Rey--who as a Senate aide helped draft the 2000 law--said last week, "We've had six years of it now. We're proposing another five years (with 50% cutbacks)," and called the administration plan "an extension of a program that was never intended to be permanent."
But Western lawmakers said the proposal amounted to a death knell for a law that many described as the most successful federal forestry initiative in decades. "Governing is about priorities, and this proposal to cut funding to rural counties by 50 percent tells (us) that we're not very high on the administration's priority list," said Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.
Under the administration plan, $800 million would be authorized in a phased reduction to zero over the next five years for rural schools and other needs.
Wyden and other critics said the cutbacks were made even worse by a plan to help pay for the program by selling off some Forest Service land that officials consider unnecessary. Mike Anderson of The Wilderness Society called the idea of funding county payments through private land sales absurd, and said it could jeopardize a law all sides of the forestry debate support.
The law is set to expire Sept. 30 if Congress does not reauthorize it. "We don't know what lands are being talked about yet, but we would certainly have to be very vigilant about having any national forest lands sold off," Anderson said. "It's really unprecedented in my experience. It's very troubling and it jeopardizes a program that has helped bring a lot of healing to the west."
Sen. Larry Craig, R-Idaho, a co-sponsor of the original law, said he was concerned about the plan to sell up to 170,000 acres of public lands to pay for the rural schools program. "Public lands are an asset that need to be managed and conserved," he said.
“I had to deal with this issue following the 2003 Aspen Fire in Arizona’s Catalina Mountains. When I put together a final report for the folks down there, I summarized the findings as follows:
“Most were also growing in wet soils in areas of highest wind velocity, usually along ridge tops. The Catalinas experienced a very strong wind event on January 1 last year, following a wet period. That’s what probably precipitated the green tree failure.”
Photo: Forestry Div., Arizona State Land Dept.
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Trees leaning in this precipitous fashion are prime candidates to fall. Prudent hikers stay well away from such specimens. |
Photo: Forestry Div., Arizona State Land Dept.
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Notice the twisted and stubby root structure on this fallen ponderosa pine. Weakened by lack of room to spread its roots, this tree was easily overturned. |
Elaborating last week on this theme, Celaya detailed the process that causes such unfortunate tree loss. “Trees growing under these conditions,” he said, “tend to produce short, shallow roots that intertwine with surrounding trees to support each other. Intertwine your fingers and you’ll see what I mean.
“Narrow trunks with little taper and reduced crowns are also symptomatic of overcrowding. Once trees growing under these conditions are opened up dramatically by fire, for example, or excessive logging, they’re easily susceptible to windthrow.
Photo: Forestry Div., Arizona State Land Dept.
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This family’s deck needed to be completely replaced after a ponderosa dropped on it during a windstorm. But what if there had been a child or a pet standing on that spot at the moment the tree fell? |
Photo: Forestry Div., Arizona State Land Dept.
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Here’s the havoc that the falling tree wreaked on the previous deck, whose replacement is shown above. |
“Conversely, trees growing in uncrowded conditions tend to have expansive root systems, one to two times the height of the tree, with excellent trunk taper and a full complement of branches.”
What does this mean to individual property owners who are concerned with the health of their own trees?
Celaya has several recommendations:
1. Homeowners should inspect their trees on a regular basis to detect the signs that a tree may be failing.
2. Check for soil cracks developing around the base of the tree, soil bulging above the roots and trees that have developed a lean.
3. Also check trees that have suffered soil erosion if you live in an area that has undergone a fire.
4. Prompt and proper removal of failing or failed green trees plus proper disposal of the material will reduce the chances of bark beetles becoming an issue. Enough said.
If it’s enough for Celaya, it’s enough for us. Homeowners, take heed.
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March 3, 2006—A FAREWELL WORD FROM YOUR MONITOR—Tomorrow is my 73rd birthday. A time for gratitude for still being alive; a time as well to make a change in my life.
Nearly four years ago, I came to the Interface Commission to suggest that a web site be instituted that would tell the people of the Prescott community—in real time--when wildfire threatened, or when smoke in the sky heralded only a prescribed burn, or when it was incumbent on us all to prepare for what may one day be a fiery holocaust in our neck of the woods.
Thanks to the generosity of PAWUIC and the cooperation of all the agencies that serve the public in our area, that web site was established back in 2002 and I was tapped to operate it. And operate it I have for nearly four years, researching and writing stories to inform you seven days a week, 365 days a year.
I’ve had lots of splendid help, too numerous to list here, and I thank them all. Just one individual I must single out, Robert Winston, my compatriot, my staff photog, my sometimes co-writer and all-the-time friend. His work, especially behind the camera, has made the PAWUIC page sparkle with dramatic input.
Photo by Paul Benner
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Photographer Bob Winston (left) and Monitor Don Levenson both say adieu to this web site’s readers. Bob and his family are moving to Georgia at the end of next month. |
So, what now?
Another very special friend, Nick Angiolillo, has sprung to the rescue. He, the head of Yavapai County’s Emergency Management office, has agreed to take over responsibility for the www.regionalinfo-alert.org page. Effective today.
It’s a good change, one that I need, and one which will be bringing you alerts and advisories from an official source in the future, as in reality it should have been from the very beginning. Nick’s office coordinates all urgent and emergency services in our county. He should be the one to keep you informed.
But this page will never be the same. YCEM has a thousand issues on its plate; that small office perforce must limit its postings to critical information: on-going wildfires, evacuation notices, prevention procedures and the like. But not all the kinds of subjects I’ve covered....and certainly not every day.
Although you will no longer find the kinds of stories on this page that I’ve brought you over the past years, please know that when an emergency situation arises, you can still find the essential information you need on this web site.
It’s been a fine ride with all you folks these past years. Thanks for “tuning in.” I’ll miss you, I’ll miss the self-imposed assignments, I’m sure, but I’m leaving you in good hands. Welcome aboard, Nick & Co.
Don Levenson
PAWUIC’s Ex-web site Monitor
March 3, 2006—AND A PARTING WORD FROM BOB WINSTON— I have been an active member of PAWUIC for three years and during the past two have had the pleasure of working with the Regional Alert's "Monitor," Don Levenson. I was "Monitor-2" acting as the website's fill-in when Don was away from Prescott--as well as serving as PAWUIC's photographer.
What is the "Power of a Picture?" Please forgive me if I cite that old cliché, "A picture is worth a thousand words." When people see a picture of a home that is completely engulfed in flames due to a wildland fire, it sends them a message they remember. They are less likely to recall spoken or printed words.
Combining my love of firefighting and photography, I have tried to capture that "Power of a Picture" to convey reality, drama and beauty.
Now, my wife and I have decided to move to Georgia and live close to our son and his wife. Our new home is located near the start of the Appalachian Trail and it is, wouldn't you know it, in the Wildland/Urban Interface. We just can't escape it! It is a beautiful area.
We leave our lovely Prescott home, also nestled into the Interface, adjacent to Prescott National Forest, with mixed emotions.
I have enjoyed the privilege of being a volunteer for PAWUIC and working with its members. I will surely miss working with my mentor and good friend, Don. He has been an inspiration to me not only on a personal basis, but also in my role as PAWUIC's man behind the camera.
Photo by Richard Gregory
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Photographer Bob Winston, this time in front of the camera |
I will gradually transition out of my role as I assist PAWUIC's new photographer, Gary Roysdon, to assume my duties. I wish all PAWUIC members and all of you website readers a fond farewell. Be safe! Be Firewise!
Robert M. Winston
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Wildfire Advisory, Feb. 2, 2006—GOVERNOR FEARS “WORST FIRE SEASON”—As Arizona heads into the 2006 fire season with no relief from any substantial rainfall since last October, Governor Janet Napolitano is worried.
She was briefed yesterday on the anticipated severity of the upcoming wildfire season by representatives of the State Land Department, the AZ Division of Emergency Management, as well as other agencies.
The word she got was not encouraging.
After reviewing the degree of preparedness from each agency, Napolitano issued a public warning.
“This season,” she said, “threatens to be the worst in recorded history and could begin much earlier than past wildfire seasons. “Although it’s impossible to prevent all wildfires, there are steps we can take on the federal, state, local and individual levels to reduce the severity and size of wildfires and to reduce associated costs and losses.”
The Governor encouraged every Arizonan to create defensible space around their property. She reminded all homeowners that conditions this year promise fire risks in both low elevations (grasslands and deserts) and high elevations (forests).
Asked about the federal government’s role in wildfire planning, the Governor referred to the response she received last month from the Departments of Agriculture and Interior to her letter of Dec. 30 demanding assurances that Arizona will have the necessary federal air resources to fight fires.
