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May 8, 2001
For Immediate Release
Contact: Jim Kleissler, (814) 223-4996
U.S. Forest Service Plans the Largest Timber Sale
in the Eastern U.S.
Citizen Groups Speak Out in Opposition to the East
Side Timber Sale
Three years ago, a Federal Court in Pittsburgh threw
out the Forest Service’s 5,000-acre "Mortality II" logging plan
calling it "arbitrary and capricious." The Forest Service recently
re-released their plan, which now calls for 8,666 acres of logging
in the Allegheny National Forest.
The East Side Timber Sale (formerly known as "Mortality
II") calls for 66 million board feet of logging and includes over
3,000 acres of clearcuts, 3,493 acres of herbicide use, and close
to 125 miles of road construction work on Pennsylvania’s only national
forest – the Allegheny.
As with the Mortality II Timber Sale, citizen groups
have rallied in opposition to the giant timber cutting plan. Among
the group’s concerns is proposed logging that could affect an area
of old growth forest that makes up the Tionesta Research Natural
Area, a National Natural Landmark described by the Forest Service
as "one of the most valuable old-growth remnants in the eastern
U.S."
"The Allegheny National Forest is a unique example
of why National Forests are treasures that need to be protected
for generations to come." explains Alison Cochran, Executive Director
of Heartwood, an 18-state forest protection organization based in
Bloomington, Indiana. "National Forests are at a critical juncture,
as are all natural forests, worldwide. The East Side Timber Sale
threatens to harm forests, wilderness trout streams, endangered
species habitat, and key recreation spots. What more needs to be
said? The Forest Service should abandon the East Side Timber Sale."
The groups also claim that logging will fragment the
habitat of endangered species while hampering forest-based recreation
opportunities. They point to the fact that the East Side Timber
Sale would result in clearcut areas as large as 152 acres. In fact,
the East Side Timber Sale calls for 23 clearcut areas larger than
the 40 acre limit normally allowed by the National Forest Management
Act of 1976.
The groups say that the Forest Service lacks an adequate
Management Plan for protecting the habitat of threatened and endangered
species. They claim that a Draft Plan recently released by the Forest
Service for public review fails to incorporate important provisions
mandated under the Endangered Species Act.
"The Forest Service wants to use our national forest
as a commercial tree farm solely for the benefit of the timber industry,"
explains Jim Kleissler, an original founder of the Clarion, PA based
citizen group Allegheny Defense Project. The Allegheny Defense Project,
along with Heartwood, led the initial fight against the East Side
logging plan. "The East Side Timber Sale disregards threatened and
endangered wildlife by logging directly up to old growth forest
and cutting areas previously planned for protection as old growth.
The East Side logging plan fails to incorporate important provisions
for protecting the habitat of the endangered Indiana bat and Clubshell
and Northern riffleshell mussels."
Opponents of the large-scale timbering on the Allegheny
National Forest argue that the Forest Service is intentionally manipulating
the forest to promote commercially valuable trees such as the black
cherry tree. Black cherry is used for high-quality veneer wood and
furniture –selling for high amounts and often exported to Europe
or Japan. Other uses of the forest, the groups say, are largely
ignored in favor of timber. They note that more than 300 acres of
proposed logging would occur at Crane Run, a wilderness trout stream
specifically designated for remote fishing opportunities. Logging
is also proposed along sections of the North Country Trail – a national
scenic hiking trail.
"When they aren’t exporting our wood to Europe the
timber industry is chipping it up to make particleboard and paper,"
says Bill Belitskus, a member of the citizen-based Communities for
Sustainable Forestry in Kane, PA. "Large outside corporations such
as Willamette and Temple-Inland are demanding that unsustainable
quantities of our forest be cut down to feed their mills."
The groups point to legislation currently before the
U.S House of Representatives as their solution. The National Forest
Protection and Restoration Act, they say, would end logging on the
national forests while providing jobs in forest restoration work
and saving taxpayer money.
"The East Side Timber Sale is the largest timber sale
in the east. The Forest Service plans to cut enough trees to fill
more than 20,000 log truck loads of publicly owned trees," says
Susan Curry, the Eastern Field Organizer for the National Forest
Protection Alliance. The Alliance has been working to end logging
in all 155 of America’s national forests. "We can protect the Allegheny
National Forest by supporting the National Forest Protection and
Restoration Act – a bill in the United State House. If we act today,
we can enjoy the Alleghenies tomorrow."
Public comments on the East Side Timber sale are being
accepted by the Forest Service. Citizens can send their comments
to: John Palmer, Forest Supervisor, Allegheny National Forest, P.O.
Box 847, Warren, PA 16365. (814) 723-5150. mailto:John.Palmer/r9_allegheny@fs.fed.usjpalmer@fs.fed.us
.
The Allegheny Defense Project has information on the
East Side Timber Sale posted on their website at www.alleghenydefense.org.
The organizations joining in the statement are:
- Allegheny Defense Project (Clarion, PA)
- Heartwood, Inc. (Bloomington, IN)
- Communities for Sustainable Forestry (Kane, PA)
- Pennsylvania Environmental Network – Forestry Leadership Team
(Clarion, PA)
- Sierra Club – Pennsylvania Chapter (Harrisburg, PA) and Allegheny
Group (Pittsburgh, PA)
- Student Environmental Action Coalition (SEAC National Office:
Philadelphia, PA)
- SEAC Mid-Atlantic Region (Delaware, New Jersey, Maryland, and
Pennsylvania)
- National Forest Protection Alliance (Charlottesville, VA)
- American Lands Alliance (Washington, D.C.)
- Native Forest Council (Eugene, OR)
Fact Sheets and additional quotes are available from
the Allegheny Defense Project.
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