[alt.activism] Ancient Forests of the Pacific Northwest......HELP!

daveme@tekirl.LABS.TEK.COM (Dave Mead) (06/06/89)

                      Ancient Forests
                           of the
                     Pacific Northwest





     The ancient forests of the Pacific Northwest harbor  in
the  shade of their high canopies a unique ecosystem that we
are only beginning to understand. These  old-growth  forests
contain  more  organic  material  per  acre than the densest
tropical rain forest and are  very  much  analogous  to  the
tropical  forests  in  terms of their role in preserving air
and water  quality,  as  well  as  wildlife  habitat.  These
forests are comprised mainly of Douglas fir, the world's tal-
lest tree (one specimen at 385 feet).  Often  in  excess  of
eight  feet  in  diameter  its bulk rates second only to the
Redwood/Sequoia species.The Douglas fir has been the world's
main  source of lumber since the middle of the 19th century,
yielding five times the timber per acre of the best  Eastern
forests.  An  early  traveler  was  inspired  to write these
words:



        "Oh! What timber,"...."These trees...these forests of trees...
        so enchain the sense of the beautiful that I linger on the
        theme and am loth to depart. Forests in which you cannot ride
        a horse...in which you cannot possibly recover game you have
        shot without the help of a good retriever...forests into which
        you cannot see, and which are almost dark under a bright midday
        sun...such forests, containing firs, cedars, pine, spruce and
        hemlock, envelop Puget Sound and cover a large part of the
        Washington Territory, surpassing the woods of all the rest of
        globe in the size, quantity and quality of the timber."...
        "...monarchs to whom all worshipful men inevitably lift their
        hats."

                                      Samuel Wilkeson.....1869




     Only 5-15% of these forests remain and they  will  soon
be  gone at present cutting rates. A whole diverse ecosystem
is being fragmented and destroyed at society's bidding  only
to  be  replaced  by  a time constrained monoculture of see-
dlings (many are literally cloned) that  will  be  lucky  to
reach an age of 60 years. We are trading a valuable piece of
our heritage for  the  wood  and  paper  of  our  throw-away
society.

     One of the first casualties of this destruction of  the
ancient  forest habitat is likely to be the northern spotted
owl, a very tame bird that dwells in  tree  hollows  of  the
deep  forests.  Listed  as  a "threatened species" under the
Endangered Species Act, it has become the focal point  of  a
legal  battle between the timber industry and various groups
of  concerned  citizens  (Audubon  Society,  Oregon  Natural
Resource  Council,  Wilderness  Society,  National  Wildlife
Federation, Sierra Club, and many others). With many  timber
sales  tied-up in court the timber industry is fighting hard
to circumvent the legal system through use of  its'  politi-
cians  at the state and federal level who are heavily influ-
enced by timber interest "contributions". Various bills have
been introduced to prohibit law suits against the government
to stop logging on public lands. Jay D. Hair,  president  of
the National Wildlife Federation, said:

        "We are truly outraged by these undemocratic maneuvers.
        Limiting the right of citizens to judicial relief violates
        the most sacred principles on which our government is
        founded."


     The timber industry has launched a large  public  rela-
tions barrage on Northwest TV with slick ads that would lead
one to believe they are only engaged in raising bald eagles,
fawns,  salmon, wild-flowers, Christmas trees, and all other
sorts of cute, fuzzy things. Not  once  have  they  shown  a
denuded   clear-cut   with  waist-deep  erosion  and  silted
streams, the real product of their  efforts.  "Weyerhaeuser,
the tree growing company." is the slogan.

     A  word   of   compassion   is   in   order   for   the
logger/millworker.  Since  1820,  when  the  damage started,
he(or she) has been used. Working at dollar-a-day rates they
risked  and lost their lives in an effort to provide civili-
zation a cheap and plentiful supply of wood products. Only a
few  of  the people at the top got very rich. Today  workers
are losing their jobs due to mismanagement  of  an  industry
grown  too  large for the resource.  Log shortages, combined
with increasing mechanization and foreign  export  of  logs,
have squeezed out Northwest millworkers at increasing rates.
At present cut-rates the old-growth will be  gone  and  more
down-sizing  will  be  inevitable.   Some  smaller operators
realize this and have adapted  to  harvesting  second-growth
and  other   species  of trees.  Ironically the vast bulk of
top grade timber producing lands are privately held and usu-
ally lie in low altitude, easy to manage/harvest areas. Stu-
dies have shown these lands to  be  capable,  under  intense
management, of supplying an adequate sustained yield of logs
for our needs. Lack of proper replanting and management com-
bined  with  over-cutting has left this resource largely un-
tapped while the timber industry has moved  out  to  destroy
old-growth  on  public lands. Most of the public forests are
higher altitude, harder to harvest, and  much  less  produc-
tive. As with the Exxon Valdez, we again have the public and
the environment picking up the tab on personal (and  govern-
mental) greed and incompetence.

