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- <text id=90TT1663>
- <title>
- June 25, 1990: Owl vs. Man
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 25, 1990 Who Gives A Hoot?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 56
- COVER STORY
- Owl vs Man
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In the Northwest's battle over logging, jobs are at stake, but
- so are irreplaceable ancient forests
- </p>
- <p>By Ted Gup
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>What would the world be, once bereft</l>
- <l>Of wet and of wildness? Let them be left,</l>
- <l>O let them be left, wildness and wet;</l>
- <l>Long live the weeds and the wilderness yet.</l>
- </qt>
- <qt>
- <l>-- "Inversnaid," by Gerard Manley Hopkins;</l>
- <l>Poems (1876-89)</l>
- </qt>
- <p> In Oregon's Umpqua National Forest, a lumberjack presses his
- snarling chain saw into the flesh of a Douglas fir that has
- held its place against wind and fire, rockslide and flood, for
- 200 years. The white pulpy fiber scatters in a plume beside
- him, and in 90 seconds, 4 ft. of searing steel have ripped
- through the thick bark, the thin film of living tissue and the
- growth rings spanning ages. With an excruciating groan, all 190
- ft. of trunk and green spire crash to earth. When the cloud of
- detritus and needles settles, the ancient forest of the Pacific
- Northwest has retreated one more step. Tree by tree, acre by
- acre, it falls, and with it vanishes the habitat of innumerable
- creatures. None among these creatures is more vulnerable than
- the northern spotted owl, a bird so docile it will descend from
- the safety of its lofty bough to take a mouse from the hand
- of a man.
- </p>
- <p> The futures of the owl and the ancient forest it inhabits
- have become entwined in a common struggle for survival. Man's
- appetite for timber threatens to consume much of the Pacific
- Northwest's remaining wilderness, an ecological frontier whose
- deep shadows and jagged profile are all that remain of the land
- as it was before the impact of man. But rescuing the owl and
- the timeless forest may mean barring the logging industry from
- many tracts of virgin timberland, and that would deliver a
- jarring economic blow to scores of timber-dependent communities
- across Washington, Oregon and Northern California. For
- generations, lumberjacks and millworkers there have relied on
- the seemingly endless bounty of the woodlands to sustain them
- and a way of life that is as rich a part of the American
- landscape as the forest itself. For many, all that may be
- coming to an end.
- </p>
- <p> This week the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is expected to
- announce whether it will list the northern spotted owl as a
- threatened species. If the owl is listed, as many predict, the
- Government will be required by the Endangered Species Act to
- protect the bird. And if a preservation plan advocated by
- biologists is put into effect, it could be one of the most
- sweeping environmental actions ever undertaken. Federal and
- state agencies say the plan, fully carried out, would set aside
- an additional 3 million acres of forests. That would slash by
- more than one-third timber production on federal lands, which
- accounts for nearly 40% of the region's total harvest. The
- possible result: mill closings and cutbacks costing 30,000 jobs
- over the next decade. Real estate prices would tumble, and
- states and counties that depend on shares of the revenue from
- timber sales on federal land could see those funds plummet.
- Oregon would be hardest hit, losing hundreds of millions of
- dollars in revenue, wages and salaries, say state officials.
- By decade's end the plan could cost the U.S. Treasury $229
- million in lost timber money each year.
- </p>
- <p> All this to protect an owl that stands barely 2 ft. tall and
- weighs 22 oz. Granted, it is one of the most regal birds of the
- forest, with its chocolate-color plumage, dappled with white
- spots, and its enormous eyes, like onyx cabochons, scouring the
- forest for prey. A fine bird, yes, but it was never really the
- root cause of this great conflict.
- </p>
- <p> More than a contest for survival between a species and an
- industry, the owl battle is an epic confrontation between
- fundamentally different philosophies about the place of man in
- nature. At issue: Are the forests--and by extension, nature
- itself--there for man to use and exploit, or are they to be
- revered and preserved? How much wilderness does America need?
- How much human discomfort can be justified in the name of
- conservation? In the Pacific Northwest the nation's
- reinvigorated environmental movement is about to collide head
- on with economic reality. What happens here will shape the
- outcome of similar conflicts between ecological and economic
- concerns for years to come. It will also enhance or diminish
- U.S. credibility overseas, as America tries to influence other
- nations to husband their natural resources and protect their
- endangered species. From Brazil to Japan, the decision will be
- carefully observed. The stakes are that high.
