林业局、大萧条与佛蒙特州政治文化:执行新政保护与救济政策

John Aubrey Douglass
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引用次数: 1

摘要

约翰·奥布里·道格拉斯1932年4月25日,在严重失业、贫困和绝望的时期,赫伯特·胡佛总统在佛蒙特州建立了绿山国家森林。在许多方面,经济衰退和随后的新政计划的冲击为佛蒙特州和全国的林务局提供了一个独特的机会。大萧条时期迫使联邦政府将其土地管理和林业项目视为不仅仅是保护活动,不仅仅是提供持续木材产量和保护西部联邦土地的一种方式。联邦保护政策和地理上分散的机构,如林务局,成为制定新的经济救济计划的主要手段。在大萧条期间,林业局获得了前所未有的资金,建立了26个新的国家森林,主要在东部,并扩大了流域保护、木材改良、重新造林、疾病控制和野生动物管理方面的工作。额外的资源分配给林务局,用于建设建筑物、道路和小径、桥梁、娱乐设施、防洪大坝和瞭望塔——通常是与公共工程管理局(PWA)、平民保护队(CCC)、陆军工程预备队以及其他联邦和州机构合作。在佛蒙特州,这样的联邦项目和公共工程项目提供了就业机会和资金,建设了今天的绿山国家森林的基础设施,并为这个农村和相对贫穷的州的长期经济发展做出了巨大贡献。然而,即使有充足的华盛顿政策指令和资金,在佛蒙特州建立国家森林的任务仍然艰巨。虽然胡佛总统用他的笔划确定了新的国家森林的边界,但实际上,其中所有的土地都必须从私营部门购买——这是根据1911年《威克斯法案》建立和资助的所有东部联邦森林的共同情况
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Forest Service, the Depression, and Vermont Political Culture: Implementing New Deal Conservation and Relief Policy
John Aubrey Douglass 0 n 25 April 1932, during a time of severe unemployment, poverty, and despair, President Herbert Hoover established the Green Mountain National Forest in Vermont. In many ways, the economic downturn and the subsequent onslaught of New Deal programs offered the Forest Service a unique opportunity in Vermont and throughout the nation. The depression years forced the federal government to think of its land management and forestry programs as more than conservation activity, more than a way to provide sustained yields of timber and to preserve western federal lands. Federal conservation policy and geographically dispersed agencies such as the Forest Service became a central means of instituting new economic relief programs. During the Great Depression unprecedented levels of funding came to the Forest Service to establish twentysix new national forests, mostly in the East, and to expand work in watershed protection, timber improvement, reforestation, disease control, and wildlife management. Additional resources were allotted to the Forest Service for the construction of buildings, roads and trails, bridges, recreation facilities, water-control dams, and lookout towers — often in cooperation with the Public Works Administration (PWA), the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), the Army Engineer Reserve Corps, and other federal and state agencies. In Vermont such federal programs and public works projects provided jobs and capital, built the physical infrastructure of today's Green Mountain National Forest, and contributed greatly to the long-term economic development of what was a rural and relatively poor state' Yet even with abundant Washington policy directives and money, the task of creating a national forest in Vermont remained daunting. Although President Hoover established the new national forest's boundaries with the stroke of his pen, virtually all acreage within it had to be purchased from the private sector— a situation common to all eastern federal forests established and funded under the 1911 Weeks Act. 2
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