WASHINGTON – Representative Kristi Noem and the U.S. Forest
Service today announced an additional $1 million has been provided to the Black
Hills National Forest to help combat the pine beetle epidemic.  Noem said
the funds were made available to the Forest Service as a result of excess
carryover funds from previous years and directed to the Black Hills National
Forest Service. 

“This announcement is welcome news for folks in the Black Hills
who are living daily through the slow-motion disaster that is the pine beetle
epidemic,” Noem said.  “By providing these additional resources, the
Forest Service has given a boost to the continued efforts to beat the beetles.”

Dennis Jaeger, Deputy Forest Supervisor for the Black Hills
National Forest, said the funds will be used for on-the-ground pine beetle
mitigation efforts in high priority areas in the Black Hills.

Noem has made the pine beetle epidemic a top priority in her first
term in Congress.  Earlier this year, she organized a meeting with Forest
Service Chief Tom Tidwell, Council on Environmental Quality Chairwoman Nancy
Sutley and representatives of the Black Hills timber industry to provide an
update on the Black Hills pine beetle problem and to press for additional
assistance. 

During the meeting, Noem made the case that with South Dakota’s
robust forest industry and infrastructure, the Black Hills could put additional
resources to good use.  She also presented Chief Tidwell with dozens of
letters from Black Hills area businesses and concerned citizens asking for help
combating the beetles. At the meeting, Chief Tidwell said he would work on
finding additional funding that could be directed toward the Black Hills
National Forest.

“This is great news for the Black Hills National Forest.  We
are already making plans to use these additional funds to do more this year to
control the beetles,” said Craig Bobzien, Supervisor for the Black Hills
National Forest.

“I appreciate the assistance of Chief Tidwell and the Forest
Service and know these resources will be put to good use. I look forward to
continuing to work together on ways we can get ahead of the pine beetle
problem,” Noem said.

Last year, Noem, through her position on the Natural Resources
Committee, hosted a field hearing near Hill City to help draw additional
attention in Washington to the severity of the pine beetle epidemic in the
Black Hills.  She also has continued to press Chairwoman Sutley through a
grass-roots letter writing campaign asking her to grant alternative
arrangements to expedite the lengthy environmental regulatory approval process.