Environmental groups sue over Klamath logging plan
SACRAMENTO - Two environmental groups are suing the U.S. Forest Service
in an attempt to block logging of large trees in the Klamath National
Forest.
The Environmental Protection Information Center of Garberville and
Ashland, Ore.-based Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center sued in federal
court in Sacramento this week over the 1,026-acre Westpoint timber sale
above the lower Scott River.
"The Klamath National Forest is actually targeting the big
fire-resistant trees for logging, and leaving the brush and small
diameter material which are the greatest fire risks," said KS Wild
conservation director George Sexton.
Cutting bigger trees is permitted under the Northwest Forest Plan
negotiated during the Clinton administration, said service spokesman
Matt Mathes. The plan contained a compromise recognizing the economic
needs of communities that traditionally depended on logging large
trees, he said.
Logging would be on 53 parcels in two general areas: on Scott Bar
Mountain east of the Lower Scott River, and in the headwaters of Middle
Creek, near the northeast corner of the Marble Mountains Wilderness.
The lawsuit alleges the plan would increase fire risks while breaking
up wildlife habitat and destroying old growth forest. Among species
endangered would be the rare California Siskiyou Mountain salamander,
the groups said.
Sexton contrasted the plan to the nearby Scott Bar Mountain Vegetation
Management Project, also on the Scott River, where the service recently
cleared small material from 360 acres and burned another 1,800 acres.
But the Westpoint sale also will improve fire management by clearing
out small trees and brush as well as larger trees, so that prescribed
fires can be used there as well, said Klamath forest spokesman Brian
Harris.
The Scott is a tributary of the Klamath River, site of an ongoing
battle between farmers, fishermen and Indian tribes over chronically
scarce water.
The Klamath-Siskiyou Region
Fire Ecology and Policy
Responsible Use