Even though the 2006 federal aviation air fleet is a reduction from 33 to 16 heavy airtankers compared the early season 2004 fleet, there will be no further cut-backs, she was told.
“I’m relieved to see that no further reductions are expected, but I remain skeptical that the federal resources used last year, during a wet season, will meet the needs of this year’s extended dry season,” Governor Napolitano said in a voice of deep concern.
MONITOR’S NOTE: We at PAWUIC echo the governor’s fears that we are all facing a gravely dangerous fire season beginning this spring....or even earlier. If you have substantial brush growth on your property that cries out for removal, now’s the time to get on the horn.
Call the Prescott Fire Department at 771-5872 if you’re a city dweller, 759-9933 if you’re in the Central Yavapai Fire District to get your situation assessed and flammables removed. You have nothing to lose but your home.
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News Advisory, Feb. 3, 2006—THE SAGA OF THE FOREST SERVICE: DEALING WITH HARSH REALITIES, Part V—Conclusion. (For Parts I-IV, see below)— The first law with teeth was the 1973 Endangered Species Act; the next law, the 1974 Forest and Rangeland Renewable Resources Planning Act, requires inventory of resources aimed toward sustained renewable resource production.
The 1976 National Forest Management Act replaced and clarified the original Organic Act of 1897 and requires that the Forest Service involve the public more in its decision making and hire people trained in disciplines other than forestry and engineering. As late as 1960, 90% of professional positions were filled with foresters.
Any attempt to summarize the last three decades of agency history is doomed to be incomplete.
The service-wide adoption of the Data General computer system by 1984 reinforced the trend toward greater agency centralization and forced more managers to do their own typing.
The fostering of diversity of peoples and occupations is a story still in progress. Conflict continues in the present. Lawsuits over the northern spotted owl and old-growth forests in the Pacific Northwest are having a major impact on agency practices.
Herbicide use was a major issue only a few years ago, with range and salmon on the horizon as the next two resources in the environmental spotlight.
What may be a final observation of the move to a new era is that never again will the agency operate without checking the public pulse, because perception and beliefs are stronger arguments than scientific ones alone.
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News Advisory, Feb. 2, 2006—THE SAGA OF THE FOREST SERVICE: DEALING WITH HARSH REALITIES, Part IV—(For Parts I-III, see below)— To understand the causes of a shift in the Forest Service to a new stage of land stewardship, any analysis must start with the watershed decade of the 1970s.
The first signal of change was the confrontation between industry and environmentalists that ended with passage of the Wilderness Act of 1964. The Forest Service had hoped to preempt the dispute by getting Congress to pass the Multiple Use-Sustained Yield Act in 1960.
The act mixed uses, resources and lands in a list of five forest purposes: outdoor recreation, range, timber, watershed, and wildlife and fish. Two key points of the law are that no resource has statutory priority and each is to receive equal consideration in determining the best combination of uses.
The problem was who was to decide the mix and on what basis?
The 1964 law allowed Congress to establish wilderness areas on national forests and was only the beginning of public and congressional involvement in Forest Service management practices.
The 10-year study on roadless area reviews and evaluations stemmed from compliance work required by the Wilderness Act. Public involvement in agency policy was fostered in part by a law with unintended consequences that was signed by President Richard M. Nixon on January 1, 1970—the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).
The agency had always consulted with special interest groups, but after NEPA, Congress and the public became directly involved in daily operations of the Forest Service. The act allowed lawsuits to be filed against the agency for noncompliance with the requirement to prepare environmental impact statements on proposed major actions by federal agencies.
The first important timber management challenge took place in 1969 on the Bitterroot National Forest. Later, in 1973, the Forest Service practice of clear-cutting on the Monongahela National Forest was challenged in court.
The public no longer held the view that "the professional forester knows best" how to manage the national forests. Outsiders were now going to monitor agency activities, and there were several additional laws that helped ensure that the public had a say in land use management practices.
TO BE CONCLUDED TOMORROW
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News Advisory, Feb. 1, 2006—THE SAGA OF THE FOREST SERVICE: DEALING WITH HARSH REALITIES, Part III—(For Parts I & II, see below)— At this moment, the explosive issue of the ultimate mission of the Forest Service is in the political arena, where it will ultimately be decided by Congress.
A key to the issue is appropriations, because funding levels shape the amount of attention that the agency can devote to the mix of resources it manages.
As an example of the boom years, from 1954 to 1970, the Forest Service received 66% of the budget increases it requested for timber sales administration, but only 20% of its requested increases for recreation and wildlife, 17% for reforestation and 15% for soil and water management.
In the meantime, the work force gropes, one day at a time, toward another--as yet unknown--stage of land management.
In addition, the agency must adapt to other social changes, including the entry of non-whites and women into the agency in numbers matching their profile in the civilian labor force. This internal change accelerated following the civil rights movement of the 1960s and 1970s, which resulted in equal employment opportunity laws and programs in government agencies.
The Forest Service has also been involved with the Job Corps program since 1964, which has brought in many new employees with different skills, such as teachers and counselors.
Yet in the 1990s there was still a need for an active recruitment and retention effort given the low numbers of women and members of minority groups....even as late as 1983, when of the 5,700 professional foresters in the Forest Service, only 450 were women.
Geraldine (Geri) Larson Bergen became the first female forest supervisor in 1985.
TO BE CONTINUED
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News Advisory, Jan. 31, 2006—THE SAGA OF THE FOREST SERVICE: DEALING WITH HARSH REALITIES, PART II—(For Part I, see below)— These were years of growth in employment within the agency that started with about 500 permanent personnel in 1905. It reached 1,800 by 1920, increasing to 5,700 by 1930 and 7,484 by 1949.
Even larger increases took place in the postwar period with the number of employees reaching 21,953 by 1979 and a total of 32,375 by 1990. Agency foresters predicted that the demand for saw timber would continue and that, by the year 2000, the national forests would need to produce 20 billion board feet.
Instead, volume peaked in 1987 with an all-time record high of 12.7 billion then dropped to 12 billion in 1989, which was 13% of the wood harvested in the nation.
Massive road building and timber sales during the postwar stage of Forest Service history signified a major change in the agency’s image that not all the public accepted. The ranger on horseback who patrolled the forest for fire prevention gave way to the road construction inspector and timber sale administrator wearing a hard hat and driving a green pickup.
Local citizens, usually active recreationists, were first to protest specific projects that would alter the environment in ways they didn't like.
In time, local concerns over herbicide use, timber harvest levels and so on became national issues, much to the dismay of timber-dependent communities and ranchers who grazed their animals on national forests and grasslands.
National environmental groups are seeking to reduce timber harvest levels and livestock numbers on national forests and grasslands. After generations of earning a livelihood by logging and ranching on public lands, residents of rural areas find their way of life challenged by urban "outsiders," and many of them find these changes threatening.
Inside the Forest Service, the same debates echo, with often younger, or at least newer, employees with non-traditional backgrounds and professions (biologists, archeologists, and other "ologists") arguing for a return to the custodial mode or a more environmentally sensitive management.
Meanwhile, employees who entered the agency as foresters during the heyday of the development era (1950s and 1960s) respond that the nation needs jobs and goods provided by commodity production on national forests and grasslands.
TO BE CONTINUED
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News Advisory, Jan. 30, 2006—THE SAGA OF THE FOREST SERVICE: DEALING WITH HARSH REALITIES, Part I—Once in a while, it’s salutary, don’t you think, to step back and see where we were and what’s happened to make us go in the direction we’re now going?
Such is the situation within the U.S. Forest Service, custodian of our precious Prescott National Forest and scores of others across the U.S.
If you’d like a bird’s eye view of this agency and how it’s been whipsawed back and forth by the winds of change during its more than 100 years of existence, you’ll find the five-part story that we’re beginning today a highly interesting read.
Its source comes from the USDA Forest Service International Programs website, but its author is uncredited. Never mind, it’s a compelling read. Let’s give it a go:
The saga of the Forest Service can be defined by two fundamental stages: the custodial era--1905 to 1942-- and the commodity production era--1942 to the present). At the time of its founding in 1905, the Forest Service had a legacy of timber sales but they were minor in scale because private lands were logged off first to meet the national market needs for lumber.
By the 1920s, however, a soaring economy led to a record peak of national forest timber sales that reached 1.65 billion hoard feet in 1930.
The Great Depression shrank harvests for a decade, then a new peak was reached in 1940 of 1.78 billion. That was quickly topped as wartime defense needs stimulated harvests off national forests (the 1942 level was 2.2 billion). Yet even then, only 2% of the national supply of timber came from the national forests.
The postwar demographic and economic surge accelerated demand for housing and gave the agency the opportunity to expand national forest timber harvests. This it did with zest, moving from a level of three billion board feet in 1950 to nine billion board feet in 1960.
