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Certification
of Pennsylvania State Forests
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In
addition to the state's review of its state forest management plans,
there is an ongoing review of the conditional certification given
to Pennsylvania State Forest timbering five years ago. Scientific
Certification Systems, who is auditing the state forest management
bsaed upon Forest Stewardship Council guidelines, is soliciting
public input on the process.
This is a unique opportunity for the
public to insert itself into this otherwise private process. Currently,
a majority of state forest lands are committed as commercial tree
farms while even state Wild Areas are not given permanent protections
from some extraction-related activities such as pesticide use and
salvage logging.
We suggest that folks make the following
points:
- Public lands should not be certified.
Certification presumes that lands are properly used primarily for
commercial timber production. Whether or not timber production is
appropriate on public lands is one decision best left to a public
debate within our Constitutional system.
-Commercial tree farming of black
cherry and oak tree species is entirely inappropriate on state forest
lands and should not be deemed permissible let alone certified as
appropriate sustainable management.
- Resource extraction on Pennsylvania
state forests should not be certified as long as logging and drilling
projects are allowed to proceed without public comment and without
detailed environmental impact statements that are distributed for
public review.
- Management plans for Pennsylvania
State Forests should be deemed inadequate as long as they are not
bound by regulatory/statutory rules and can be ignored at the state
forester's discretion.
Send your comments
to: Dave Wagner, Director of Forest Management
Certification; Scientific Certification Systems; 145 Park Place;
Point Richmond, CA 94801; dwager@scscertified.com
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