The Forest Service and large companies have not yet  adapted
to  the  reality of their deeds.  They and the Bush adminis-
tration have aggravated the log  shortage  by  the  proposed
selling of raw logs to Japan to make up for the Reagan defi-
cits. U.S. wood-products workers should feel sold-out by their
own  companies, the President, and the Forest Service. These
people are caught in the middle and vilify the  "environmen-
talist" by displaying tee-shirts saying things like, "Sierra
Club kiss-my-axe" and " Save a  logger,  eat  an  owl!".   A
local  TV  news  program  reported an attack of gun-wielding
displaced wood-products workers on  Memorial  Day,  week-end
campers  in  the  Yakima, Washington area.  Shots were fired
and some of the campers were injured in  the  scuffle  which
was  reported  to have started over "the spotted owl contro-
versy".  These people are confused and looking for a  scape-
goat  in  a  complex issue that is threatening their liveli-
hoods.  There really  are  no  villains  in  this  conflict,
except perhaps for a few key people who have manipulated the
situation for their own gain.

     In 1905 Secretary of Agriculture James Wilson,  at  the
behest  of  Theodore  Roosevelt,  created  the United States
Forest Service to be commanded by its founder, Gifford  Pin-
chot. Pinchot's charter stated:


        "All the resources of the Forest Reserves (later known as
        National Forests) are for use and this must be brought
        about in a thoroughly prompt and businesslike manner, under
        such restrictions only as will insure the permanence of
        these resources. Where conflicting interests must be re-
        conciled, the question (please note) will always be de-
        cided from the standpoint of the greatest good of the
        greatest number in the long run."

        (Parenthetical statements are mine.)



     The current collision course of the timber industry  is
in  clear  conflict with not only the Endangered Species Act
but the legal goals of the Forest Service. Pinchot  did  not
say  "..greatest  good  of loggers", or"Oregonians", or even
"Americans". He meant all people, born, and yet to be  born.
That  is  where  the  outside  world  comes  in. The loss of
ancient forest is a world-wide calamity  that  we  have  all
created  and  is probably far more advanced than the loss of
Amazonia which is slated for 50% destruction (we are at  90%
already).  It's  time  for  people to invest a quarter, or a
shilling, or a franc, or whatever postage costs to  let  the
officials  know  we  want to save the ancient forests of the
Pacific Northwest and their inhabitants.

     I am including along list of addresses  of  appropriate
people  to  contact.  Please  feel free to use the following
letter but I would prefer you write in  your  own  words  if
possible.  Include  your credentials (especially if you have
relevant training). Please write congressional  leaders  and
urge  them to vote against any legislation circumventing the
legal appeals process  or  allowing  increases  in  raw  log
exports or cutting rates.


                                        David Mead
                                        Tektronix Labs




Disclaimer: My opinions are  not  necessarily  those  of  my
employer.





Dear ________,


I am greatly concerned over the loss of the ancient  forests
of  the  Pacific  Northwest.  Please do all in your power to
preserve what remains of this unique  ecosystem  for  future
generations.