- </p>
- <p> Environmentalists claim that talk of an economic doomsday
- is wildly exaggerated and is intended to whip up popular
- opposition to conservation efforts that threaten industry
- profits. The skeptics question figures coming from those
- federal agencies--the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land
- Management--that lease timber rights on public lands and have
- long been seen as being cozy with the logging industry.
- Privately, some agency officials concede that the dire economic
- forecasts were rushed and based on shaky assumptions. Still,
- they have bolstered industry's attack on the owl-preservation
- plan and fueled community fears. Already there are signs that
- those agencies, under directions from the White House, may try
- to scale down the plan urged by biologists. A joint Forest
- Service-BLM study indicates that the very fabric holding some
- communities together would unravel if the biologists' plan were
- fully implemented. "In severe cases of community dysfunction,"
- says the report, "increased rates of domestic disputes,
- divorce, acts of violence, delinquency, vandalism, suicide,
- alcoholism and other social problems are to be expected."
- </p>
- <p> In many ways, however, the owl dispute merely hastened an
- inevitable crisis facing the Pacific Northwest. For decades,
- the timber industry, driven by the nation's voracious housing
- needs, leveled private and public land for timber with little
- regard for long-term consequences. "We've been running an
- ecological deficit, and the bill has come in," says Jerry
- Franklin, a research scientist with the Forest Service.
- "There's going to be pain for owls, for people and for trees."
- The industry's reforestation practices have markedly improved
- over the past decade, but the reinvestment is too little too
- late.
- </p>
- <p> The life cycle of the Pacific Northwest's primeval woodlands
- is measured not in decades but in centuries. No amount of
- saplings and science can make up for years of wanton
- harvesting, or replace a thousand-year-old fir. Only time can
- do that--and time may be short for those mills that are
- specially designed to devour the old firs. The owners eye the
- forests hungrily, knowing they cannot wait for the millions of
- seedlings and young trees to mature. If the industry is
- allowed to keep cutting, some forestry experts say, the last
- ancient forests outside wilderness areas could fall within 30
- years. Thus many mills may be forced to close no matter what.
- Owl or no owl, the timber industry faces a painful conversion
- from its dependence on giant old-growth trunks to smaller trees
- in reforested stands.
- </p>
- <p> Already the old growth has all but vanished from private
- lands. Most of the remaining great trees are in areas under
- federal control, administered primarily by the Forest Service.
- Many Americans believe these lands are all included in the
- national parks, and that the U.S. Forest Service is a gentle
- custodian of the woodlands. Except in certain protected
- wilderness areas, that is not so. The Forest Service and BLM,
- which oversee the public lands, are empowered to sell timber
- rights to the highest bidder, and sell they have--a
- staggering 5 billion board feet a year, sweeping away 70,000
- acres of old-growth forest annually. What is grown in its stead
- is not forest but "fiber," as the timber industry refers to
- wood.
- </p>
- <p> One can grasp the distinction by looking out from any one
- of a thousand promontories in the Northwest. Clear-cutting--the indiscriminate leveling of every tree in an area--has
- left the wilderness fragmented and scarred. Long after the last
- truck has pulled out, heavy with logs, and the debris has been
- torched, what remains is a blackened earth, pockmarked and
- studded with tombstone-like stumps. "It looks like Alamogordo,
- as if it's been nuked," concedes Dan Schindler, a Forest
- Service district ranger.
- </p>
- <p> Though the timber industry has zealously replanted over the
- past two decades, the hallmark of old growth, biodiversity, has
- been lost. Gone are the broken-topped dead trees or "snags"
- favored by owl, osprey and pileated woodpecker. Gone the
- multilayered canopies and rich understory, the scattering of
- hemlock, incense cedar and sugar pine. Gone the centuries-old
- firs in their noble dotage. Increasingly, the forests have been
- transmogrified into tree farms of numbing uniformity, countless
- ankle-high seedlings and spindly saplings germinated from seeds
- selected for their productive capacity. The logging operations
- have tattered the seamless fabric of old growth that once
- covered the land. "There are more holes in the blanket than
- there is blanket," laments BLM biologist Frank Oliver.