TO BE CONTINUED
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News Advisory, Jan. 30, 2006—FOREST SERVICE WINS A KEY BATTLE—You win some; you lose some. This time the U.S. Forest Service managed to gain the support of a federal appeals court which ruled last week in favor of a logging project near Meadow Valley, Calif. It handed the agency a crucial legal victory in its efforts to implement federal legislation designed to provide jobs and reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfire.
In reporting the news, Correspondent Jane Braxton Little of the Sacrament Bee wrote that in a decision filed last Thursday, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals concluded that the Forest Service properly evaluated the environmental impacts of logging more than 40 million board feet of timber around the community.
The ruling rejects an appeal filed by four environmental organizations seeking to force the Forest Service to study more fully the combined effects of the Meadow Valley and adjacent logging, much of it still in the planning stages.
The judges said the Forest Service "took the requisite 'hard look'" at the cumulative effects of the logging--past, present and future. The agency's environmental study adequately analyzed the risks associated with logging debris, and the direct and indirect effects on the California spotted owl, the judges said.
The ruling has indirect impact on the Prescott area as well. Each time a court upholds a Forest Service project, it adds a bit of support to PAWUIC’s efforts in our own community to enable a local wood products industry to thrive. At the same time, PNF officials are working to thin overgrown Prescott National Forest and protect us all against the perils of wildfire.
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News Advisory, Jan. 29, 2006—“THEY’RE RUNNING OUT THE CLOCK”: REY—A little more than two months ago, we told you about pending legislation in Washington introduced by Rep. Greg Walden (R-OR) that would give federal land managers the ability to rapidly assess damaged forestlands following catastrophic events such as wildfire.
(For that original story, click on the 2005 Archives button in the left column of this page and scroll down to the story headlined “House Bill Targets Post-Fire Forest Restoration.”)
A lot of water has passed under the bridge since Walden’s bill was introduced, so its current status was reviewed this past week by Staff Writer Dylan Darling of the Redding (CA) Record Searchlight.
Here, excerpted, is the essence of Darling’s story:
“As soon as the last flames of a wildfire are out,” he writes, “a clock starts ticking.
“Time is short for loggers to cut timber while it's still valuable. Time is also of the essence for restoration.
“A bill moving through the U.S. Congress could speed up both of those timetables, a federal official on Wednesday told a roomful of private, state and federal workers who thin, spray and replant trees on Western timberlands.
“Mark Rey, a high-ranking Agriculture Department official, said H.B. 4200, authored by Rep. Walden, would stop those opposed to logging in a burn area--such as environmentalists--from ‘running out the clock’ through legal challenges.
| Mark Rey, Undersecretary for Natural Resources and the Environment |
“ ‘If you play the clock down (far enough), you...eliminate the prospect of salvage,’ Rey said, because burned wood rots quickly.
“The bill would streamline the regulations that have slowed the process of logging timber and planting new trees after wildfires or storms, which in turn may allow commercial interests to profit from the logging more readily. The process has been lengthened in recent years by requirements for multifaceted analyses and even legal battles.
“A crowd of about 240 attended the meeting at the Redding Holiday Inn, put on by the Forest Vegetation Management Conference, a nonprofit group of forestry professionals.
“Few, if any, at the gathering expressed opposition to the bill but some were skeptical that the bill would make it through the Senate. They doubted senators from the East Coast would approve spending increases for forests that are mostly in the West.
“ ‘I'd like to see more happen on the ground,’ said Jeff Webster, a forestry consultant for Total Forestry, Inc.
If the restoration bill passes, it would be a ‘huge breath of fresh air,’ he added.
“While optimistic that the bill will become law, Rey told the crowd that the issue would be ‘hotly debated’ in Congress. ‘On federal lands, we’re treating about four times as much land as was treated in the 1990s,’ Rey said. Now the focus has shifted to restoration.
“Rey, Undersecretary for Natural Resources and the Environment, has authority over both the U.S. Forest Service and the Natural Resources Conservation Service. As a federal policy worker appointed by President Bush, Rey's gray business suit and red tie made him stand out amid the gathering of forestry professionals who wore mostly jeans and flannel or fleece.
“He said he wears the suit so people can more easily pick out that ‘knucklehead’ from Washington.”
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News Advisory, Jan. 27, 2006—JUDGE HALTS TIMBER SALES IN THREE STATES—So round and round we go, a merry-go-round of action and reaction, endlessly repeated in court cases that seem doomed to stretch into a far distant future.
The U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) find themselves unwillingly locked in a chess game of maneuver and counter-maneuver with environmental groups in national forests and national parks across the country.
This cycle continues to pit America’s executive, legislative and judicial branches of government in a power tussle that results in little but waste and loss of time while serving up blow after blow to the economy of communities adjacent to--and dependent on--public lands.
This time the setting is the federal 9th District circuit court presided over by Judge Marsha Pechman. On Monday of this week, Judge Pechman issued an injunction blocking as many as 144 timber sales in three states: Washington, Oregon and northern California.
| Judge Marsha Pechman of the federal 9th District circuit court |
AP Staff Writer Gene Johnson describes the situation this way:
“The sales had been approved under the (Bush) administration's decision to stop requiring that the USFS and the BLM look for and protect rare plants and animals before logging on 5.5 million acres covered by the 1994 Northwest Forest Plan.
“The Bush administration eliminated the so-called ‘Survey and Manage’ rule in spring, 2004, as part of a legal settlement with the timber industry. Environmental groups sued over the decision, arguing that it was arbitrary and that the government had not evaluated what the impact would be on protected species such as the great gray owl.
“Last August, Judge Pechman agreed, striking down the new rule. At the time, she did not say whether she would allow the 144 timber sales--approved since the rule's adoption--to proceed. About half of those sales included old-growth logging.
“In her decision Monday, she reinstated the Survey and Manage rule, and made clear that no timber sales would proceed unless they met that standard.
“The potential harm to the approximately 300 species protected by the old rule outweighed the potential harm to the government, which put its projected economic loss from stopping the timber sales at $2.7 million.
“The judge noted--as the environmental groups had--that the court should not be concerned about any money the government stood to make by breaking the law.
“Reflecting the environmentalists’ point of view after the decision, Pete Frost, attorney for the Western Environmental Law Center in Eugene, Ore., commented that ‘the courts have again had to force the Forest Service to use science rather than politics and favoritism to preserve our last remaining old growth forests.'”
Needless to say, Forest Service officials don’t see it that way. So the battle goes on.
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News Advisory, Jan. 26, 2006—TOTTING UP THE SCORE—Quietly and without a lot of fanfare, that specialized team of firefighters and vegetation managers from the Prescott Fire Department keeps whaling away day after day, removing excess brush, grasses and dead trees from private property in the Prescott Basin.
The summary of what the 10-odd members of Crew 7 have accomplished in diminishing ground fuels during the last quarter—October, November and December—has now been compiled....and it’s a heartening report.
Especially when considering that the nearly dry winter we’ve having is setting the stage for what may turn out to be a brutal fire season.
According to the PFD’s Fuels Management Supervisor Todd Rhines, upon the request of homeowners, 84 private residential parcels were assessed to determine their fire risk during the fourth quarter of 2005, and 63 of them were treated by Crew 7, making them defensible in the face of wildfire.
Photo by Robert Winston
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Fuels Management Supervisor Todd Rhines |
In addition, 25 dead or dying ponderosas and pinyon pines were limbed, felled and hauled away. The mechanical chipper got plenty of work too during this period, with 30 chip jobs racked up for people who had already done their own yard trimming work.
The total of wood and brush material chipped is astonishing. It totaled 207 tons, equivalent to 3,105 cubic yards of waste. Asked what is done with all this debris, Rhines said it’s deposited in a variety of places including the PFD’s Training Center out on Sundog Ranch Road and in the old drying pits at the Waste Treatment Plant in the same area.
[map]
And there it will sit, Rhines added, “until we can find a home for it.”
There was much more on the department’s plate to deal with as the yearend approached.
Throw in the 9 ½ acres that were treated in the Willow Cove area, [map]
four acres in the Iron Springs Club
[map]
and the seven completed on the Yavapai-Prescott Indian Reservation
[map]
and all in all, Crew 7 accounted for 95 ¼ acres treated during the quarter.
Give credit too to all the Prescott area residents who not only cleared their own land but hauled all the yard waste to the Sundog Ranch Road Transfer Station where a pile of debris as big as a football field was burned just nine days ago (see story below datelined Jan. 20).
One major highlight of Rhines’ report concerned a one-man gang named Jeremy Brinkerhoff. As Wildland Code Enforcement Officer, this young fellow hiked his way through the Hidden Valley Ranch subdivision, assessing fire risk at 187 homes for an experimental risk-assessment program dubbed Red Zone.
