Section 10201: Rescission of Amounts for Forestry
๐ Section 10201: Rescission of Amounts for Forestry
๐ง What is this section about?
This part of the bill says the government will take back money that it hadn’t yet spent, which was originally given for forest projects under a law called the Inflation Reduction Act.
✅ In 4th-Grade Language:
A few years ago, the government set aside money to help take care of forests—like checking old-growth trees, studying them, and protecting nature.
Now, lawmakers are saying:
“We have that money, but we’re not spending it. Instead, we’re taking it back.”
So, things like forest reviews, old tree protection, and other green projects will no longer get that money.
๐ Why it matters:
These are optional forest programs—not for emergencies.
It means less money to protect old forests, check their health, or plant trees in cities.
People who care about forests might worry because this is climate-friendly money being taken away.
๐ง Quick Example:
Imagine you get $10 to buy snacks later, but then you never use it. Your parents ask for it back. That’s like the government:
“We gave money for forest care, but you didn’t spend it, so we’re taking it back.”
๐ Background Info (from Forest Policy Reports):
The rescinded funds included $100 million for environmental reviews and $50 million for old-growth forest inventories.
Here's the original:
SEC. 10201. RESCISSION OF AMOUNTS FOR FORESTRY. The unobligated balances of amounts appropriated by the following provisions of Public Law 117-169 are rescinded: (1) Paragraphs (3) and (4) of section 23001(a) (136 Stat. 2023). (2) Paragraphs (1) through (4) of section 23002(a) (136 Stat. 2025). (3) Section 23003(a)(2) (136 Stat. 2026). (4) Section 23005 (136 Stat. 2027).

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