- According to the National Audubon Society, each year enough
- old-growth trees are taken from the Pacific Northwest to fill
- a convoy of trucks 20,000 miles long.
- </p>
- <p> "The landscape has been so transformed by ignorance,
- arrogance and greed that those who must prove their case are
- not those who call for forest protection, but those who call
- for business as usual," says Richard Brown of the National
- Wildlife Federation. Less than 10% of the ancient forest that
- once covered the Northwest remains. From Alaska to British
- Columbia to Oregon, forests that predate the 13 Colonies are
- being sacrificed for plywood, planks and pulp. The rapidity
- with which these primeval stands are being cut down has driven
- a handful of environmental extremists to sabotage
- timber-industry equipment, tie themselves to trees slated for
- harvesting and booby-trap trees with buried spikes that can
- mangle saws or injure unwary cutters.
- </p>
- <p> All this bewilders timber-industry leaders, who say there
- are plenty of owls, plus abundant old-growth stands set aside
- in wilderness areas, that are safe from the saw. In Oregon
- about half the state's estimated 3 million acres of old growth
- cannot be logged because it is unsuitable or designated as
- wilderness. But that leaves 1.5 million acres of old growth
- that can be cut. Some of these areas contain no owls and are
- not likely to be protected.
- </p>
- <p> How much ancient forest is enough? The question is not just
- one of aesthetics or recreational adequacy. No one knows how
- much forest is needed to sustain an intricate and little
- understood ecosystem upon which animals and plants, and, yes,
- man too, depend. What is known is that the old growth plays an
- integral role in regulating water levels and quality, cleaning
- the air, enhancing the productivity of fisheries and enriching
- the stability and character of the soil. "We're probably just
- on the edge in terms of our understanding," says Eric Forsman,
- a biologist with the Forest Service. "If we continue pell-mell
- down the path of eliminating these old forests, we'll never
- have the opportunity to learn because they won't be there to
- study." He and others have come to believe that where science
- ends, the mystery that is the ancient forest begins.
- </p>
- <p> To understand what is at stake in human terms, it helps to
- visit a community that depends on timber for its existence.
- Take Oregon's Douglas County, which, like the fir, is named for
- the Scottish botanist David Douglas. Oregon produces more
- lumber than any other state, and Douglas County boasts that it
- is the timber capital of the world. It stretches from the
- Cascades in the east to the Pacific Ocean on the west. There
- one can tune in to Timber Radio KTBR, feel the roads tremble
- beneath logging trucks and watch children use Lego sets to haul
- sticks out of imaginary forests. In the current struggle,
- Douglas County is ground zero, likely to take as direct an
- economic hit as any site in the region. "Something is going to
- happen in the next few months that will rip the rug right out
- from under us," says Lonnie Burson, who works in a sawmill and
- presides over the union, Local 2949, that represents 3,400
- lumber- and millworkers.
- </p>
- <p> The controversy is on everyone's mind there, and the owl
- gets much of the blame. A banner headline in the local paper
- declared: SAVING SPOTTED OWL SEEN AS THREAT TO SCHOOLS. Douglas
- County may lose more than $13 million a year in timber revenue
- that the Federal Government returns to the county to help pay
- for public administration, roads and schools. At the local Ford
- dealership, the only owls that are welcomed are those made out
- of ceramic, which stand on the roofline warding off swallows
- intent on building nests under the eaves. Cars and trucks are
- not selling. Too much uncertainty. Says salesman Bruce Goetsch:
- "We survived without the dinosaur. What's the big deal about
- the owl?"
- </p>
- <p> At Bud's Pub in Roseburg, a spotted owl hangs in effigy over
- the bar. Shops offer T-shirts saying I LOVE SPOTTED OWLS...FRIED. And in the cabin of logger Bill Haire's truck, beneath
- the mirror, swings a tiny owl with an arrow through its head.
