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April 24, 2004
For Immediate Release
Secretary
of Agriculture Tours Illegal Logging Projects, Shuts Out
Public
Bush Administration's
Pro-Logging Agenda Threatening National Forests
Kane, PA – Secretary
of Agriculture Ann Veneman and U.S. Congressman John Peterson
used Earth Day as a platform to promote
increased logging during a tour in Pennsylvania’s Allegheny
National Forest today. The tour was geared toward promoting the
Bush Administration’s “Healthy Forests Initiative”,
which decreases opportunities for public participation and weakens
environmental impact considerations in commercial logging projects
in our national forests.
Conservation groups objected to the
tour today noting that the highlighted projects were not legal
even
under the Bush Administration’s
Healthy Forest Initiative. Ryan Talbott, a resident of Forest
County and organizer with the conservation group Allegheny Defense
Project
was prohibited from joining the tour and threatened with arrest
for trying to observe this tour of public lands areas. The tour
highlighted commercial logging proposed as a response to natural
wind-storm events that felled trees last summer.
"A Forest Service
law enforcement officer told me that if I did not leave immediately
I would be arrested," said Talbott. "I
was told that this tour on public land by public officials
was by invite only and any attempt to join the tour with Congressman
Peterson and Secretary Veneman would result in my arrest."
"Congressman
Peterson and Secretary Veneman are touring a series of illegal
salvage logging projects proposed for the Allegheny
National Forest,” explained Jim Bensman from Heartwood,
a national forest conservation organization that has successfully
challenged the use of Categorical Exclusions such as those
being
promoted to push logging in the Allegheny. "The Forest
Service is trying to break down timber sales into several
small projects
instead of doing the detailed analysis that is normally required
for a logging project of this size."
Allegheny National
Forest projects which are being used to "Categorically
Exclude" salvage logging from more detailed public
involvement and environmental analysis include Martin Run,
FR191 Salvage,
and FR 395/396 Salvage. Attempts to Categorically Exclude
salvage logging
within the Martin Run project were withdrawn after it was
pointed out that the activities were illegal. Public comment
is currently
being accepted on the FR 191 Salvage until April 23 and
the FR 395/396 Salvage until April 30th. The Categorical
Exclusion
allows
the Forest Service to hold shorter public comment periods,
limit comment opportunities to a single time-frame, and
avoid detailed
environmental assessments.
"These windstorm events serve
a valuable function, as they provide downed woody debris
otherwise missing throughout much of
the Allegheny National Forest," said Rachel Martin, a naturalist with
the Allegheny Defense Project. "Ecologically, dead and
downed wood is as important to a healthy forest as live
trees. Dead and
downed trees provide important habitat for birds, salamanders,
and small mammals, and are a vital source of nutrients
for tree seedlings."
Conservation Groups pointed
out that "salvage logging" is
an economic, not an ecological term. Salvage logging
is performed to "salvage" the economic value
of trees before it is lost. The term salvage logging
has no direct relationship to forest
health.
"The Bush Administration's publicity
stunt makes a mockery of Earth Day by encouraging more industrial
logging in US National
Forests ," said Andrew George, campaign coordinator for the National
Forest Protection Alliance who identified the Allegheny
National Forest as the most endangered national forest in a report released
three years ago. "If the Bush Administration
celebrates clearcutting on Earth Day, it tells you
something about
their logging agenda
for the rest of the year. They honor Earth Day by
pushing more logging in public lands and removing
citizen rights
over those
lands."
Nationally, conservationists are urging
President Bush to announce on Earth Day an end
to old growth
logging
and support
for protecting
the nation’s remaining wild forest heritage.
For a complete review of administration policies
that threaten forests, please
see The Wilderness Society report "Bush
Administration Record on America's National Forests".
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