Photo by Robert Winston
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Seeing what a torrent of work that Code Enforcement Officer Jeremy Brinkerhoff is doing, Rhines said “We’re going to have to get him some help.” |
Then in his “spare time,” Brinkerhoff reviewed 101 residential vegetation plans where contractors were seeking permits to begin construction of new homes in the Interface, plus 96 vegetation assessments of homes that were already in the process of being built.
In an effort to diminish the fire risk to the Prescott community, new codes were written back in 2002 that mandate safer landscape plantings. It’s part of Brinkerhoff’s job to check out work-in-progress to make sure those code mandates are being followed.
He’s making things safer for all of us.
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News Advisory, Jan. 25, 2006—GRANT MONEY OPENS DOOR FOR NEW FORESTRY CLUB—When the Yavapai County Board of Supervisors allocated $12,400 last week for both new and ongoing forestry projects funneled through your Interface Commission, nobody was happier about it than PAWUIC’s Rod Edgmon.
Having helped establish a Forestry Club at Prescott High School last summer, Edgmon now will have both opportunity and funding to organize a second club, this time hopefully at Chino Valley High School.
Part of the dollar grant--$7,060—is planned to be used for the proposed Chino Valley student club, the balance of the money devoted to creating new forestry programs and continue existing ones at PHS.
Edgmon expects to meet with officials of the Chino Valley School District between now and the end of the current school year to develop a reciprocal commitment, then when school starts in August begin recruitment of perhaps 12 core members for the new club.
“My guess is that we’ll have a larger number of club members at Chino Valley than we have here in Prescott,” Edgmon said. “It’s more outdoors oriented out there.”
First duty once the new club is formed will be for the youngsters to write their own by-laws and develop a constitution, much as was done when the PHS club was organized. Next will come a series of programs and projects to be created, both for the classroom and in the field.
Photo by Robert Winston
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PAWUIC volunteer Rod Edgmon has been the moving force to establish a Forestry Club at Prescott High School. Now he’s set his sights on a similar project in Chino Valley. |
Meanwhile, back at Prescott High School, Edgmon is seeking new work projects, designed to keep the seven core members active and to encourage additional members to join the club. Prior to Christmas, the young people gathered mistletoe in Prescott National Forest then sold it to help augment their club’s funds.
Money from the 2006 grant will be used for a whole variety of budgeted items at both schools, ranging from the purchase of forestry books, supplies, copying costs, teacher stipends on weekends and consultant fees to money for school buses to take students on field trips.
An exciting prospect in the coming week for the students, said Edgmon, will be the arrival of their new Forestry Club T-shirts, a uniform each of the young people will wear with pride.
At the same time that the Board of Supervisors voted the PAWUIC funding, they allocated $10,000 to the Arizona Wildfire Academy, $10,000 to the Highlands Center For Natural History and $20,000 to the UofA Cooperative Extension in Yavapai County. All three organizations fall to one degree or another under the PAWUIC inter-agency umbrella.
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News Advisory, Jan. 24, 2006—HIKERS AND MOTORISTS SHOULD BEWARE OF FALLING TREES—The story comes from Colorado where many killed trees from the massive 2002 Missionary Ridge Fire are still standing, but the message rings just as clearly here in the Prescott area where, in the same year, the Indian Fire seared forest landscapes southeast of the city.
The problem? Danger from falling trees.
Below is an excerpt from an article scribed by Chuck Slothower of the Durango Herald. His cautions should be heeded by everyone hiking Prescott National Forest in the Indian Fire area or driving forest roads in or near the burned trees that have not yet been logged out.
“The fire left many trees standing with weak root systems, according to Philip Kemp, a forester with Dolores Public Lands. Trees may look okay but have little holding them up.
“Ponderosa pine, a tree species particularly likely to fall this year and next, line heavily traveled roads in the fire area. Mike Johnson, a U.S. Forest Service forester, said that an unsuspecting driver could run into a fallen tree.
“ ‘Our concerns are particularly where the fire got close to the roads and common-use areas.’
“Research conducted by the U.S. Forest Service in the Northern Rockies found that ponderosa pines fall in increasing frequency four to five years after a forest fire. The annual fall rate for ponderosa pines rises 20% above normal four years after a fire and 53% five years after a fire.
“ ‘These trees that are fire-killed and don't have any needles are going to be falling over with a greater frequency,’ Johnson said.
“Foresters worry that because much of the fire damage has been fixed, people could falsely believe that the danger from falling trees has passed.
“ ‘The public, in general, could be lulled into believing that the dangers of the fire and post-fire era are diminishing,’ Supervisory Forester Steve Hartvigsen warned. ‘Yet the dangers of tree-fall are likely to continue for many years to come.’
“But local county government has received an opinion from Dan Ochocki of the Colorado Forest Service noting the difficulty of knowing which trees pose a danger and when and how they might fall, according to Commissioner Sheryl Ayers.
“ ‘We have not decided that there's any action on our part needed,’ Ayers said.
“ ‘Nevertheless, hikers, hunters and others who play in the forest should exercise caution in burned areas, Johnson said. ‘If it's a windy day, you may want to postpone your trip. Folks need to be careful.’”
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News Advisory, Jan. 23, 2006—STUDY STIRS UP A HORNET’S NEST—On Jan. 9, we reported a study conducted by researchers at Oregon State University concluding that salvage logging does more harm than good, and that left alone, a burned forest regenerates itself more quickly than when the Forest Service intervenes, logs out the dead trees and plants seedlings. (See story below headlined "Study Suggests Nature Is Best Healer....").
The study was submitted to the prestigious Science magazine and was accepted for publication.
Then last Saturday, we reprinted a quick riposte from the Corvallis (OR) Gazette-Times, offering evidence that the research was faulty and citing the example of Tillamook State Forest, which was beautifully restored by human hands--after nine years of devastating fires--through salvage logging and then by reforestation. (See story below, headlined "Which To Believe: Research Or On-The-Ground Reality?").
But as Paul Harvey might say, that’s not the end of the story. No, what followed turned a scholarly disagreement into a full-blown controversy.
Stung by the conclusions of the study, some of which contradicted recommendations by three Oregon State faculty members who have publicly favored salvage logging and reforestation, a group of nine OSU professors and the U.S. Forest Service rushed to contact Science magazine.
Delay publication of the study, they urged, until graduate student Daniel Donato, 29, and the other authors of the research paper address their criticisms. The professors said the researchers’ conclusions are premature and that the true test of efforts to restore forests will require decades.
As an alternative, they requested that their concerns be included in a letter accompanying publication of the study.
You can imagine how Science magazine reacted to that. Suddenly the issue of freedom of the press and First Amendment rights surfaced.
Rejecting both requests out of hand, Editor Donald Kennedy, who is the former president of Stanford, said those who dispute the findings can respond to the study once it is published instead of using what he termed prior “censorship.” The study was scheduled for Friday's edition of the journal.
The tale gets curiouser and curiouser.
First to spring to the defense of the researchers was Kathleen Dean Moore, a distinguished professor of philosophy at OSU who teaches environmental ethics. "One has to notice and acknowledge the courage of a graduate student to do research and publish findings that run against the norm," she said. "The university isn't about secrecy, it's about discussion."
There was no discussion from OSU President Ed Ray nor Provost Sabah Randhawa, both of whom declined to comment on the controversy swirling about them.
Although Science, as is its custom, had independent scientists review Donato's research before accepting his paper for publication, the group of protesting professors maintained that the journal's process of peer review had failed to detect flaws.
Not so, said Kennedy. "There was no failure of peer review in this case.” he said. "I'm sorry they don't like the outcome, but I think they have a misplaced case here."
OSU's College of Forestry, which receives about 10% of its funding from a tax on logging, remains divided. But bottom line: the research paper, its conclusions--right or wrong-- has found its way unimpeded into both Science magazine and its on-line internet edition.
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News Advisory, Jan. 22, 2006—HALF OF HEAVY TANKER FLEET NEVER COMING BACK, SAYS ROSE DAVIS—For those of our readers who do not subscribe to the Daily Courier, we’re reprinting in part a story penned by Courier Staff Writer Joanna Dodder last Thursday.
The article recounted the news that only 16 aircraft—half of the original fleet of 33 heavy airtankers once contracted by the U.S. Forest Service to fight wildland fires—will be available for duty in this and future years.
Here, excerpted, is Ms. Dodder’s story:
“Federal officials say Arizona will have the necessary aerial resources to help battle a potentially huge fire season, despite the loss of half of their heavy airtanker fleet. However, the number of available heavy airtankers probably won’t reach previous levels for a long time, if ever, says Rose Davis, a Forest Service spokesperson at the National Interagency Fire Center.
