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Environment

Once Upon a Forest

By Kelpie Wilson, TruthOut.org. Posted April 10, 2006.


Republicans are using their version of 'science' to eliminate environmental protections for recovering forests.
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I was on a radio program out of Detroit last week, and the host asked me how things were going in the great forests of the Pacific Northwest. "Do people still sit in trees there?" he asked. "Are they still cutting down the big trees?"

My answer to both questions was yes. People do still sit in trees and protest logging. But these days, the protests rarely make the national news. The mainstream media has never allocated enough space to cover environmental news (while most newspapers have special sections on health, science and technology, special environment sections are rare), and what space there is goes to the hottest issue of the moment. These days, understandably, it is global warming.

But the health and stability of the climate is intimately tied to the health and stability of forests. Destruction of forests and other wild land is one of the largest sources of greenhouse gas emissions, contributing somewhere between 20 percent and 30 percent of the total.

For this reason alone, the newest assault on America's forests, House Resolution 4200, should be big news. HR 4200 passed out of the House Resources Committee last week (with the votes of six Democrats -- showing that the timber industry spreads its influence around liberally). It goes to the Agriculture Committee for markup this week and then to a vote.

Also known as the "Walden logging bill," after its sponsor, Oregon congressman Greg Walden, HR 4200, the "Forest Emergency Recovery and Research Act" would mandate logging after natural disturbances like fires, droughts and windstorms. This bill would exempt salvage logging from every relevant environmental law, including the Endangered Species Act. The bill includes no protections for old-growth reserves, roadless forests, salmon streams or other sensitive areas. Making matters worse, it is an assault on public safety that would steal taxpayer dollars from fire prevention work in order to subsidize commercial logging.

Proponents of the Walden logging bill claim they need to slash environmental protections for burned forests because otherwise environmentalists will use the protections to appeal logging plans. Often, they say, appeals can drag out long enough that the burned timber rots and becomes worthless, and if the timber can't be sold then there won't be enough money for replanting. Thus the politicians, who know best, must override the misguided environmentalists in order to "save" the forests.

There are two very large problems with this line of reasoning: the science and the facts. Chris Mooney, in his book "The Republican War on Science," has documented the Right's extremely well-orchestrated attack on science. Republicans have invented something they call "sound science," which is basically any science that gives them the results that they want, as opposed to independent science that gives the wrong answers. The attacks on science have been many and varied, ranging from distorting and misrepresenting reports from agencies like the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to the outright silencing of scientists like NASA's James Hansen who try to sound the alarm about climate change. In the case of salvage logging, there is a particularly bizarre story to tell.

The story starts with the ignition of the Biscuit Fire in the Siskiyou National Forest in the summer of 2002. The fire eventually burned through about 500,000 acres. Some acres burned heavily, some burned lightly, and some not at all as the fire skipped and swirled its way through the steep wild canyons of the Siskiyou terrain.

With so much acreage burned, environmentalists knew that the pressure to log dead and dying trees, known as "salvage logging" or "post-fire logging" would be intense. Even though such logging does not help a forest recover, they prepared themselves to work with the Forest Service to design a salvage logging program that would do the least possible damage, and a plan to log about 100 million board feet moved ahead.

The timber sale planning was almost complete by the summer of 2003, when the Forest Service put it on hold for some new information, a study paid for by the Douglas County Commissioners on behalf of the timber industry. The study, conducted by forest engineer John Sessions at Oregon State University, showed that, with advanced engineering methods, loggers could feasibly pull 2 billion board feet -- 20 times more wood -- out of the burned areas. This was the study that delayed the logging plan. Environmentalists had nothing to do with it.


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Kelpie Wilson is the environment editor of TruthOut.org.

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View:
Complete perversion of basic scientific principles
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Apr 10, 2006 1:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Bush administration has sponsored a total collapse of scientific integrity, but it is important to understand that the mechanisms whereby big business controls scientific inquiry have been put in place over the past two decades. The patenting of taxpayer funded research under Bayh-Dole and related legislation is at the heart of this mess - even when it comes to forestry research.

The university adminstrators who should be supporting basic scientific principles have been thrown out and replaced by CEOs from the pharmaceutical, microelectronics and similar patent-driven businesses. Their influence stretches right into areas of science unrelated to patentable research, such as environmental science, geosciences, social sciences and humanitarian studies - you name it. They control the disbursement of funds and have strong influence over who is hired as well.

Thus, when industry needs a favorable b.s. study to promote a given business plan, whether in pharma or forestry, they have an eager chorus of lapdogs willing to write whatever they want. The corruption in the pharmaceutical and medical areas of science has reached staggering proportions, particularly when it comes to the approval of new drugs. Many of the 'scientists' in this area have financial ties to the pharma companies they are doing research for - so they try and push untested dangerous drugs on an unsuspecting public. As the above story shows, the same is true for forestry.

In the areas of forestry and agribusiness the situation is similar - self-styled 'scientists' with political ambitions know what song to sing if they want the approval of the administrators who control fund dispersement and other perks - new lab buildings, offices, etc. These people are terrible scientists, but their submissive attitude leads to their promotion. The result is a continuing collapse in the quality of science done in US universities.