                                        Sincerely,

                                        ______________








President Bush                           
1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW
Washington, D.C
20500                              	                 202-456-7639


Secretary of the Interior
Washington, D.C
20240                              	                



Chief Dale Robertson
USDA Forest Service         
12th St. and Independence Ave. SW         
PO Box 96090 
Washington, DC  20090   
202-447-3957                           



Director U.S. Dept. of Fish & Wildlife
Dept. of the Interior
Washington, D.C
20240                              	                


Director  of BLM
Dept. of the Interior
Washington, D.C
20240                              	                




Senator Mark O. Hatfield
Hart Building, Room 711
Washington, D.C. 
         20510		                              202-224-3753

Senator  Bob Packwood 
Russell Building, Room 259
Washington, D.C. 
         20510		                              202-224-5244


Congressman  Les AuCoin 
Rayburn Building, Room 2159
Washington, D.C. 
         20515		                              202-225-0855

Governor Neil Goldschmidt 
254 State Capitol Building
Salem, Oregon 
         97310                                      1-800-322-6345 


Oregon Natural Resources Council
Yeon Building, Suite 1050
522 SW 5th Ave
Portland, Oregon 97204


Locals: Get acquainted with forest regulations and specific issues, report
violations. A biologist friend in the Forest Service says this is *very*
effective. Reporting nesting sight of spotted owls, goshawks, etc. to
USDAFS, Fish and Wildlife, and others works.

                      Pacific Northwest Region                 
_____________________________________________________________________________


Regional Supervisor             
USDA Forest Service         
Pacific Northwest Region                 
319 SW Pine St.        
PO Box 3623
Portland, Or.  97208   
503-326-2877                           



_____________________________________________________________________________

Forest Supervisor             Forest Supervisor          Forest Supervisor  
USDA Forest Service           USDA Forest Service        USDA Forest Service
Colville N.F.                 Ochoco N.F.                Umpqua N.F.       
Federal Bldg.                 155 N. Court St.           2900 Stewart Pkwy.
695 S. Main St.               PO Box 490                 PO Box 1008
Colville, Wa. 99114           Prineville, Or 97754       Roseburg, Or.97470
509-684-3711                  503-447-6247               503-672-6601




Forest Supervisor             Forest Supervisor          Forest Supervisor  
USDA Forest Service           USDA Forest Service        USDA Forest Service
Deschutes N.F.                Okanogan N.F.              Wallowa-Whitman N.F. 
1645 Highway 20 East          1240 2nd Ave South         1550 Dewey Ave.
Bend, Or                      PO Box 950                 PO Box 907
              99114           Okanogan, Wa. 98840        Baker, Or.97814
503-388-2715                  509-422-2704               503-523-6391




Forest Supervisor             Forest Supervisor          Forest Supervisor  
USDA Forest Service           USDA Forest Service        USDA Forest Service
Fremont N.F.                  Olympic N.F.               Wenatchee N.F. 
524 North G St.               801 South Capitol Way      301 Yakima  St.
PO Box 551                    PO Box 2288                PO Box 811
Lakeview, Or. 97630           Olympia, Wa. 98507         Wenatchee, Wa.98801
503-947-2151                  206-753-9534               509-662-4335




Forest Supervisor             Forest Supervisor          Forest Supervisor  
USDA Forest Service           USDA Forest Service        USDA Forest Service
Gifford Pinchot N.F.          Rogue River N.F.           Willamette N.F. 
6926 E. 4th Plain Blvd.       333 West 8th St.           211 East 7th Ave. 
PO Box 8944                   PO Box 520                 PO Box 10607
Vancouver, Wa. 98668          Medford, Or. 97501         Eugene, Or.97401
206-696-7500                  503-776-3600               503-687-6521




Forest Supervisor             Forest Supervisor          Forest Supervisor  
USDA Forest Service           USDA Forest Service        USDA Forest Service
Malheur N.F.                  Siskiyou N.F.              Winema N.F. 
139 NE Dayton St.             200 NE Greenfield Rd.      2819 Dahlia St. 
John Day, Or. 97845           Grants Pass, Or. 97526     Klamath Falls, Or.97401
503-575-1731                  503-479-5301               503-883-6714




Forest Supervisor             Forest Supervisor           
USDA Forest Service           USDA Forest Service        
Mt. Baker-Snoq. N.F.          Siuslaw N.F.                
1022 1st Ave.                 4077 Research Way       
                              PO Box 1148                
Seattle, Wa.  98104           Corvallis, Or. 97333  
206-442-5400                  503-757-4480         




Forest Supervisor             Forest Supervisor           
USDA Forest Service           USDA Forest Service        
Mt. Hood  N.F.                Umatilla N.F.                
2955 NW Division              2517  SW Hailey Ave.       
Gresham, Or.  97030           Pendleton, Or. 97801  
503-666-0700                  503-276-3811