“The USFS probably won’t ever contract to use converted Douglas DC series commercial planes again, Davis said.
“The Forest Service expects to contract for 16 heavy airtankers this year. They are all P-3 and P2V retired military planes. It contracted to use 17 last year.
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Much missed are 17 of these gallant sky warriors, capable of dropping either fire retardant, foam or water on any wildfire that threatens a community. Pictured above is one of the 16 airtankers that are still flying. |
“While the agency returned those old military aircraft to duty after extensive safety evaluations, it probably never will use DC planes again because Boeing won’t give the government its old (maintenance) records, Davis said.
“Boeing contends the information won’t be useful because the firefighting use is different than past commercial use.
“Next year, the Forest Service plans to buy three more P-3s from the Navy when the aircraft are retired from use, Davis said.
“The Forest Service and U.S. Bureau of Land Management have been putting more aerial responsibility on much smaller single-engine airtankers and helicopters since 2004. The two agencies combined will have nearly 600 helicopters of various sizes available (for use this year), according to BLM spokesman Randy Eardley.”
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These little guys can do the job too. Still disputed is whether they can be as effective as the bigger heavy airtankers which can carry far more water or retardant. |
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Editorial, Jan. 21, 2006— WHICH TO BELIEVE: RESEARCH OR ON-THE-GROUND REALITY?—Readers of this website will recall that on January 9, we reported a study conducted by researchers at Oregon State University concluding that salvage logging does more harm than good, and that left alone, a burned area reforests itself more quickly. (See story below headlined "Study Suggests Nature Is Best Healer...)
Shortly thereafter, the Daily Courier reprinted a report from the World Wildlife Fund that found that the government lost millions by selling burned trees in the southwest Oregon area of the 2002 Biscuit fire.
Taken together, says a Jan. 16 editorial in the Corvallis (OR) Gazette-Times, the two reports suggest the forest and the taxpayers would be better off if burned-over forests were left alone. But that’s not at all the thrust of the editorial view. Quite the opposite. The text goes on in scathing terms as follows:
“If only the leaders of Oregon in the 1940s and ’50s had known that. They could have saved themselves the trouble of dealing with the series of four large fires, from 1933 to 1952, that later became known as the Tillamook Burn.
“The fires were followed by salvage logging and then by reforestation financed by a state bond issue. A quarter century later, in 1973, Governor McCall was able to sign a state law dedicating the burn area as the Tillamook State Forest.
“But he must have made a mistake. According to the latest research, the salvage operations should have ravaged the land. The expense of paying for reforestation should have been money down the drain. It could not have been likely, according to these report writers and researchers, for the Tillamook Burn to be restored to a verdant forest in such a short time with all the human intervention that was going on. The place should be a sorry excuse for a forest now.
“But it’s not.
“The Tillamook is such a beautiful and rich forest that for the last few years environmental interests have pushed for having parts of its set aside as nature reserves.
“What does this show? It shows that research is one thing, and the facts on the ground may be something else.
This should be no surprise to careful readers of the news.
“The OSU study did not consider the economics of salvage logging, according to the university’s own press release. The economic effect on local economies, though, is a big aspect of why its backers advocate salvage logging as soon as possible after a big fire. It can’t be ignored in any consideration of salvage logging.
“In summing up, OSU quoted the authors of the salvage study: ‘Post-fire logging may conflict with ecosystem recovery goals.’
“May. Or it may not. And if people get jobs out of harvesting a batch of fire-killed logs, some slight postponement of recovery might be tolerated.
“As for the alleged Forest Service losses, this sounds like an artifact of accounting. Sure, if you count most of the costs of a national forest operation against the salvage revenue, especially if the salvage is delayed two or three years, it sounds like a loss. But the foresters and other staffers working on the salvage plans are on the payroll anyway. And selling logs clearly yields revenue the government otherwise would not have.
“But we don’t have to speculate about these things. We can look at the evidence on the ground. In the Tillamook Forest, we can see that salvage logging and reforestation work very well.”
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News Advisory, Jan. 18, 2006— NEW WILDFIRE ACADEMY OFFICE CELEBRATES OPENING—Tuesday, January 17 was a cold day. A jovial crowd of about seventy Academy staff, dignitaries and invited guests converged on the new Arizona Wildfire Academy offices located at 543 W. Gurley Street, creating a warm atmosphere that belied the winter’s cold.
This was the day of the grand opening of the Academy’s offices complete with a ribbon cutting ceremony.
Photos by Robert Winston
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An exciting moment for the Arizona Wildfire Academy as a ribbon was cut to officially symbolize the Grand Opening of the AWA’s first office. For the previous three years, Coordinator Kori Kirkpatrick had to make do with only an office in her home. |
On hand were representatives from the Prescott Chamber of Commerce, Prescott Fire Department, Central Yavapai Fire District, Arizona State Lands Department, Arizona State Fire Marshal’s office, Yavapai County Emergency Management, PAWUIC members, and various other fire service personnel from as far away as Tucson to the south and the Flagstaff area to our north.
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Here’s Academy Commander and Summit (Flagstaff) Fire Chief Don Howard doing the honors as the Grand Opening ceremonies began.
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The offices had been painted, furnished and tastefully decorated by Academy Coordinator Kori Kirkpatrick, Judy Willis, and PAWUIC’s own Judy Mannen. The walls were adorned with pictures depicting wildland fires, past Academy staff members and firefighters in action. The hard work that transformed this once vacant office building into a comfortable place of business was most evident. Nice work, ladies!
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AWA Coordinator Kori Kirkpatrick is flanked by office staffers Judy Willis (left) and Judy Mannen. |
Brief comments were given during the opening ceremony by Kori Kirkpatrick and Fire Chief Don Howard who focused upon the achievements of the last three years that the Academy has been held at the Embry-Riddle Campus.
Both said that they are looking forward to another successful Academy. A highlight of the event was when PAWUIC Chairman Everett Warnock handed a check for $10,100 to Kori that will help fund this year’s Academy.
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Spontaneous applause rang out when PAWUIC Chairman Everett Warnock presented Kori Kirkpatrick with a $10,100 check from the Interface Commission to help fund the 2006 Wildfire Academy. |
News media reports of the grand opening of the offices and the brightly colored “Arizona Wildfire Academy” sign that graces the exterior of the offices brought in 75 new students in just one day. Predictions are that last year’s Academy attendance of 800 students will be surpassed this year. Not only will attendees learn important lessons, they will develop relationships that can last a lifetime.
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During an on-camera interview with Academy Coordinator Kirkpatrick, a Phoenix TV film crew flashes the news of the 2006 Arizona Wildfire Academy to viewers in the Valley area. |
Because this year’s fire season could be a difficult one, preparing Arizona firefighters to combat wildland and wildland/urban interface fires safely and effectively is the primary mission of the Academy. The new Academy offices will greatly enhance that mission and provide a professional work environment for its staff.
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News Advisory, Jan. 14, 2006—FOURTH ANNUAL AWA SEEKING STUDENTS—For the fourth consecutive year, the premier firefighting training program in the state of Arizona will be conducted in Prescott. This year’s class dates are from March 18-24, once again at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.....and sign-up time is upon us.
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Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, site of the 2006 Arizona Wildfire Academy |
Kori Kirkpatrick, coordinator of the Arizona Wildfire Academy, says that firefighters from across the state are invited to attend any one or more of 40 training classes in order to prepare for the 2006 fire season. The deadline for advance registration in academy classes—discounted by $10 per day--is Sunday, Jan. 15.
Most courses still have space available. Student tuition at the academy is $50 per day, which includes all course materials, breakfast, lunch and tent camping on site at Embry-Riddle. Hotel accommodations are available at additional cost.
“I believe that we’re offering some of the best training anywhere for the money,” said Don Howard, commander for the Academy. “The courses range from basic to advanced and are taught by people well respected in their fields. We’re proud of the training we provide and hope that as many men and women as possible take advantage of it.”
Photo by Robert Winston
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Summit (Flagstaff) Fire Chief Don Howard will serve once again as Incident Commander for this year’s Wildfire Academy. That makes him everybody’s #1 man. Here, he’s addressing the 2005 Academy at a morning briefing. |
For those unable to secure funding for the training, the academy is also offering scholarships to help offset costs. According to Howard, some rural fire departments might not be able to send students because they don’t have the financial resources to cover tuition. They should consider applying for scholarships, Howard said.
Academy students include firefighters in federal, state, local and volunteer departments from all over the state. Besides working to provide the skills and technical expertise required to meet the challenge that wildland fire poses, Academy organizers also hope to provide a forum where firefighters from diverse backgrounds can learn to work together to manage a common threat.
