Friday, October 04, 2013

Enviros sue over another logging project

A timber sale in the Kootenai National Forest faces a court challenge for allegedly failing to protect a small population of grizzly bears. The Alliance for the Wild Rockies filed the lawsuit in Missoula’s U.S. District Court office on Tuesday. The Helena-based group charges the Pilgrim timber sale would open 50 miles of roads in the Cabinet Ranger District, where fewer than 50 grizzlies live. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service population target is 100 bears. “The Fish and Wildlife Service has declared that ‘(i)f human-related disturbances such as road use or timber harvest continue in preferred habitats for extended periods of time, historical bear use of the area may be lost.’ “ AWR director Michael Garrity said in an email. “But instead of refraining from logging and road-building in occupied grizzly bear habitat until the bear shows signs of recovery – or at least stabilization – the Forest Service has just approved another road-building and commercial logging project in occupied bear habitat: the Pilgrim Creek Project. Obviously the Forest Service isn’t doing its job to recover the grizzlies in the Cabinet-Yaak, so unfortunately, we have no choice but to take them to court to force the agency to follow the law.” The project would log or burn 1,434 acres in the Kootenai National Forest, including 898 acres of clearcuts. It also plans to use helicopters for prescribed burning of another 3,250 acres in the Huckleberry Mountain and Lone Cliff Smeads inventoried roadless areas, which Garrity said was also occupied bear habitat...more

Three days ago I posted the following, which so far has received quadruple the hits of an average post:

 You are not going to obtain better management as long as the current laws, and the judicial interpretation of those laws, remain in place.  

Congress has given the Secretary of Homeland Security the authority to waive some 30+ environmental laws to speed construction of the border fence.  Congress should now grant similar authority to the Secretaries of Agriculture and Interior for the purpose of thinning our forests.  Otherwise, save the picture above, for it is an image of our future.
This is just another example of what's happening.  In this particular instance they are using the grizzly, in other instances they use different critters or plants, or they sue on process under NEPA or other planning laws. 

These are just some of the headlines from the last week of news.

Conservationists look to end old-growth logging 

Groups, US House members, seek cancellation of southeast Alaska old-growth timber sale

U.S. Forest Service to Reevaluate Big Thorne Timber Sale Due to Effects on Wolves and Deer 

Timber from Yosemite fire sparks debate over salvage plan

Obama threatens to veto timber bill

ead more here: http://www.mercedsunstar.com/2013/09/28/3249501/timber-from-yosemite-fire-sparks.html#storylink=cpy

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