- "I can still maintain some sense of humor," says Haire. His
- father Tom, 65, works with him in the forest, and his son
- Brian, 12, hopes one day to join them there. "If it comes down
- to my family or that bird," says Haire, "that bird's going to
- suffer. Where would we be right now if everything that lived
- on this earth still survived--the saber-toothed tiger, the
- woolly mammoth? Things adapt or they become extinct." That
- applies to his industry as well, says Haire. "If we don't
- adapt, we'll become extinct."
- </p>
- <p> The crisis has forced many in Douglas County to reappraise
- a life-style more precious now that it is endangered. Those who
- work in the woods can make $35,000 to $45,000 a year.
- Millworkers generally make less. But the issue is more than
- money. They have also been forced to re-examine themselves and
- the ecological legacy they have been left. Douglas County has
- always been dependent on natural resources, though it has not
- always used them prudently. In the 19th century, furriers
- killed off many of the furbearing animals and, in so doing,
- their trade as well. Later, prospectors emptied the rivers of
- gold, and the mining camps were reclaimed by the forest.
- Millworkers and their families often ask union leader Burson
- what will become of them. "What do I tell them, `It's going to
- be O.K.'?" asks Burson. "I can't. Who do I blame? Do I blame
- the industry for raping the lands in the East and raping the
- lands in the West 50 years ago and not replanting? Do I blame
- my father? Do I blame my grandfather? Do I blame myself for not
- reading the paper every single night and being critically
- involved in these issues? How do I answer these people?"
- </p>
- <p> Mill town after mill town is buried beneath an avalanche of
- contradictory statistics tossed out by timber-industry
- officials and environmentalists. "To put it bluntly, we don't
- know what the hell is going on," says Burson. "We're being
- blackmailed and threatened from both sides. Industry is saying
- `Support our side, or you'll lose your jobs.' Environmentalists
- are saying `Support our side, or you won't have clean air to
- breathe.' People are scared to death."
- </p>
- <p> Many who draw their living from timber concede that the owl
- is not their only problem. Jobs have been lost to automation
- too. A Forest Service study predicts that technological changes
- will displace 13% of the work force during the next 15 years.
- The recession of 1980-82 also took its toll. Export of logs
- overseas, particularly to Japan and China, has reduced the work
- available for local mills. And high production costs for lumber
- and plywood make the region vulnerable to competition from the
- South and Canada.
- </p>
- <p> Burson knows the little owl draws attention away from these
- complex problems, some of which the industry brought upon
- itself. And he suspects industry is exploiting community fears
- for its own ends. "It's part of the corporate strategy to scare
- the hell out of us so we write letters and communicate with
- other people," says Burson. In a popular timber publication,
- industry lawyer Mark Rutzick wrote an article titled "You Have
- Enemies Who Want to Destroy You." The enemies: the National
- Audubon Society and the National Wildlife Federation.
- </p>
- <p> The mill owners, self-made men of considerable influence in
- their communities, are stunned that their livelihoods are
- threatened because of a nocturnal bird so unobtrusive that few
- have ever seen it. "We came out here in the 1850s," says Milton
- Herbert, the owner of Herbert Lumber in Riddle, Ore. "We spend
- our lives trying to understand trees, to live with the
- environment, not against it. I hunt and fish. This is my home.
- I get real uptight when I think they gave my ancestors 160
- acres for homesteading, and they're giving the owl 2,200 acres."
- He is perplexed by calls to preserve the ancient forest.
- "They're trying to stop time, and that's one thing we can't
- do," says Herbert. "Bugs, fire or man are going to harvest the
- trees; they don't live forever." That's the industry's view.
- Timber is a crop, simple as that. Rod Greene, logging manager
- with Sun Studs Inc. in Roseburg speaks of the old growth as
- "overripe," "wasteful" and "inefficient." Behind him, as far
- as the eye can see, in 55-ft.-stacks, rises the mill's
- inventory of tree trunks, more than 13,000 trees that once
- covered 300 acres or more. Gobbling up some 320 trees a day, the
- mill will consume the inventory in less than six weeks.
- Inside, computers align the logs by laser, then blades unwrap
- them like rolls of paper towel, spinning out a ribbon of veneer
- 8 ft. wide and four miles long every hour. Other machines carve
- out 3,000 "studs," or construction posts, every hour, 20 hours
- a day, seven days a week. In town after town, the scene is
- repeated. Nature cannot keep pace.