“Lack of rainfall means that the 2006 fire season is shaping up to be a long and intense one,” said Howard, who is also chief of the Summit Fire Department in Flagstaff. “Part of our goal at the Academy is to help prepare Arizona firefighters to safely and effectively accomplish the missions they perform.”
2006 training courses include Basic Firefighting and Wildland Fire Behavior, Map and Compass, Wildfire Power Saws, Fire Operations in the Urban Interface, Basic Air Operations, Fire Suppression Tactics, Tactical Decision Games/Sand Table Exercises, Incident Command, Type 3 Command & General Staff, and many others.
Photo: Arizona Wildfire Academy
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It’s one thing to learn in a classroom. It’s something else when you have a control a high-pressure water hose. Just hang on! |
The most recent additions to the Academy course curriculum are two fire investigation classes: Wildland Fire Cause Determination, and Wildland Fire Origin and Cause Determination.
Another course that has been added this year is Communications Technician. This class will use the National Interagency Fire Center Radio Cache and provide a hands-on learning experience in the development of a communications system, including repeaters.
To register for the academy, visit the Arizona Wildfire Academy web site at
az_wildfire_academy.org
or call (928) 442-3563. To apply for a scholarship, contact Don Howard by phone at (928) 606-2668 or by e-mail at dhoward@infomagic.net; or contact Jim Pond, deputy commander for the Academy by phone at (928) 606-3957 or by e-mail at jpond@highlandsfire.org.
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News Advisory, Jan. 9, 2006—STUDY SUGGESTS NATURE IS BEST HEALER AFTER FOREST FIRES—A new study done in the area burned during the catastrophic Biscuit Fire in Southwestern Oregon in 2002 found that allowing trees to naturally regenerate works about as well or better than logging and replanting, and that undisturbed areas may be at lower fire risk in the future.
The research will be published Friday in Sciencexpress, and later presented in the journal Science, by scientists from Oregon State University and the Institute of Pacific Islands Forestry in Hawaii. It provides some of the first actual data about forest regeneration in this vast, burned area.
Even following a high severity fire such as Biscuit, which covered more than 450,000 acres and was the largest in Oregon history, the natural conifer regeneration on study sites was about 300 seedlings per acre and 80% Douglas fir. However, logging reduced the regeneration by 71%, and would necessitate manual planting to restore seedling levels that otherwise would have occurred naturally.
In addition, the study suggested that logging, by itself, would actually increase the levels of material that could fuel another fire in the near future, because of waste wood left behind on the forest floor after trees are felled and processed. Other fuel reduction approaches besides logging would still be needed, the researchers said, with additional expense.
"Surprisingly, it appears that after even the most severe fires, the forest is naturally very resilient, more than it's often given credit for," said Dan Donato, a graduate student in the Department of Forest Science at OSU and lead author on the study.
"And if another of our goals is to reduce the risk of early re-burn, the best strategy may be to leave dead trees standing," he said. "In the absence of post-fire logging, we would expect the fuels to fall to the ground over some protracted period, as opposed to the single pulse of high fire risk we saw after logging alone."
This research was focused on regeneration potential after fire, effects of post-fire logging on regeneration and fire risks. It did not consider the economics of salvage logging.
It also did not address the long-term fate of conifer seedlings in competition with shrubs and hardwoods – although early initial regeneration is one key to winning that battle. Continued research to monitor seedling survival and forest recovery is necessary, the scientists said.
"What this study does make clear is that....strong numbers of seedlings regenerated naturally," said Beverly Law, an OSU associate professor of forest science. "And they have a good foothold. So far, so good. Only time will tell how the conifers will compete with shrubs in the long run."
One of the consequences of logging, the scientists said, is that the use of heavy equipment, log skidding, soil compaction and burial of seedlings by excess woody debris took a heavy toll on naturally regenerating seedlings, which in this case began taking root almost immediately after the fire.
When left to nature, the trees that did not die acted as a seed source for fairly wide areas around them, researchers say. And contrary to some assumptions, even severe forest fires rarely kill every tree – rather, they usually move through an area in a mosaic of burned trees and some stands left living.
Fire risk is a different issue, the report said.
"Logging has sometimes been cited as a way to reduce fuels that could feed future fires," said John Campbell, a faculty research associate in the Department of Forest Science. "But not everything leaves on the log truck. We found that the process of logging in this type of situation actually produces a large amount of fine fuels on the ground that, unless removed, could increase fire risk, not decrease it."
Mechanical fuel removal can work, the report said, but is often precluded by its expense. After logging, options are to leave the fuels and live with high fire risk, or to treat them, generally by prescribed burning, which can lead to additional impacts such as further soil damage and seedling mortality.
In this study, researchers used a comparison of logged and unlogged plots across the fire area, sampling them before and after logging activities. The study concluded that even if logged areas were replanted at prescribed levels, there would be no net gain over natural, early conifer establishment.
"Postfire logging may conflict with ecosystem recovery goals," the authors concluded.
MONITOR’S NOTE: While the Oregon study certainly merits both consideration and debate on how best to effect after-fire forest restoration, the researchers’ conclusions by no means obviate other factors that need to be built into the equation. Economics, for one, aesthetics for a second.
Human needs play a role here too. Clearing burned or beetle-killed trees and planting seedlings in their place produce jobs and sustenance for forest workers and their families. It produces simultaneous economic benefits for adjacent communities as well, as was the case with the forest restoration near Cathedral Pines after the 2002 Indian Fire.
Then, too, there’s the fact that residents living near burned areas have little affection for eyeing charred trunks and limbs standing stark against the sky for years, perhaps decades. Case in point, Yellowstone National Park, where ugly desolation remains to this day, 18 years after the 1988 conflagration that charred 793,000 acres.
All these factors--and more--come into play when it’s time to decide how to cope with a wounded forest, whether the damage is sustained from fire, disease or insect infestation. The debate is worthy of our attention and will surely persist long into the future.
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News Editorial, Jan. 10, 2006—JIM PETERSEN RETURNS TO THE STAGE—Yes, there’s heavy irony here. While PAWUIC, your Interface Commission, exerts its very best efforts to encourage sawmills and other wood products companies to locate here—thus finding uses for the logs emerging from thinning projects in Prescott National Forest—other mills in other western towns are still falling like tenpins.
The life and death of one such family operation is chronicled this week by a western writer and publisher who is doubtlessly familiar to many of the readers of this website. It’s James Petersen, founder of the non-profit Evergreen Foundation and publisher of Evergreen Magazine. We’ve reprinted his stuff often during the past three years.
Petersen is an incisive and clear-headed observer of the forest scene. We think you’ll enjoy reading his latest offering, which he calls “Death of a Sawmill.” Here, only slightly excerpted, is what he has to say:
“My friend Jim Hurst auctioned his sawmill last August.
“Jim's decision to pack it in after 25 years of beating his head on the wall made big news here in northwest Montana but, alas, not a peep from (our local) newspaper or the New York Times.
“That's too bad, because the loss of our family-owned mills also signals the loss of technologies and skills vital to our efforts to protect the West's great national forests from the ravages of increasingly fearsome wildfires.
“I was in Jim's office a few days before the auction. He told me he was at peace with his decision, but Jim has a good game face, so I suspect the decision to terminate his remaining 70 employees tore his guts out. They were like family to him.
“Jim's outfit was the economic backbone of tiny Eureka, Mont., a sawmill town since the early 1900s. I have a photo of my schoolteacher great-aunt standing on the front steps of the town's one-room schoolhouse in 1909. Although the town has grown some since then, its rural charm is still very much intact.
“Thanks to the nation's housing boom, business has been good for the West's sawmills for the past three years. But Jim faced an insurmountable problem: He couldn't buy enough logs to keep his mill running.
‘This despite the fact that 10 times as many trees as Jim's mill needed die annually on the nearby Kootenai National Forest. From his office window, Jim could see the dead and dying standing on hillsides just west of the mill. They might as well have been standing on the moon, given the senseless environmental litigation that has engulfed the West's federal forests.
‘Thanks to Jim's resourcefulness, his mill survived its last five years on a steady diet of fire- and bug-killed trees salvaged from Alberta (Canada) provincial forests. Such salvage work is unthinkable in our national forests, forests that--news reports to the contrary--remain under the thumb of radical environmental groups whose hatred for capitalism seems boundless.
“Americans are thus invited to believe that salvaging fire-killed timber is ‘like mugging a burn victim.’ Never mind that there is no peer-reviewed science that supports this ridiculous claim--or that many of the West's great forests are products of past salvage and reforestation projects.
“Jim shared his good fortune with his employees. Each received an average $30,000 in severance and profit sharing: a tip of the hat from him to a crew that set a production record the day after he told them he was throwing in the towel.
