home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!cs.utexas.edu!asuvax!ukma!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: America's National Forests: Whose Land is it Anyway?
- Message-ID: <1992Aug22.082325.23509@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: PACH
- Distribution: na
- Date: Sat, 22 Aug 1992 08:23:25 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 127
-
- /** gen.newsletter: 122.2 **/
- ** Written 12:46 pm Aug 12, 1992 by sbrackman in cdp:gen.newsletter **
- War and Peace Digest - Vol 2, No. 3 Aug.1992
-
- The War and Peace Digest is a bimonthly international newsletter on issues of
- disarmament, government secrecy, media accountability, the nuclear threat (from
- both civilian power plants and the military weapons complex), ecological
- destruction, and peaceful conflict resolution through the structures of the
- United Nations. If you would like to be placed on our mailing list or
- receive a copy of our new information packet on nuclear power, contact
- Matthew Freedman at 32 Union Square East, New York, NY 10003-3295
- (Tel: 212-777-6626).
-
- Contributions are always welcome.
- All materials may be reproduced without permission.
- -----------------------
- AmericaUs National Forests
- Whose Land is it Anyway?
-
- RWhen you compare the situation in the Pacific Northwest to the Amazon of
- Brazil, the Northwest is much worse...it appears that much of the forest has
- been literally cut to pieces.S
- - Dr. Compton J. Tucker
- Goddard Space Flight Center / NASA
-
- In just twenty years, all the ancient forests on public lands may be gone.
- Today, only 5% of the majestic old-growth that once blanketed North America
- remain standing. Since 1955, Oregon and Washington have lost 3.4 million acres
- (or 57%), reducing the Northwestern United States to a mere patchwork of
- remaining forest stands struggling to survive a growing onslaught of
- clearcutting that has put these areas in more jeopardy than the Amazon basin.
- Timber cuts in 1987 from Oregon and Washington alone represent a line of trucks
- more than 20,000 miles long. As the proportions of this tragedy unfold, elected
- officials remain unconcerned that some of the worst deforestation occurs on
- publicly owned lands.
-
- Who looks out for the forests? The United States Forest Service is charged
- with managing the national parks in the public interest. Unfortunately, it
- seems that their revolving-door relationship with the timber industry, like that
- of the links between the Pentagon and its contractors, results in a decided tilt
- towards the monied interests that profit from the logging of federal lands.
- According to John McCormick, head of the Forest ServiceUs whistleblower program
- from 1989-92, the situation is one where the Forest Service Rhas become
- comfortable with lying to the public, ignoring long-festering problems and
- serving the timber industry as Government agents of environmental destruction
- rather than environmental protection.S
-
- Not only has the management been irresponsible, but the Forest Service actually
- loses money in the process of giving away federal property for private logging.
- This may seem baffling to the American taxpayer, who would assume that the 1000
- year old forests must command a high price on the open market. Yet in 1991, 109
- of 122 national forests lost money through below-cost timber sales in an
- enterprise that cost Americans over $435 million, according to the Forest
- ServiceUs own figures.
-
- Does this subsidy amount to a net gain for American workers? Not quite.
- Though the timber industry is not allowed to export raw logs culled from
- national forests, they manage to circumvent the restrictions by simply exporting
- more from their private holdings and doing minimal processing on trees from
- federal property before shipping them to mills in Mexico and Japan. 25% of the
- 1991 Northwest harvest was exported causing a net loss of 16,000 jobs at home.
- The exports continue to rise due to higher prices in East Asian markets that
- shut out American bidders and cause mills to close.
-
- Though the timber industry finds it useful to blame environmentalists for job
- losses, they conveniently overlook the huge gains in productivity that have
- resulted in a shrinking job base despite record harvests. From 1979 to 1987,
- worker productivity due to mechanization rose by 40%. The impact of these
- gains caused employment to drop by 20% through the 1980Us while the timber cut
- increased by 18%. This trend, as predicted in a 1990 study from the General
- Accounting Office, will see employment fall by 27% over the next 50 years though
- the volume of timber harvested will increase by 55%.
-
- Not only are jobs lost, but there are severe impacts to the region. Logging in
- the Northwest has hurt the commercial and recreational fishing industries which
- produce more than $1 billion in personal income and 60,000 jobs. Currently, 214
- native salmon stocks are facing the risk of extinction due to higher water
- temperatures (from decreased shading by streamside trees) and vast increases of
- sediment (10-1000 times) from uncontrolled erosion at clearcuts.
-
- Ancient forests lies are the worldUs largest storehouse of carbon per acre and
- act as a RsinkS against the growing accumulation of greenhouse gases in the
- atmosphere. The standard method for harvesting timber is known as
- TclearcuttingU, where patches of between 40-640 acres are razed to the ground
- though less than 50% of the trees have commercial value. The rest are burned in
- a practice known as Tslash burningU which produces over 40% of all carbon
- dioxide emissions in the Northwest. The trees that are replanted will need 200
- years to reclaim the amount of carbon released from the original cut. New
- plantations are of a single species, prone to disease and insect infestation.
- The resulting tree farms can not claim the diversity of the original groves and
- are poorly suited for sustaining a wide range of species.
-
- Reforestation efforts are not going well. Contrary to official claims that
- replanted areas have been R99% successfulS, a new report by the House Interior
- Committee (RManagement of Federal Timber Resources: the Loss of AccountabilityS,
- June 1992) shows that current regrowth is only 64% of the volume being cut.
- The loss of healthy forests threatens the viability of all species, including
- humans. As critical sources of fresh air and water, the forests contain the
- biological diversity necessary to sustain all components of the food chain and
- protect a rapidly shrinking genetic pool that allows ecosystems to adjust to
- changing conditions.
-
- Overcutting has been at issue for many years but only recently has the debate
- heated up after the Northern Spotted Owl was listed as a threatened species in
- 1990, thereby forcing the federal government to protect its habitat. The owl,
- however, is only an Rindicator speciesS, meaning that it marks the beginning of
- the end for the viability of Northwest forest ecosystems. This is the intent of
- the battle-scarred Endangered Species Act (ESA), which has borne the brunt of
- outrage over the decision to place 29% of the remaining old-growth forests on
- federal lands under protection from logging. Logging companies, which own 85%
- of the U.S. timber supply, are still free to cut all of their own lands.
- Contrary to the hype, the ESA has not been much of a problem for developers.
- Out of 34,600 projects that were evaluated over the last five years, only 23
- (less than .1%) were stopped because they would put struggling animal
- populations at an undue risk of extinction Q hardly a stumbling block to
- economic growth. Moreover, a poll taken this year found that 66% of registered
- voters support the full reauthorization of the act and oppose any efforts to
- weaken it.
-
- The survival of the biosphere, and all that live in it, is threatened by the
- loss of forest cover. The War and Peace Foundation calls for a halt to
- destructive logging on federal property and a ban of log exports. There is no
- excuse for irresponsible management of our forests. Our children deserve
- better.
-
- ** End of text from cdp:gen.newsletter **
-
-