Federal Judge Recommends Striking Down Illegal Oregon Logging Plan Big day for wildlife, salmon, clean water, old-growth forests, and the public
September 30, 2011Today, people throughout the west are celebrating a federal court ruling that recommends striking down the Western Oregon Plan Revision (WOPR), which abandoned scientific protections for federal public lands in western Oregon and would have opened up those lands to outdated boom-and-bust logging.
Document Actions
ontact: Kristen Boyles, Earthjustice, 206-930-6660
Susan Jane Brown, WELC, 503-914-1323
Chris Frissell, Pacific Rivers Council, 406-471-3167
Doug Heiken, Oregon Wild, 541-344-0675
Glen Spain, PCFFA, 541-689-2000
Joseph Vaile, Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center, 541-488-5789
Portland, OR –Today, people throughout the west are celebrating a
federal court ruling that recommends striking down a plan that
abandoned scientific protections for federal public lands in western
Oregon and would have opened up those lands to outdated boom-and-bust
logging.
The Bush-era plan, called the Western Oregon Plan Revision (known as
WOPR and pronounced “whopper”) would have dramatically increased
logging on about 2.6 million acres of federal public forests in Oregon
managed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).
Today’s ruling came in response to a lawsuit filed by Earthjustice and
Western Environmental Law Center on behalf of eight conservation and
commercial fishing organizations.
“The judge confirmed what everyone’s been saying for years – that BLM
took an illegal short cut to avoid scientific scrutiny of its plan,”
said Kristen Boyles, an attorney with Earthjustice. “This decision
will finally clear the decks of the flawed WOPR process, return these
public forests to scientifically sound management, and let us move
forward with both timber harvest and environmental protection.”
The ruling by U.S. Magistrate Judge Dennis Hubel found that WOPR was
finalized without the required evaluation of federal fish and wildlife
scientists on its impacts on threatened and endangered species. Judge
Hubel recommended that WOPR be vacated, a ruling that would put the
standards and requirements of the Northwest Forest Plan back into
place. Judge Hubel’s decision is not final; there will be a brief
period of time for the parties to raise any objections before a
separate, reviewing district court judge.
“Protecting these forests is key to recovering Oregon salmon and
steelhead, said Chris Frissell, Director of Science and Conservation
for Pacific Rivers Council. “BLM’s original decision to issue WOPR was
a legal and scientific mistake that we’ve finally been able to undo.”
“This should be the final chapter in the WOPR saga and open the door to
balanced forest management,” continued Joseph Vaile of Klamath-Siskiyou
Wildlands Center. “These public forests protect our climate, produce
clean water, and sustain world class salmon runs and recreational
opportunities that contribute to Oregon’s diverse economy.”
WOPR has been controversial since 2003, when the Bush administration
settled a long dormant timber industry lawsuit with the promise to
issue a new plan that dramatically increased logging. WOPR was issued
in late December 2008. It was administratively withdrawn in 2009 by
the Obama administration, but earlier this year, a federal court in
Washington, D.C. ruled that the withdrawal was invalid – a decision
that reinstated the original WOPR plans. Today’s decision addresses
the substance of WOPR for the first time. In the Portland court,
lawyers for BLM agreed that the logging plan illegally ignored
requirements designed to protect endangered species and their forest
habitat.
“It’s a good day for commercial fishing families and all the businesses
up and down the Oregon coast that depend on our salmon, clean water,
and fresh air,” said Glen Spain of Pacific Coast Federation of
Fishermen’s Associations. “WOPR was always a bad idea and would have
been disastrous for our industry and our jobs.”
“Old growth forests with clean healthy streams drive Oregon’s economic
engine and prosperity,” said Doug Heiken of Oregon Wild. “With WOPR
and its flawed premises out of the way, we can fully commit to
restoration thinning of these forests in a way that is supported by
sound science and that protects the water, air, fish, and wildlife.”
Earthjustice and Western Environmental Law Center represent Pacific
Rivers Council, Oregon Wild, Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center, The
Wilderness Society, Cascadia Wildlands, Center for Biological
Diversity, Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations,
Institute for Fisheries Resources, and Umpqua Watersheds as plaintiffs
in this case.
