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- Putting People First / August 8, 1994
- =====================================
-
- Washington Report
-
- FROM THE TRENCHES
-
- by Kathleen Marquardt
- Chairman, Putting People First
-
- ...A weekly opinion column about the struggle against "animal rights" and
- eco-extremists.
-
- Copyright@1994 Putting People First
- Permission to reproduce this column is freely granted on the condition that
- credit is given to Putting People First.
-
- Putting People First is a nonprofit organization of citizens who believe in
- western civilization; that we need to return to common sense in man's
- relationship with his fellow man; and that public policy should be based on
- science and rationality, not emotionalism.
-
- Putting People First
- PO Box 1707
- Helena, Montana 59624
- (406) 442-5700
- Fax (406) 449-0942
-
- =====================================================================
-
-
- NEW POLICY PUTS FOREST AT RISK
-
- A close friend of my mother was killed in Montana when he was
- dropping fire-retardant on a forest fire and his plane crashed,
- starting another fire. In Colorado fourteen firefighters were killed
- when a fire there erupted unexpectedly. The West is burning up. Why?
-
- Many of the fires were started by lightening strikes, some by
- careless campers. But this year's fires burn hotter and are spreading
- farther and faster than in the past. Why? Because these fires have
- tremendous amounts of fuel.
-
- Where did this fuel come from? It turns out that we have been
- stockpiling the fuel for years now -- not in safe places but throughout
- entire forests. The fuel, of course, is the dead and dying trees that
- the timber companies have been forbidden to harvest.
-
- As these fires are burning, we need to be aware of the factors that
- have produced the tinder box we call the West.
-
- A few days ago, a Montanan received a letter from President Clinton
- touting that his administration's plan that "reverses the economically
- and environmentally destructive policies of the past." Clinton bragged,
- "My Forest Plan will help preserve the Northwest's biologically rich
- system of ancient forests -- a gift we hold in trust for future
- generations. The plan's watershed-based, scientifically grounded
- prescriptions emphasize the protection of old-growth forests,
- restoration of streams and fisheries, and the preservation of countless
- species of wildlife."
-
- In responding to President Clinton's claims about his forest plan,
- the recipient responded that the "plan does not restore economic and
- environmental stability to the Pacific Northwest. It has caused
- economic instability and it will cause environmental devastation. The
- policies of the past were not economically and environmentally
- destructive. Those portions of the national forests where logging has
- occurred are currently the most productive forests in the pacific
- Northwest and here in northwest Montana." "On the other hand," he
- continued, "those small scattered tracts of old-growth forests are
- decadent and are losing production every year. The forests that have
- been harvested throughout the last fifty years are where the real
- diversity is."
-
- Most people do not understand the needs of a healthy forest, they
- are fed a lot of sound-good claptrap from Greens who are attempting to
- shut people and industries out of the forests. Today's forests need to
- be managed if they are to be kept healthy. Sound forest management
- includes harvesting of trees as well as wildlife. Listen to the words
- of my friend, Bruce Vincent, a Montana logger and Chairman of
- Communities for a Greater Northwest:
-
- We have suppressed fires for over 70 years in most areas. For over
- a decade now we have recognized the down side to fire suppression -- the
- terrific fuel loading of our forests -- a fuel load over 500% of normal
- in many areas. This means the fires of 1994 burn much hotter than
- anything from the "natural" past. Mitigation for this fuel buildup can
- and should be done but has been thwarted by supposed "protectors" of the
- forest. Mitigation encompasses logging and controlled burning -- both
- products of the hand of man and therefore deemed by eco-extremists to be
- negative.
-
- Millions of acres of forest land in the West has been riddled with
- insect infestations, disease, and weakened by drought. Again,
- mitigation of these compounding influences is possible -- but has been
- thwarted.
-
- The loggers who have been disallowed the productive steps of
- mitigation are now called upon to mount their machinery and dive off
- flaming mountains to "protect" the forest. Those who have been painted
- as the rape, pillage and plundering Neanderthals now stand between the
- forest they love and the threat they have seen coming and have been
- helpless to avoid. They are the only people to drive toward the smoke
- because they have it in their blood to fight for the forest. Everyone
- else drives away.
-
- Because of the intensity of the fires this time around many areas
- will have soils sterilized rather than invigorated. Many areas will
- have streams boiling with cooked trout and salmon. Deer, elk, and
- grizzly bears are as safe as their speed compared to the fire's (speed).
- My children's ecosystem will take centuries instead of decades to
- recover from the insanity of thwarted management. Lives have already
- been lost -- and it is only July. Private property losses will be
- astronomical.
-
-
-
- Instead of being practical and managing the forests properly --
- allowing the loggers to take out the fallen and diseased trees, allowing
- small, contained fires to burn -- those in charge have basically shut up
- the forests.
-
- There is a place for old-growth, but there also is an urgent need
- for new-growth. In the September 1993 issue of Petersen's Hunting,
- Samuel R. Pursglove, Jr., Executive Director of the Ruffed Grouse
- Society, noted, "As young forest become less abundant, so do American
- woodcocks as do other species of forest wildlife that require young
- forest habitats."
-
- Purseglove goes on to point out that nationwide, young stands are
- decreasing dramatically as more and more land is being locked up for
- preservation purposes. Thus, over "20 species of migrant birds are
- experiencing dramatic population declines." Of these, "40% require
- young forest habitats for breeding and will undoubtedly be in far worse
- shape than they are now if active forest management is halted."
-
- New growth also provides the air filtration system we enjoy in
- healthy ecosystems. Old growth does not. We need balance, and balance
- cannot be achieved through shutting up our forests.
-
-
- Balance comes about through the wise and conservative use of
- natural resources. With balance we retain a beautiful, healthy
- environment which includes old-, middle-, and new-growth forests.
-
- Without balance our forests burn down. And as they burn they take
- human, animal, and plant lives with them, along with the beauty we all
- enjoy.
-
-