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Quincy plan will harm wildlife, water quality
by Bill Corcoran, Conservation Associate, Angeles
Chapter Sierra Club
What you can do
Sierra Club says plan will restore logging, not
forests
The Forest Service has released its draft report
detailing how it proposes to put into action the
controversial Herger-Feinstein Quincy Library Group Act,
universally opposed by environmental groups and passed by
Congress in 1998. In an unusual move that reflects turmoil
within the Forest Service's own ranks, the agency has
identified two "preferred" alternatives in its draft
Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS). Public comments are
due by July 26 (see box).
The Sierra Club is urging its members to reject all of
the considered alternatives and instead call for an end to
the commercial logging of Sierra Nevada national forests.
"These timber sales take money from taxpayers' pockets to
degrade our public forests and silt up streams that provide
Californians with pure drinking water," said Barbara Boyle,
Sierra Club Regional Director. "By ending the commercial
logging of our forests, Americans will protect their
wildlife, fisheries and water quality."
"By choosing two preferred alternatives, the Forest
Service is sending a clear signal that the Quincy Group plan
cannot comply with federal environmental law," said Boyle,
who cited the 1976 National Forest Management Act, which
requires that the Forest Service ensure the "viability" of
all wildlife species found on the national forests. A
Sierra-wide analysis of viability for over 100 species is
being developed by Forest Service scientists but won't be
released until July at the earliest.
"The plan the Quincy Group proposed would degrade the old
growth forest even further than it already has been, causing
hardship to wildlife like the goshawk, Sierra Nevada red
fox, and California spotted owl," said Boyle. She believes
the Forest Service is having trouble reconciling the
agency's existing legal responsibilities and the increased
logging called for in the Quincy legislation, which was
championed by California U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein.
The plan, which would increase logging across an area
larger than Rhode Island-- 2.5 million acres--would also
cause problems for recreationists. "Hikers, anglers, birders
and campers should be very concerned with this plan," said
Scott Hoffman Black, director of the Sierra Nevada Forest
Protection Campaign (SNFPC), an alliance of organizations
seeking reform of logging practices in the Sierra Nevada.
"The Forest Service," said Black, "has missed an opportunity
to protect forests, streams, and wild California."
The two identified alternatives would increase logging on
the Plumas, Lassen and part of the Tahoe national forests.
Alternative 2, which the Forest Service calls its "proposed"
alternative, would nearly triple logging over current
levels-from a current 124 million board feet to 319 million
board feet annually in the three affected forests.
Alternative 4, labeled the "preferred" alternative, would
increase logging to 206 million board feet annually.
Commercial logging on the three forests loses money--in FY
1997 the Forest Service itself admitted losing $800,000 on
the Lassen and Plumas Forests, and $5 million throughout the
Sierra Nevada.
Black complained that the Forest Service proposals will
increase taxpayer- subsidized destruction of the forests'
natural resources while ignoring recent scientific
recommendations for the protection of water quality. The
affected forests contain the Feather River, an important
water source for northern and central California, as well as
the last spawning streams for endangered wild salmon in the
Sierra Nevada.
Erin Noel, a staff attorney for SNFPC, ridiculed the
Forest Service's selection of two alternatives. "Two poor
alternatives don't make one good one," said Noel, who noted
that "the long-term health of local economies, fish and
wildlife, and our rugged Sierra forests and canyons all
depend on the ecological health of national forest lands and
ought not to be traded against each other to achieve
political compromise."
What you can do
Comments on Quincy Logging Plan Needed Now
The public comment period for the Quincy Logging Plan
ends July 26, 1999. Please take a few moments to help
protect our dwindling Sierra Nevada old growth and wildlife.
The Sierra Club asks its members to write the Forest
Service and urge the rejection of all of the Quincy Library
Group Act Environmental Impact Statement alternatives.
Please urge the Forest Service to choose a plan that makes
use of the best available science and make their plan
stronger by requiring all of the protection measures listed
below:
1) PROTECT ALL OLD GROWTH FORESTS, including those
identified in the SNEP Report.
2) COMPLETELY PROTECT RIPARIAN (streamside) AREAS
following the strategy outlined in the SNEP Report.
Streamside areas provide very important habitat and logging
there damages fisheries and water quality.
3) PROTECT ALL ROADLESS AREAS OVER 1000 ACRES. The last
remaining unroaded areas provide endangered wildlife with
critical habitat. The proposed alternatives would defer
logging in some (BUT NOT ALL) roadless areas greater than
5000 acres, but does not protect smaller areas. It also
provides no PERMANENT protection for any roadless areas of
any size.
4) MAXIMIZE USE OF PRESCRIBED FIRE, WITH SPECIAL
ATTENTION TO NATIONAL FOREST LANDS NEXT TO DEVELOPED PRIVATE
PROPERTY. The supporters of the Quincy Act made the
misleading claim that more logging would result in lower
fire danger. Rather than increasing logging, the Forest
Service needs to use low intensity fires to thin the forests
and reduce fire risk, especially near populated areas.
5) WAIT TO FINALIZE A PLAN UNTIL INFORMATION IS COMPLETE
FROM THE SIERRA-WIDE PLANNING PROCESS NOW UNDERWAY. Right
now, there is also a management plan being developed for the
entire Sierra range. The Forest Service must include
consideration of this larger plan in their plan to implement
the Quincy Act. Most importantly, the findings on how
increased logging and other development could harm wildlife
(viability analysis) must be considered before going forward
with ANY Quincy alternative.
6) ELIMINATE COMMERCIAL LOGGING. Ultimately the only way
to restore Sierra forests is by ending commercial logging.
Commercial logging is often a money loser; in much of the
Sierra logging is heavily subsidized by taxpayers like you.
The Quincy Act calls for 40-60,000 acres of heavy forest
"thinning" and for small clear cuts on over 9,000 acres per
year. But this logging would cause serious habitat
fragmentation and is likely to violate existing laws to
protect wildlife. The Forest Service should be urged to end
taxpayer-subsidized logging on our National Forests.
COMMENTS MUST BE RECEIVED BY JULY 26, 1999
By mail: David Peters, Project Manager Forest Recovery
Act Project PO Box 11500 Quincy, CA 95971-6025
By e-mail: FRACT/r5_plumas@fs.fed.us
To view the Draft EIS visit
http://www.r5.fs.fed.us/hfqlg/
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Last updated on 3/02/99
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