The situation is particularly bad at the University of California since Schwarzenegger apointed the new Board of Regents who started replacing administrators across the system. Environmental science has taken a terrible beating, and there is a culture of fear among faculty and staff - fear that if they say anything that upsets the corporate administrators, they will be thrown out into the cold.

As far as the actual science goes, it is clear that protecting forests and planting trees is a very effective way of sequestering carbon from the atmosphere over the next century. Planting trees on a massive basis can only help the situation, as well as help to create jobs in the long run.

The 'burn salvage' operations are complete nonsense- just an excuse to go in and take wood without public oversight. The owners of forests and the politically connected logging companies that log on public lands only see the short-term profit that can be made from clear-cutting vs. low-impact selective logging. Low-impact selective logging not only employs far more people, but it can be done in a much less destructive manner - but with far lower profit margins. If you consider that much of the wood is shipped overseas for the benefit of multinational corporations with headquarters in the Cayman Islands you get an idea of the massive corruption that is rampant in all sectors of this country.

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&$#@&%@&@
Posted by: decembrist on Apr 10, 2006 1:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Of course re-planting isn't necessary after a burn. It's only necessary when the timber industry wants a mono-crop of similarily aged trees to harvest in the future.

Forest fires are actually a boon for ecosystems. Especially when they aren't fought constantly, which inadvertently allows a build up of the available amount of fuel for a fire and causes them to burn unnusually hot. Why forest fires are necessary for a healthy ecosystem

As the article hits right on, logging in burn areas under the guise of the "Healthy Forests Initiative" is a thinly disguised aid for the timber industry to circumvent policies that are actually healthy for forests.

Calling a timber industry supported initiative "Healthy Forests" is alot like a man named "Walden" supporting the logging of burned areas in "order to help the forests." A bunch of B.S.

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» RE: &$#@&%@&@ Posted by: Cathyblj
According to evangelicals
Posted by: maxpayne on Apr 10, 2006 5:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
this is somehow "moral" because they have to make "room" for "god" and "armageddon". With terrorists like these, this country needs no international ones.

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Trees=Oxygen
Posted by: Roverton on Apr 10, 2006 11:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Can't be religious without air.

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Don't Ignore these Laws!!
Posted by: ravengrrrl on Apr 10, 2006 11:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, laws can be boring and many idealists would argue that they are "unrealistic" in the natural scheme of things... but we are (supposedly) in a land that follows the Rule of Law. That's how neocons are getting away with raping and pillaging our beautifull land.

The US Fish and Wildlife Service is supposed to oversee and regulate the care of our natural resources (through the ESA). They are now crippled with impossilby-low budgets, high turnover (reduces understanding of local ecosystem), and low morale. Add to this the new strategy of the neocons (and homebuilder associations) - Take Em To Court!!! The time and budget of the FWS is useless. They need more resources!!!

Don't ignore these laws. Don't allow them to be passed without a stink. These locally-voted congressmen are condoning the rape and pillaging of our national resources. This is a national crime!!!

Pay attention to the laws and fight them!! Fight to allow real science without biased funding!!! (I've experienced the same, but will not go into details...)

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About the independent (Donato) study
Posted by: bperkins on Apr 10, 2006 12:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Drawing broad conclusions from one study on one burned area on one forest is not valid. I agree that the Bush administration has perverted and ignored science for their own gain but the Donata study has flaws. I would point you to a document produced by Brian Baird (linked text). You can attack Baird if you like but his analysis is statistically and scientifically correct.

The number of tree seedlings declined in unlogged areas as well as logged areas. The difference between the two was not statistically significantly using the correct statistical analysis given the small sample size.

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Damn right ! Look what these neo NAZIs did to us Dakotans
Posted by: SDres11 on Apr 10, 2006 5:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ever wonder why the Dakotas which at one point had 5 EVs each continues to depopulate along with MT, WY, and ID to the point that put these states together as one big blob of a state and we'll be stuck with 3 ?!?!?!?!!!

At least Brian Schweitzer of MT and Dave Freudenthal of WY, both Democratic governers, are making honest efforts to crack down on the fucking land muggers and don't be surprised to see the outdoor sports hunters joining the pro-environmental advocates.

GET YOUR GUNS AND BOMBS AND FIGHT BACK !!!

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The pen is mightier then the sword (until you get shot)
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Apr 10, 2006 9:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now, now - don't go overboard. Words can be wielded more effectively then weapons, at least until the jackboots start kicking down your door in the dead of night. We haven't reached that point in this country, so don't be giving them an excuse - OK? They'd love nothing more then an excuse to implement martial law - so don't give them one! Words can be wielded like samurai swords - train yourself in that art. Just watch that you don't end up cutting yourself - as the old man said, measure twice, cut once.

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money and greed and religious brainwashing
Posted by: rsaxto on Apr 11, 2006 2:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Bushies don't understand science or environmentalism or democracy because they are fixated on money and greed and religious/media brainwashing and murderous conquest. So they are ignorant about what's important and fixated on creating complete financial dominion. So the world is going to hell and all they can think about is piles of money for themselves. It is sad that such perverted creatures are called human beings.

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