A massive clearcut proposed for national forest lands next to Yellowstone National Park, along with an even larger logging project, have been dropped for the time being by the U.S. Forest Service.
In announcing that, the Forest Service said the delay was due to staffing issues that prevented the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service from completing a biological opinion on the project.
According to the Center for Biological Diversity, the project called for clearcutting more than 4,600 acres of forest, logging across an additional 9,000 acres, and bulldozing up to 56 miles of road on lands just outside Yellowstone in the Custer Gallatin National Forest.
In April the Center for Biological Diversity, WildEarth Guardians, Alliance for the Wild Rockies and Native Ecosystems Council challenged the South Plateau project, saying it would destroy wildlife habitat. The groups claimed that the logging project would have also destroyed the scenery and solitude for hikers using the Continental Divide National Scenic Trail, which crosses the proposed timber-sale area.
“This is a good day for the greater Yellowstone ecosystem and for the grizzlies, lynx, and other wildlife that call it home,” Ted Zukoski, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, said last week. “The Forest Service may revive this destructive project in a few months, but for now this beautiful landscape is safe from chainsaws and bulldozers.”
In response to the group’s challenge, the Forest Service said it was withdrawing the South Plateau project until after it issues a new management plan for the Custer-Gallatin National Forest this summer. Then it plans to prepare a new environmental analysis of the project with “additional public involvement” to ensure the project complies with the new forest plan.
“This was another one of the Forest Service’s ‘leap first, look later’ projects where the agency asks for a blank check to figure out later where they’ll do all the clearcutting and bulldozing,” said Adam Rissien, a rewilding advocate at WildEarth Guardians. “Logging forests under the guise of reducing wildfires is not protecting homes or improving wildlife habitat, it’s just a timber sale. If the Forest Service tries to revive this scheme to clearcut native forests and bulldoze new roads in critical wildlife habitat just outside of Yellowstone, we’ll continue standing against it.”
The project violated the National Environmental Policy Act by failing to disclose precisely where and when it would bulldoze roads and clearcut the forest, which made it impossible for the public to understand the project’s impacts, the groups said in their April objection. The project allowed removal of trees more than a century old, which provide wildlife habitat and store significant amounts of carbon dioxide, an essential component of addressing the climate emergency.
“The South Plateau project was in violation of the forest plan protections for old growth,” said Sara Johnson, director of Native Ecosystems Council and a former wildlife biologist for the Custer Gallatin National Forest. “The new forest plan has much weaker old-growth protections standards. That is likely why they pulled the decision — so they can resign it after the new forest plan goes into effect.”
“The Forest Service needs to drop the South Plateau project and quit clearcutting old-growth forests,” said Mike Garrity, executive director of the Alliance for the Wild Rockies. “Especially clearcutting and bulldozing new logging roads in grizzly habitat on the border of Yellowstone National Park.”
Comments
Why weren't they sky rocketing when trump was in office? And no matter the current cause, there is little doubt that ending clear cutting would make matters worse. But you are right, I should have said "during Biden" rather than under. I don't know that any of his specific polocies are a near term cause but certainly they haven't been a near term benefit.
A lack of clearcutting or other timber supply is not the reason lumber prices are high. It is inadequate mill capacity to meet a COVID-related spike in demand. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-04-20/lumber-s-version-of-a...
Aside from this issue, responsible landowners avoid clearcutting because it causes long-term degradation of the forest.
I'm sorry, Mr. Kellett; but, you're probably not going to win over your detractors by informing them that clearcutting causes the degradation of forests. If there's anything the past few years have taught us, it's that rightwing republicans actually like and even advocate degradation, any kind, any time, the more the merrier. So, telling them that clearcutting causes degradation merely puts you in one of those "never wrestle with a pig because you both get all dirty and the pig likes it" situations.
I live in an area where random areas of clear cutting are obvious on mountains and hillsides we observe driving down the road. One would think that someone with a personal vested interest in real estate sales would - at least - admit that buying property with a view of a partially scalped hillside wasn't popular, even setting aside any other concern other than aesthetics.