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- <text id=94TT0718>
- <title>
- Jun. 06, 1994: Environment:Redwoods: The Last Stand
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jun. 06, 1994 The Man Who Beat Hitler
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 58
- Redwoods: The Last Stand
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A young activist fights a corporate raider to save an ancient
- California forest from being cut down
- </p>
- <p>By John Skow/Fortuna
- </p>
- <p> Two unusually stubborn men from Texas--one rich, the other
- never quite sure of having gas money or whether his truck's
- head gasket will last till the next interstate exit--are locked
- in a battle over the last of California's privately owned ancient
- redwoods. Doug Thron, 24, a nature photographer, became an environmentalist
- after he saw the wild land in Richardson, Texas, he had hiked
- as a boy paved with malls and condos. Charles Hurwitz, 54, raided
- and leveraged his way to an '80s-style fortune, acquiring a
- random bag of companies, including Kaiser Aluminum and the Pacific
- Lumber Co. From his Houston headquarters, Hurwitz seems puzzled
- that other people care about some big trees Pacific owns in
- Humboldt County, California.
- </p>
- <p> Humboldt is a region of hardscrabble logging towns along Highway
- 101 on the foggy coast of northern California. Here it is still
- possible to see a big truck grinding toward the Pacific Lumber
- mill at Scotia with a single, monstrous redwood log, 15 ft.
- in diameter. A tree that can produce logs this size is worth
- upwards of $150,000.
- </p>
- <p> Take your pick, dreamer or dealmaker. Here is Thron, a sturdy,
- straightforward fellow who looks like one of those happy, hey-no-prob
- guys in the beer commercials. But he's an activist who gave
- up his senior year at Humboldt State University in Arcata, California,
- to rumble around the country in a beat-up truck, presenting
- some 80 slide shows of his logging photos to environmental groups.
- It's all in support of a bill now in Congress, the Headwaters
- Forest Act, that would preserve most of the remaining old-growth
- redwood groves, which contain trees that have survived uncut,
- some of them, since before Rome fell. The bill, introduced by
- Congressman Dan Hamburg, a Democrat from Humboldt County, has
- 123 co-sponsors and the support of the Clinton Administration.
- </p>
- <p> Most of the 5,000 to 6,000 acres of privately owned old growth
- that remain can be seen in five minutes from a small plane circling
- inland near Humboldt Bay. Thron and pilot Lew Nash, a volunteer
- for the environmental flying service Lighthawk, point out fragments
- of what was an enormous woodland. There is one intact 3,000-acre
- forest called Headwaters--the largest uncut stand anywhere
- still in private hands--and smaller clusters surviving around
- Owl Creek, Allen Creek and Shaw Creek. All are listed for cutting.
- "They want to turn all that into lawn furniture and hot-tub
- decking," Thron yells over the Cessna's intercom. A much larger
- area of nearly 40,000 acres is scarred and scraped by bulldozers,
- its salmon-spawning streams choked with silt. Some of this is
- healthy second growth (redwoods reach marketable size in 50
- to 80 years), but the recently logged areas look as if they
- had been fought over by an armored division. This is a tree
- farm, not a forest; viable commercially but useless to creatures
- who had lived here. Congressman Hamburg wants the government
- to buy the combined 44,000-acre tract, old growth and new, from
- Pacific Lumber.
- </p>
- <p> Not long after the Lighthawk flight, for perhaps the 30th time
- in two years, Thron broke the law by ignoring a no-trespassing
- sign in the tiny town of Fortuna and hiking up one of Pacific
- Lumber's logging roads. It was 10 p.m. and misting when he started,
- and 3 a.m., with a light rain falling, when he set up his tent.
- Two hours later, before first light, Thron was standing outside
- the tent, rain running down the back of his neck. After perhaps
- five minutes, he heard a short, musical, descending call--the "keer" of a marbled murrelet. Huge, dark shapes began to
- coalesce in the lightening gray: the enormous trunks of redwoods
- and Douglas firs. By full light, Thron had tallied 23 calls
- from murrelets. In this April nesting season, these smallish,
- fast-flying seabirds trade chores in a quick exchange at dawn.
- The parent freed of egg-sitting duty arrows off at 55 m.p.h.
- for Humboldt Bay to fish for breakfast. Thron was pleased; the
- murrelets are endangered because they need redwood canopies
- to shield their nest sites from crows and ravens. He had not
- checked his birds since Thanksgiving because he had been touring
- the U.S. with his slide show, buying gas and burgers with freewill
- offerings, often camping in the truck with his fiancee and co-lecturer,
- Lucy Ingrey.
- </p>
- <p> The great redwoods here, 300 ft. tall and more, would have been
- cut five years ago if a local group, the Environmental Protection
- Information Center (EPIC), had not used the Endangered Species
- Act to entangle Pacific Lumber in a web of lawsuits. The web
- may be fragile; Pacific's executives were crowing over the recent
- "Sweet Home" decision in the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington
- that could weaken U.S. rules on the modification or degradation
- of wildlife habitat.
