 |
August 10, 2004
For Immediate Release
Conservation
Groups Expose Bush Administration Plans to Exploit Allegheny
National Forest
New Report
Documents Destructive Logging and Energy Development by Bush
Administration
Clarion, PA – Conservationists
today condemned an array of Bush Administration proposals that
threaten America’s publicly
owned forests. The citizens held a press conference announcing
the release of a report – "This Land is Your Land" – which
details how recent policy changes are playing out in communities
across the country. The national report highlights threats to the
Allegheny National Forest – a popular recreational retreat
for citizens in Northeastern Ohio, Western New York, and Pennsylvania.
According
to conservationists, the current Administration consistently puts
logging and energy development ahead of other uses -- including
recreation and valuable community protection programs -- on publicly
owned forestlands. In Pennsylvania, conservationists claim that
the Administration is violating even its own rules in order to
implement logging in a proposed Wilderness Area and adjacent lands.
The
report released today highlights 18 timber sales and one gas development
project that are moving forward in 13 states. Among
the list of projects are several that would cause irreparable harm
to old-growth forests. The Allegheny National Forest was selected
as the poster child of misguided forest management policies in
the northeastern U.S. under the Bush Administration. The report
says a recent project proposed by the Forest Service, the Martin
Run timber sale, threatens the Tionesta Creek watershed in the
heart of the Allegheny.
“
The Martin Run timber sale proposes logging adjacent to the largest
old-growth forest in Pennsylvania, along the North Country National
Scenic Trail, within designated old-growth management areas and
within a proposed Wilderness Area”, said Jim Kleissler, Forest
Watch Coordinator for the Allegheny Defense Project. “The
Forest Service should be protecting these valuable public resources,
not auctioning them to the highest bidder.”
The Martin Run
Timber Sale is also tied to another proposal under the Administration’s ‘Healthy
Forest Initiative’ which
calls for salvage logging 6,000 acres of trees affected by a windstorm
in July 2003. Under the new Bush regulations, most of the 6,000
acres is being exempted from any public environmental analysis
while cutting out public comment opportunities.
“The Bush Administration’s ‘Healthy
Forest Initiative’ is
anything but healthy because it threatens the very things it
claims to protect, such as clean air and drinking water, while
simultaneously
taking away the public’s ability to challenge these projects,” said
John Demos, Northeast Organizer of American Lands Alliance. “Americans
want to see their forests preserved and protected, not more
fat subsidies being given out to oil and logging companies
to destroy
them.”
“The Bush administration’s forest policies have been skewed
in favor of the timber industry at the expense of all Americans.
There is a better way,” said Phil Coleman, Chairman of
the Sierra Club’s Pennsylvania Chapter. “The Bush
administration should focus on redirecting logging subsidies
to create jobs in
forest restoration in the Allegheny National Forest.”
“The focus is on intensive logging rather than enhancing recreation,
forest health or community protection,” said Susan Curry,
Executive Director of the National Forest Protection Alliance. “These
lands are too important in terms of clean water, recreation
and wildlife habitat to squander. The Allegheny is where local
citizens
look to relax or to go hunting and fishing – it would
be extremely sad if this area were to become an industrial
zone.”
'This Land is Your Land” Report
- download (pdf, 2.3 MB)
- Executive Summary -
download (pdf, 84 kB)
- Press Release
- download (pdf, 76 kB)
- Bush Administration Record on America's
National Forests - download (pdf,
68 kB)
Martin Run Timber Sale Facts ### |
 |
|
 |