- </p>
- <p> Fred Sohn, owner of Sun Studs, sees no difference between
- the reforested stands and the ancient forest they replace. "I
- believe I as an individual can replicate the forest, redo it
- like a farmer growing a crop and do it better than nature," he
- says. "I can remake the old forest the same way nature did,
- only quicker." Talk like that riles environmentalists, who see
- the forest as more than just another fungible asset. Steve
- Erickson, whose father was in the timber industry and whose
- brother works in a mill, is writing a book about hiking trails.
- But Erickson finds it hard to share his vision of the forest.
- "It's like being in an artery in God's body," he says.
- Biologists and botanists speak in more scientific terms. They
- say the ancient forest is more than an aggregation of trees.
- To them the ancient forest's rotting trunks, decrepit firs and
- deep debris represent not waste, but vital nutrients in a
- vastly complex ecosystem.
- </p>
- <p> Those who cut down the great firs may not see the forest
- that way, but many have no less reverence for it. The
- lumberjacks of Douglas County are not boisterous back-slapping
- rubes but pensive men who feel as much a part of this rugged
- landscape as the black-tailed deer and elk that retreat from
- the sound of their saws. A popular bumper sticker here
- declares, FOR A FORESTER, EVERY DAY IS EARTH DAY. Rather than
- surrender the name "environmentalist" to their foes, they have
- labeled the opposition "preservationists." Many loggers never
- finished high school but followed their fathers and grandfathers
- into the woods. They rise in the dark at 3 or 4 in the
- morning, pull up their suspenders and adjust rough hide pads
- on their left shoulders. The pads cradle the saws and, like
- trivets, shield the men from the hot blades that would burn
- their flesh through their flannel shirts. Their pants legs are
- tattered so that if they are suddenly snagged, the material
- will tear rather than hold. They do not wear steel-tipped shoes
- for fear that if a massive limb falls on their feet, it may
- turn the metal down and sever their toes. Better that their toes
- be crushed than pinched off.
- </p>
- <p> Few loggers or environmentalists have ever seen the elusive
- spotted owl. They know it as either a costly subject of
- litigation or a rare distillation of the forest spirit. But on
- the summit of a steep ravine in Douglas County, a pair of
- spotted owls assert themselves, as if to prove they are more
- than a mere abstraction. Nesting in the cavity of a
- broken-topped fir, they scan for prey and ponder the rare
- two-legged observer far below. Their gentle mewing gives way
- to a distinctive four-note hoot: "who-who, who-who." The male
- drops down for a closer look and settles on a limb 15 ft. from
- BLM biologist Oliver. "They have no fear of man," he says. In
- his hand, Oliver hides a mouse. The moment he exposes it,
- dangling it by its tail, the mouse disappears in a blur of
- wings and razor-sharp talons. The owl has carried it off and
- up to its mate, who snips off the mouse's head and ferries it
- skyward to the nest, where two snowy hatchlings devour it.
- </p>
- <p> Oliver is enchanted by the owls' trusting ways, their grace
- and their attention to their young. He worries about their
- future, seemingly dependent as they are for both prey and
- nesting sites on old-growth forests. But Oliver and others have
- observed that it is not the age of the forest that appears to
- be critical to the habitat of the owl, but rather the structure
- and character of the forest. He and other biologists hope that
- one day they will be able to identify those key components and,
- by preserving them in reforested tracts, both widen the owls'
- habitat and open the way for a resumption of timbering on a
- selective basis. But the owl is not alone in the forest. As an
- "indicator species," its well-being is a measure of how other
- creatures and the ecosystem as a whole are faring. "The
- spotted owl is almost certainly just the tip of the iceberg,"
- says the Forest Service's Franklin. "There are probably dozens
- of other species just as threatened as the owl."
- </p>
- <p> The dispute over the owl has festered more than 15 years,
- a period in which the ancient forests receded ever farther and
- the timbering continued largely unabated. Efforts to find a
- solution were thwarted by the power of the timber industry, the
- bungling and inertia of the federal bureaucracy and the
- stridency of an environmental movement as quick to alienate as
- to persuade. But the conflict should never have reached the
- current crisis point. Forest ranger Schindler believes the
- coming economic turmoil might have been averted if the
- Government had weaned industry from its dependence on old
- growth by gradually reducing the level of harvesting. Instead
- the industry has been allowed to enjoy record harvests in
- recent years.