- </p>
- <p> For now, the Headwaters forest has an astonishing presence,
- and whatever city meaning there is to the notion of anyone's
- owning such a place loses force among the trees. Here the concept
- of unregulated private property, much admired by logging outfits,
- is an empty legalism.But the fact is that Headwaters and miles
- beyond it are owned, as is Pacific Lumber, by Hurwitz's Houston-based
- Maxxam company. After he grabbed Pacific in a 1986 hostile takeover,
- paid for largely with junk bonds issued by Drexel Burnham Lambert's
- Michael Milken, Hurwitz visited Pacific's mills at Scotia. "There's
- a story about the golden rule," he told employees. "He who has
- the gold rules." Then he drained $55 million from the firm's
- $93 million pension fund and, with the remaining $38 million,
- bought annuities from an insurance company that collapsed. (The
- U.S. Labor Department is suing; so far, Pacific has made good
- on retirees' pensions; two weeks ago, Maxxam agreed to a $52
- million settlement of a suit by shareholders dissatisfied with
- the takeover of Pacific.) Hurwitz also boosted the rate of old-growth
- logging; as Congressman Pete Stark, a California Democrat, put
- it, "looting the forest, meeting monthly interest payments by
- cutting thousand-year-old trees." Is there a moral issue here?
- A Maxxam spokesman dismisses the question, saying, "Our position
- is that sufficient redwoods are protected and that our trees
- are private property." (Redwood National Park, 50 miles to the
- north, has 38,000 acres of ancient redwoods.)
- </p>
- <p> Hero or villain? Hurwitz didn't fire anybody; he hired more
- workers and added a fourth mill. He continued a Pacific Lumber
- practice of giving a college scholarship to every employee's
- child who finished high school. Top hourly pay runs about $15
- to $16 an hour, in an area of high unemployment. When he refinanced
- Pacific's debt a year ago, issuing $620 million in high-interest
- bonds to pay off $510 million in junkers, the fact that he also
- paid Maxxam a $25 million dividend from the new debt raised
- only murmurs. That was how the big boys did things.
- </p>
- <p> Pacific Lumber has been logging for 125 years and is accustomed
- to indulgent treatment by state forestry officials. Now several
- local creatures are on endangered-species lists: not only the
- murrelets but also the spotted owl, the peregrine falcon, the
- bald eagle and a couple of humble amphibians, the Pacific giant
- salamander and the tailed frog. While Coho salmon still spawn
- in Headwaters streams, stocks of this once plentiful game fish
- have crashed so sharply off California--in part because of
- logging erosion--that all sport and commercial fishing was
- banned recently. Environmentalists gripe that wildlife-survey
- regulations are a joke because logging companies do their own
- surveys. But regulations have slowed log production, and Pacific
- has fought back. In 1990 the company reamed a broad, mile-and-a-half
- corridor into the middle of the Headwaters forest and called
- it, with a wink and a snicker, "our wildlife-biologist study
- trail."
- </p>
- <p> Two years later, in 1992, the logging firm defied state and
- federal regulations more directly. Over a frenzied Thanksgiving
- weekend of what environmentalists called "renegade logging,"
- Pacific broke off negotiations with state officials and the
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and sent loggers into a prized
- old-growth stand called Owl Creek. Though Pacific claimed that
- the state board of forestry and the office of Governor Pete
- Wilson had approved the Thanksgiving cut, it was stopped after
- five days by a state appeals court. John Campbell, Pacific's
- combative president, shrugs off legal entanglements that have
- tied up virtually all the firm's old-growth stands since then.
- Campbell dismisses concern over spotted-owl habitat as "a hoax"
- and thinks research will show that the murrelet's old-growth
- needs are exaggerated. But he is proud of an industry award
- for a model project, done with the state, for rehabilitating
- erosion damage caused by the firm's logging at Shaw Creek.
- </p>
- <p> A federal-court lawsuit on the Owl Creek logging, due for trial
- in July, may determine how seriously logging firms must take
- endangered-species regulations. Mark Harris, a young lawyer
- for EPIC, which brought the suit, is bitter about Pacific Lumber
- and Maxxam. "They're hosing this county," he says. "If they've
- got a new Blazer in the driveway, that's their environment."
- In April EPIC also sued the California Department of Forestry
- for "failing to lawfully respond to environmental issues" in
- approving old-growth cutting. Lasting protection of the old-growth
- redwoods, however, depends on Congressman Hamburg's Headwaters
- bill. The catch is price. Maxxam doesn't want to sell the whole
- 44,000 acres--about one-fifth of Pacific's holdings--on
- which fast-growing second- and third-generation redwoods are
- reaching market size. But it is willing, perhaps eager, to sell
- Headwaters and a logged-over 1,500-acre buffer zone for something
- more than $500 million, the Forest Service estimate of the value
- of the timber. Hamburg thinks the figure is far too high.
- </p>
- <p> Deep in the Headwaters forest, as these matters simmered, activist
- Thron spent his day making photos, then hiked back down the
- trail after dark. Last fall Hurwitz's lawyers threatened to
- sue Thron unless he ceased his photographic raids and stopped
- giving the Headwaters show. He and Ingrey kept on trucking.
- The two were married last week in Arcata and plan to hit the
- road with fresh slides.
- </p>
- <p> Hurwitz, in the meantime, regards the world contentedly from
- the cover of a magazine called Leaders, which flatters CEOS
- with softball interviews. (Sample question: "You see opportunities
- where others may not see them?" Hurwitz's reply: "Yes.") He
- tells Leaders that his lumber people are looking into operations
- in New Zealand, South America, Mexico and Russia.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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