“Such is the professionalism--and talent--found among the West's mill workers. A few Oregon mills tried to recruit them, but most don't want to leave Eureka. I haven't the faintest idea how they'll make a living, but in the 40-odd years I've spent observing forests and people who live in them, I've learned never to underestimate the power of roots.
“Although he's still a young man filled with creative energy and enthusiasm, I suspect the government has seen the last of Jim Hurst.
“Three years ago, I called nearly 100 sawmill owners scattered across the West and asked them if they would invest $40 million in a new small-log sawmill on the government's promise of a timber supply sufficient to amortize the investment.
“The verdict was a unanimous ‘No.’
“The never-reported truth is that the family-owned sawmills that survived the decade-long collapse of the federal timber sale program no longer have much interest in doing business with a government they no longer trust.
“Most now get their timber from lands they've purchased in recent years, other private lands, tribal forests or state lands. Some even import logs from other countries, including Canada, New Zealand and Chile.
“You would think environmentalists who campaigned against harvesting in the West's national forests for 30-some years would be dancing in the streets. And, in fact, some of them are. But many aren't.
“Railing against giant faceless corporations is easy, but facing the news cameras after small family-owned mills fold has turned out to be very difficult. Everyone loves the underdog, and across much of the West there is a gnawing sense that environmentalists have hurt a lot of underdogs in their lust for power.
“Environmentalists also face a problem they never anticipated. Recent polling reveals some 80% of Americans approve of the kind of methodical thinning that would have produced small diameter logs in perpetuity for Jim's sawmill.
“We Americans seem to like thinning in overly dense forests because the end result is visually pleasing, and because it helps reduce the risk of horrific wildfire--a bonus for wildlife and millions of year-round recreation enthusiasts who worship clean air and water.
“Many Westerners wonder why the government isn't doing more thinning in at-risk forests that are at the epicenter of our New West lifestyle. I don't.
“Until the public takes back the enormous power it has given radical environmentalists and their lawyers, the Jim Hursts of the world will continue to exit the stage, taking their hard-earned capital, their well-developed global markets and their technological genius with them.
“Fifteen years ago, not long after the release of ‘Playing God in Yellowstone,’ his seminal work on environmentalism's philosophical underpinnings, I asked philosopher and environmentalist Alston Chase what he thought about this situation. I leave you to ponder his answer:
" ‘Environmentalism increasingly reflects urban perspectives. As people move to cities, they become infatuated with visions of land untouched by humans. This demographic shift is revealed through ongoing debates about endangered species, grazing, water rights, private property, mining and logging.
“ ‘And it is partly a healthy trend.
“ ‘But this urbanization of environmental values also signals the loss of a rural way of life and the disappearance of hands-on experience with nature. So the irony: As popular concern for preservation increases, public understanding about how to achieve it declines.’"
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News Advisory, Jan. 8, 2006—THE PROS & CONS OF SETTING A $100,000 BOND—Have you been following the recent saga of that federal judge who told environmentalist groups they’d have to cough up a $100,000 bond if they wanted to appeal his ruling favoring the Forest Service?
The story is detailed below, datelined Jan. 7 as well as an earlier article datelined Dec. 29.
Today we review both sides of the issue as published online by Imtribune staffer Eric Barker. Here’s Barker’s take on the controversy:
“The timber industry is hailing a federal judge's decision to require a coalition of environmental groups to risk losing money if their effort to stop a logging project in Montana is determined to be without merit.
“But environmental groups say the requirement sets a dangerous precedent by limiting judicial recourse to the wealthy.
“Last week Judge Donald Molloy said the environmental groups Alliance for the Wild Rockies, the Ecology Center and the Native Ecosystem Alliance must post a $100,000 bond if they want him to impose a restraining order on a logging project near Butte. The groups would forfeit the money if they lose the lawsuit and the litigation causes a delay that leads to a loss in the value of the timber.
“Those in the timber industry say requiring bonds on logging lawsuits would make environmental groups think before they sue.
“ ‘I think it's a great thing,’ said Dick Wilhite, resource manager of the Bennett Forest Industries mill at Elk City. ‘I think it would eliminate a lot of frivolous lawsuits."
“Tim Partin of the American Forest Resource Council at Portland said timber companies are required to post bonds when they bid on timber sales and when they log federal forests.
“ ‘If a group is trying to tie up a sale or stall it, I think it's only fair they have to put up a bond to do the same thing,’ he said. ‘In the past, the environmental groups have never had any downside risk.’
“Bonds are often required in civil cases where one party wants to stop the actions of another, according to Doug Honnold, an Earthjustice attorney at Bozeman, who is not involved in the case. But he said judges generally waive bonds in lawsuits when nonprofit environmental groups take on the federal government.
“ ‘You are not making any money in trying to get the federal government to follow the law,’ he said. ‘If you start attaching bonds--especially sizable bonds--that basically says the only way to get the government to follow the law is if you have the financial wherewithal to come foreword and pay money and risk losing that money.’
“The environmental groups in the case are making that argument. Michael Garrity of the Alliance for the Wild Rockies at Helena said, ‘We think all American citizens should be concerned. If we lose our appeal, it will mean citizens in general will have their First Amendment rights to petition the government affected. It's chipping away at the Bill of Rights.’
“If the judge feels the group's claims don't have merit, he could simply dismiss the case or deny the request for a restraining order, Garrity said.
“In this case, the government has proposed logging in an area where insects are killing trees. It argues a delay in the logging could cause the insects to spread and lead to a loss of timber value.
“According to the Missoulian newspaper, the Forest Service awarded a contract to a logging company. The groups sued to stop the project last summer. Molloy put a halt to the logging until the case was heard.
“Subsequently, he ruled in favor of the Forest Service, and the environmental groups appealed. Again they asked for Molloy to stop the logging until the case could be resolved. Again Molloy agreed. But this time the Forest Service asked him to require the bond.
“The environmental groups are appealing the bond requirement and the entire case is now before the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.”
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News Advisory, Jan. 7, 2006—JUDGE DID RIGHT: MISSOULIAN—Back on December 29, we reported to you that a federal judge, Donald Molloy, broke new legal ground by imposing a $100,000 bond requirement on three environmental groups who are suing to halt salvage logging of beetle-killed trees near Butte, Montana. (See article below, under OTHER RECENT STORIES.)
Timber companies cheered; environmentalists howled.
On the first day of 2006, the daily Missoulian, in a thoughtful editorial, stated the case in terms that strongly supported Judge Molloy’s bond ruling. Here’s how the paper views the situation:
“Among economists, there's a concept known as ‘willingness to pay.’ The general idea is that people say they want all sorts of things, but a truer measure of what they value is what they're willing to pay for and how much they're willing to pay.
“It's in that context that we find intriguing a federal judge's recent order requiring environmental groups to post a $100,000 bond to halt a logging project on a Montana national forest while they appeal a ruling permitting the logging.
“U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy of Missoula said The Native Ecosystems Council, Alliance for the Wild Rockies and The Ecology Center must post a $100,000 bond while the groups appeal an unfavorable ruling in their lawsuit to block the Basin Creek timber sale near Butte. The groups obtained a restraining order barring completion of the logging pending the outcome of their appeal.
“While we certainly don't think substantial bonds should be required in all cases in which people or groups challenge the actions of government agencies, some situations seem to warrant them. This is one.
“In disputes such as this one, there are two ways for logging opponents to win. One is on the merits of their case. The other is by playing out the clock.
“The timber in question involves trees killed by insects. standing trees have value for lumber, but their salvage value diminishes relatively quickly as the wood deteriorates. Those who oppose salvage logging projects can prevail in court if they can show the Forest Service erred in its planning, preparation or administration of the timber sale.
“But they also can win on the ground if their lawsuits and appeals can drag things out long enough for the timber to lose its value until no one wants to buy it.
“In this case, the Forest Service says the agency could lose up to $600,000 if logging is delayed a year--not unlikely given the pace at which federal courts work. And, for what it's worth, the timber already has been sold and belongs to R-Y Timber of Townsend. Its profits and its workers' paychecks are at stake, too.
“In October, Judge Molloy ruled against the environmental groups suing to block the Basin Creek logging. Molloy has never hesitated to smack down the Forest Service when the agency has erred, and, in fact, his rulings on past logging cases have made him a hero of sorts among environmentalists.
“In the matter of Basin Creek, however, Molloy concluded, ‘The Forest Service has demonstrated a threat to public health and safety due to increased potential for wildfire,’ and that the merits of the proposed logging outweigh the risks associated with doing nothing with all that timber.
“If Molloy has erred and misinterpreted the law or abused his judicial discretion, then his ruling will be overturned on appeal. In that case, the environmental groups would get their $100,000 back and, likely, have an opportunity to recover their legal expenses. If Molloy's ruling is solid, then they'd have to forfeit the $100,000.
