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June 3, 2003
For Immediate Release
| Contact: |
James Kleissler, (814) 223-4996 |
New
Report Identifies National Forests at Greatest Risk from Bush Administration
Pro-logging Policies
Pennsylvania's
Allegheny National Forest Named Among America's Special Mention
Endangered National Forests
Washington, DC-
A nationwide coalition of environmental groups released a new report
today that identifies the national forests at greatest risk from
logging and documents the Bush Administration's attempts to eliminate
public oversight of environmental laws. Greenpeace and the National
Forest Protection Alliance (NFPA) released Endangered Forests, Endangered
Freedoms in response to the Administration's unprecedented attacks
on America's national forests. Pulitzer Prize-winning author, Dr.
E.O. Wilson of Harvard University joined the groups to call for
an end to logging in these national treasures.
"Scientists have reached a deeper understanding
of the value of the National Forest System that needs to be kept
front and center," said Dr. Wilson. "They represent a public trust
too valuable to be managed as tree farms for the production of pulp,
paper and lumber. The time has come to free national forests from
political partisanship, and to use their treasures to benefit all
Americans."
Forests were selected based on several
criteria, including water quality, road construction, the presence
of endangered and threatened species, timber sale volume and economics,
and the percentage of remaining old-growth and roadless areas. Chosen
as the 10 most endangered forests were Apache-Sitgreaves National
Forest (Ariz./N.M.), Bitterroot National Forest (Mont.), Black Hills
National Forest (S.D.), Chequemegan-Nicolet National Forest (Wis.),
George Washington-Jefferson National Forest (Va.), Kootenai National
Forest (Mont.), Mississippi's National Forests (Miss.), Plumas National
Forest (Calif.), Tongass National Forest (Alaska), and Umpqua National
Forest (Ore.)
"Endangered Forests, Endangered Freedoms
provides the American public with a detailed and scientific account
of the current ecological state of the National Forest system,"
said Jake Kreilick, Project Coordinator of NFPA. "By citing direct
evidence of environmental damage in 10 particularly endangered forests,
it paints a grim picture of the Bush Administration's mismanagement
of our precious public lands."
The report lists specific actions taken
by the Bush Administration to achieve its pro-logging agenda, namely:
- limiting the public's right to participate in
decisions affecting their public lands;
- using stealthy administrative rule changes to
undermine fundamental environmental laws, such as the National
Environmental Policy Act and the National Forest Management Act;
- using the threat of wildfires to give timbers
companies access to remote intact forests for logging;
- dismantling rules that protect forests from roadbuilding
and commercial development; and
- turning over large tracts of National Forest
land to logging companies under the guise of "Stewardship Contracting."
"This fight is not just about saving
trees," said John Passacantando, Executive Director of Greenpeace.
"We are fighting for the principle that some places in this country
are so special that they belong to all Americans. And we are fighting
for the right of the people to have a say in the future of those
places."
The report also gave special mention
to Allegheny National Forest (Pa.), the Medford Bureau of Land Management
District (Ore.) and Sequoia National Forest (Calif.). Nine other
forests were listed as "threatened:" Cherokee National Forest (Tenn.),
Clearwater National Forest (Idaho), Idaho Panhandle National Forest
(Idaho), Kaibab National Forest (Ariz.), Mount Hood National Forest
(Ore.), Monongahela National Forest (W.Va), Ottawa National Forest
(Mich.), Ouachita National Forest (Ark./Okla.) and Sumter National
Forest (S.C.).
Speakers at the press conference highlighted
an alternative to Bush's logging plans, the National Forest Protection
and Restoration Act (H.R. 2169), which would end the costly practice
of taxpayer-subsidized logging in national forests while providing
true relief to areas threatened by wildfire. Rep. Leach, a longtime
advocate for protecting the nation's natural heritage, is the primary
sponsor of the bill, which has gained the bipartisan support of
90 co-sponsors so far.
In a statement read at the press conference,
Rep. Leach said, "These are the nations' forests, enjoyed by, but
also entrusted to, all of us. Common sense dictates that fragile
federal land should be appropriately protected by federal laws,
but this report argues that we are moving in the opposite direction.
If we are to redeem the future of our public lands, we must protect
what remains of our national forests."
The National Forest Protection Alliance,
which includes Greenpeace, is a coalition of 120 grassroots conservation
groups from all over the U.S. committed to ending the commercial
exploitation of federal public lands, beginning with the federal
timber sale program. The report's release coincides with National
Forest Protection Lobby Week, in which activists from all over the
country have come to Washington, D.C. to pressure Congress to protect
and restore our national forests. In late June, NFPA and Greenpeace
will be holding an "action camp" in Montana, a week-long training
on nonviolent tactics and methods of protecting Americ's endangered
forests.
CONTACTS:
Nancy Hwa, Greenpeace Media Officer, 202-319-2432
(office); 202-413-8521 (cell)
Andrew George, NFPA, 828-280-6956 (cell);
919-933-2959 (office)
Jim Kleissler, Allegheny
Defense Project. (814) 223-4996
The report is available at www.greenpeaceusa.org.
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