don’t act fast, within 18 to 24 months of the massive 2022 Hermits Peak and Calf Canyon wildfires, $100 million in the commercial value of sawlogs just on private lands will be lost through rot and deterioration. OnTrackNorthAmerica led stakeholders through a six-month game-planning process to coordinate businesses and governments to scale up the volume of harvesting, logistics, and processing of various forest materials into valuable products. This coordinated action and funding will empower the numerous public sector efforts now in gear to effectively expand the capacity of the local forestry materials industry with business-savvy capital for staffing, equipment, and new facilities coupled with more culturally and ecologically relevant practices. We can integrate funding and support from the public and private sectors to accomplish what neither government nor business can achieve independently. | ||
== What’s the opportunity? == | |||
This initiative would be a well-informed pilot project that exemplifies what is possible when diverse stakeholders think, plan, and invest together. In addition to an economic and ecological issue, this is a social justice issue. We can address all three holistically. The income from multiple value streams can pay for the clearing of dead timber and the thinning of green wood, which, in turn, has immense importance to local people who, for centuries, have used our forests for firewood, grazing, hunting, and other traditional purposes. At the same time, forest thinning protects roads, power lines, and watersheds while improving the land’s ecological health. Local communities and state and federal agencies will realize huge returns if we rally around our power as a thoughtful and activated community. | This initiative would be a well-informed pilot project that exemplifies what is possible when diverse stakeholders think, plan, and invest together. In addition to an economic and ecological issue, this is a social justice issue. We can address all three holistically. The income from multiple value streams can pay for the clearing of dead timber and the thinning of green wood, which, in turn, has immense importance to local people who, for centuries, have used our forests for firewood, grazing, hunting, and other traditional purposes. At the same time, forest thinning protects roads, power lines, and watersheds while improving the land’s ecological health. Local communities and state and federal agencies will realize huge returns if we rally around our power as a thoughtful and activated community. | ||
== What’s the next step? == | |||
Building from an 18-page outline based on input from numerous individuals and organizations, the team was poised to facilitate the region’s stakeholders in co-creating an “Investor-Grade Community Action Plan” that will pinpoint the commercial, ecological, and operational realities of scaling up harvesting, logistics, and processing of forest biomass. This analysis and Action Plan would provide the basis for private sector investment, local forestry business expansion, and any needed state or federal funding support for the plan’s implementation, which is scheduled to start immediately upon plan completion. | Building from an 18-page outline based on input from numerous individuals and organizations, the team was poised to facilitate the region’s stakeholders in co-creating an “Investor-Grade Community Action Plan” that will pinpoint the commercial, ecological, and operational realities of scaling up harvesting, logistics, and processing of forest biomass. This analysis and Action Plan would provide the basis for private sector investment, local forestry business expansion, and any needed state or federal funding support for the plan’s implementation, which is scheduled to start immediately upon plan completion. '''The action plan will be convened as a CAPSI [[Industry Action Plan]] which has yet to be named.''' | ||
===== What deliverables will the Action Plan generate? ===== | ===== What deliverables will the Action Plan generate? ===== | ||
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'''Community Coordination & Outreach''' | '''Community Coordination & Outreach''' | ||
CAPSI organizers and facilitators will interact with participating forestry stakeholders via outreach and use of our collaborative convening tools. | |||
For further engagement: contact Michael Sussman, '''[mailto:Msussman@ontracknorthamerica.org msussman@ontracknorthamerica.org]''' | For further engagement: contact Michael Sussman, '''[mailto:Msussman@ontracknorthamerica.org msussman@ontracknorthamerica.org]''' or send an email to welcometocapsi@ontracknorthamerica.org with the subject header: Forestry Management. Please look over our [[Participation Options]] page for further details. |