“The groups undoubtedly say they're in the right. But what's their willingness to pay?
“Even with the bond requirement, this isn't a level playing field. The potential economic losses for the taxpayers and loggers is far greater than the $100,000 the environmental groups have at risk. Still, the bond requirement does encourage the litigants to weigh the merits of their case carefully and dampens somewhat the potential to prevail merely through the elapse of time.
“Obviously, the authority to require people and organizations to post bonds must be exercised using good judgment. A strict pay-to-play system could limit people's access to justice. But in this case, the environmental groups have had their day in court. They want another one. In a no-lose situation, why wouldn't they?
“Judge Molloy's bond requirement seems a reasonable condition for delaying logging of timber that retains value for only a limited time. Judges routinely make case-by-case decisions, and they're expected to use their discretion in the interest of justice.
“Requiring litigants to post reasonable bonds in cases where they're unlikely to prevail on the merits, where delay creates the potential for economic hardship on others, serves--not undermines--the cause of justice.”
MONITOR’S NOTE: If Judge Molloy’s ruling stands up on appeal, it could have a powerful influence on future Forest Service vs. environmentalists cases all over the west. Such a precedent might well slow--or even halt--the torrent of lawsuits that erupt whenever logging issues surface in U.S. national forests.
We saw the impact of such destructive delays here on the Prescott National Forest when a local environmental splinter group appealed a Forest Service restoration plan after the 2002 Indian Fire. Even with an accommodation eventually reached, most of the once-salvageable logs are now so deteriorated that they are valueless in the marketplace.
Tomorrow we’ll post some of the whirlwind of comments—pro and con—that resulted from the judge’s unusual decision. Tune in; it’s an intriguing argument no matter which side you’re on.
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Wintertime Advisory, Jan. 6, 2006—STAYING SAFE IN YOUR CAR IN WINTERTIME—Arizona's winter season often brings snow to the high country and can produce unexpected floods—remember last winter? Preparing your vehicle for the winter season and knowing how to react if stranded or lost on the road are the keys to survivable winter driving.
HERE’S A CHECKLIST OF WISE BEHAVIORS, MOST OF WHICH YOU ALREADY KNOW, BUT JUST IN CASE......
Before the winter season begins in earnest, have a mechanic check the following items on your vehicle:
battery, antifreeze, wipers, windshield washer fluid, ignition system, thermostat, lights, flashing hazard lights, exhaust system, heater, brakes, defroster and oil level.
Install good winter tires and make sure the tires have adequate tread. All-weather radials are usually adequate for most winter conditions. However, some jurisdictions require that vehicles be equipped with chains or snow tires with studs.
Keep a windshield scraper and a small broom in your car for ice and snow removal.
Maintain at least a half tank of gas during the winter season.
Plan long trips carefully.
Always travel during daylight, and if possible, take at least one other person.
Dress warmly. Wear layers of loose-fitting light-weight clothing.
Carry food and water.
Take your cell phone or a two-way radio. Keep the batteries charged.
Let someone know your destination, your route and your expected arrival time.
Call 5-1-1 or log onto az511.com for the latest road conditions around Arizona.
KEEP A WINTER DISASTER KIT IN YOUR CAR AT ALL TIMES. INCLUDE THESE ITEMS:
Flashlights with extra batteries
First aid kit with pocket knife
Necessary medications
Several blankets
Sleeping bags
Extra newspapers for insulation
Plastic bags for sanitation
Matches
Extra sets of mittens, socks and wool caps
Rain gear and extra clothes
Small sack of sand for generating traction under the wheels
Small shovel
Small tools (pliers, wrench and screwdriver)
Jumper cables
Set of tire chains or traction mats
Cards, games and puzzles
Brightly colored cloth to use as a flag
Non-perishable high-energy food/snacks
Non-electric can opener
Bottled water
TIPS TO REMEMBER IF YOU GET TRAPPED IN YOUR CAR DURING A SNOWSTORM
Stay in your car. Don’t leave to search for assistance unless help is visible within 100 yards. You could become disoriented and get lost in blowing and drifting snow.
Display a trouble sign. Hang that brightly colored cloth on the radio antenna and raise the hood.
Occasionally run the engine to keep warm. Turn on the engine for about 10 minutes each hour. Run the heater when the car is running and turn on the car's dome light.
Beware of carbon monoxide poisoning. Keep the exhaust pipe clear of snow and open a downwind window slightly for ventilation.
Watch for signs of frostbite and hypothermia.
Avoid dehydration. Have a supply of bottled water in the car.
Do minor exercises to keep up your circulation. Clap your hands and move your arms and legs occasionally.
Try not to stay in one position for too long. If more than one person is in the car, take turns sleeping.
Huddle together for warmth. Use newspapers, maps and even the removable car mats for added insulation.
Avoid overexertion. Cold weather puts an added strain on the heart. Unaccustomed exercise such as shoveling snow or pushing a car can bring on a heart attack or make other medical conditions worse.
MONITOR’S NOTE: Hey, you never know what life’s going to send your way. Better be ready.
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Personality Profile, Jan. 5, 2006—MEET PAWUIC’S NEW TREASURER FOR 2006—Elected treasurer at the December meeting of the Prescott Area Wildland/Urban Interface Commission, Wayne Hultberg represents Prescott’s Forest Trails subdivision
[map] where he and wife Margie built their home in 2001.
Hultberg, a strong advocate of creating defensive space in his neighborhood, has been an active volunteer as Chairman of the Forest Trails Firewise team and equally involved as a Prescott National Forest Trails volunteer.
| Newly elected PAWUIC Treasurer Wayne Hultberg |
"Margie and I came to Prescott from Mansfield, Massachusetts," Hultberg said. "We’ve been married for 47 years (longevity occasionally tested) and have two children and four grandchildren that we spoil rotten every chance we get."
Before his retirement in 1999, Hultberg’s professional career included his role as Packaging Engineering Consultant and Laboratory Manager for the Medical Packaging Group of Kendall Health Care Co., now called Tyco Healthcare.
Before that, he was president of Hultberg and Associates, a design and development consulting firm specializing in medical device packaging. During this period, he was past Chairmen of the Packaging Institute in Chicago and served on various professional groups and committees dealing with his area of expertise.
Hultberg received his BA from Beloit College in Beloit, Wisconsin, followed by graduate work in industrial design at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago.
Among his current interests and hobbies are Civil War history, photography "and a lot of tennis....or as much as the old bones will tolerate."
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Personality Profile, Jan. 3, 2006—MEET PAWUIC’S NEW 2006 CHAIRMAN—It took a bit of encouragement and persuasion but by PAWUIC’s election day on December 1, Everett Warnock, 69, agreed to allow his name in nomination as the Interface Commission’s 2006 Chairman.
Elected unanimously, he ran unopposed.
Warnock’s responsibility which begins today is not a small job, both shepherding a corps of highly knowledgeable volunteers and helping to coordinate the work of a half-dozen or so governmental and quasi-governmental agencies.
Photo by Robert Winston
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After three years of representing Hidden Valley Ranch as a volunteer for PAWUIC, Everett Warnock takes up his new position as Commission Chairman beginning today |
The demanding post—as outgoing Chairman Ken Iversen can testify--entails implementation of the Yavapai Communities Wildfire Protection Plan, developing industrial uses for biomass coming out of Prescott National Forest and running an ongoing education process about defensible space issues vital to Prescott Basin residents.
“My involvement with PAWUIC began three years ago as the representative for the Hidden Valley Homeowners Association” Warnock said, “and has continued as a volunteer for PAWUIC. Last year I took on the challenge of researching and writing a history of PAWUIC that will soon be posted on www.pawuic.org.
Asked his vision for the Commission’s future, Warnock replied that “the challenges this year and for years to come is helping to educate the public about the realities of living in our wildland/urban interface and finding economical uses for all of the biomass material being generated.
“Viable economic uses would contribute to our overall economy,” he added, “and reduce the need for burning so much of this material.”
Achieving such a goal would go a long way towards reducing the smoke level from prescribed burns, an unwelcome by-product of protecting the community from catastrophic wildfire.
Looking back on his early years, Warnock explained that after graduation from Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo, California, with an engineering degree, he and his family spent the next 30 years in Wisconsin, New York and Michigan where he was involved in the management of several different manufacturing companies.
Along the way, he earned a Masters in Management from Aquinas College in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
“My wife Lenora and I moved to Prescott in 1988 when we bought a cabinet business that I managed while Lenora taught at Yavapai College. We had both grown up in Arizona so this really brought us home again. Ten years later, we both retired.
“Our family consists of a son, Christopher, daughter Nancy, and two grandchildren, Amanda and John.”
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