- </p>
- <p> U.S. Forest Service biologist Eric Forsman, who has studied
- the owl since 1968, believes it was the strategy of the federal
- agencies to stall for time by continually asking for more
- studies on the owl. "I've seen how the games are played," says
- Forsman. BLM in particular ignored repeated alarms. As early
- as 1976, BLM biologist Mayo Call warned his superiors that
- unless swift action was taken to protect the owl, it might one
- day have to be put on the endangered-species list, curtailing
- timber harvests on federal lands.
- </p>
- <p> And the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which is charged
- with protecting species, refused to call for the owl to be
- listed as endangered until a federal court in 1988 judged that
- refusal to be "arbitrary and capricious." Later the General
- Accounting Office discovered that Fish and Wildlife officials
- had rewritten portions of a major study, expunging critical
- references suggesting the owl was endangered. One biologist
- said he felt pressured to "sanitize the report." For years,
- economics and politics, not biology, have controlled the
- decisions of BLM, the Forest Service and Fish and Wildlife.
- </p>
- <p> The controversy offers the U.S. an opportunity to reassess
- the cost of past profligacy and salvage what remains of a
- treasured legacy of wildlife and ancient forest. Neither the
- owl nor the timbermen are served by further governmental
- inaction or sham solutions. What is gained by waiting until the
- last fir topples, the owl slips closer to extinction, or the
- mills finally retool or shut down because there are no more
- old-growth trees available? The lesson of the owl is not that
- environmental and economic concerns are incompatible, but that
- the longer society lacks the political courage to act, the
- harder it is to find a solution. After years of industry
- obstructionism and governmental acquiescence, the Forest
- Service is finally experimenting with requiring more selective
- harvesting of trees, rather than clear-cutting. But many
- environmentalists fear that such half measures will not
- preserve the forest ecosystem.
- </p>
- <p> In a sense, everyone is to blame for the current dilemma.
- Says Jolene Unsoeld, a Congresswoman from Washington State: "It
- is the accumulated actions of all of us--those of us who
- admire a beautiful wood-paneled wall, environmentalists who
- want their grandchildren to know the ancient forests, and those
- of us who come from generations of hardworking, hard-living
- loggers. We are all at fault, because all of us wanted the days
- of abundance to go on forever, but we didn't plan, and we
- didn't manage for that end."
- </p>
- <p> Since most old-growth forests are on federal land, they
- belong not to an industry or a region but to the nation. The
- federal bureaucracies that manage them have too often operated
- under antiquated guidelines, framed when the forests seemed
- inexhaustible and man was oblivious to all but his own needs.
- Those agencies must reappraise their roles as custodians of the
- land and recognize the widest interests of the nation, not
- merely the most deeply vested. To place timber production above
- every other concern in this era of expanding environmental
- awareness is an abrogation of the public trust.
- </p>
- <p> These are times of shifting societal values, from an
- appetite for natural resources to a concern for environmental
- quality, from the need for a strong defense to the reality of
- eased world tensions. Each shift brings dislocation and
- hardship. When revisions to the Clean Air Act pass Congress,
- the use of high-sulfur coal will be curbed, and thousands of
- West Virginia miners will lose their careers. And the scaling
- back of the defense budget could put thousands more on the
- unemployment line.
- </p>
- <p> What is the Government's obligation to those workers and to
- the loggers of the Northwest? It would be impossibly costly for
- Congress to insure every citizen against the winds of change.
- But when scores of communities are imperiled, relief measures
- are necessary. In the case of the Northwest, the Federal
- Government should help retrain loggers and millworkers and
- provide towns with grants to spur economic diversification.
- Congress could also help sustain the Northwest's processing
- mills by passing legislation aimed at reducing raw-log exports.
- </p>
- <p> There is no way to avoid hard choices. The U.S. will have
- to recognize that no society can have it all at all times--unfettered harvesting of natural resources, full employment and
- a healthy and rich environment. The soft hoot of the owl, an
- ancient symbol of wisdom and foresight, beckons us to resolve
- both its future and our own.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
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