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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
COIC
examines Cache Mountain Fire
On July 23 lightning
struck a remote area on Cache Mountain, and local forest and fire officials
knew within minutes that they had a serious problem on their hands.
What they didn't expect was
how difficult it would be to convey the sense of urgency to agencies outside
the local area.
Last week, the Central Oregon
Intergovernmental Council (COIC) conducted a public debriefing on the
Cache Mountain Fire.
Scott Aycock, Program Coordinator
for COIC, put together a tour to examine the fire, which turned into an
open forum.
The approximately 70 participants
included representatives of public agencies, private industry, the media,
concerned organizations and interested members of the general public.
Tom Fitzpatrick, Assistant
Fire Management Officer for the Forest Service in the Sisters area, personally
witnessed the lightning strike that ignited the blaze.
Gesturing toward Cache Mountain
in the background, Fitzpatrick said, "There were six ignitions that evening,
and this is the only one that got away from us. I saw it strike, and almost
immediately a column of smoke appeared."
Fitzpatrick said that, although
the storm had a lot of moisture, it didn't rain over Cache Mountain.
"It was the one thing I've
feared," he said, "a fire on the back side of Cache Mountain."
He explained that the remote
and roadless area contained extremely dense concentrations of dead timber
left over from a spruce budworm infestation several years ago.
A Black Butte Ranch resident,
who declined to give his name, asked Fitzpatrick if the severity and spread
of the fire were worsened by environmentalist appeals that delayed forest
thinning in the area. Fitzpatrick responded that, "had the fuels been
treated, we would have had a much better chance of stopping the fire."
Forest Service District Ranger
Bill Anthony said, "there's no doubt about it that the appeals slowed
us down."
He also observed, however,
that the approval and implementation process for such a fuels treatment
project takes more than two years.
As a result, he conceded,
the thinning in question would probably have been only partially completed
by the time of the fire.
A number of firefighters who
were present expressed frustration at the low priority initially assigned
to the fire. Officials indicated that the fire was first ranked 14th in
priority for the region.
It was not until the fire
had raged for a week -- and homes were lost at Black Butte Ranch -- that
the fire was moved to the top of the list.
Because of the low priority
and resource demands caused by other fires, only a handful of local firefighters
were available to fight the blaze. More than 1,000 were eventually needed
to bring it under control.
When the tour moved on to
a portion of the actual burn, discussion shifted to thinning techniques,
salvage and reforestation.
Weyerhaeuser representative
Tucker Williamson said that the company had about 3,200 acres of timber
in the path of the fire and about 1,100 burned.
He said that, due to the company's
forest thinning and management strategies, however, only about 5 percent
of the timber was lost.
One of the participants asked
how long it would take for Weyerhaeuser to begin timber salvage on their
affected land. Williamson said that logs were already being removed as
he spoke.
On Forest Service lands, however,
the issue of salvage is more involved.
"We're looking at those options
now," Anthony said. "Probably the earliest that salvage operations could
begin is next summer."
He explained that environmental
documentation, issues decisions, and time for appeals would have to be
part of the process.
Anthony said that approval
already exists for some thinning operations immediately adjacent to Black
Butte Ranch. As a result, he was optimistic that some rehabilitation could
begin soon if funding becomes available.
"Regarding the area right
along the west side of Black Butte Ranch, we could do some cleanup of
burned trees under nine inches (in diameter) without additional analysis,"
he said.
"We would probably try to
get that done before next summer."
Several participants complained
that forest management practices should be entrusted to forest managers
rather than to courts, committees, and special interest groups.
Carl Yee, Emeritus Professor
of Forestry at Humboldt State University, said, "A lot of this concern
over salvage is overblown. It's better to just salvage it now and get
it out of here before this happens again."
Yee's concern for the future
of Oregon's timber industry is reflected in some statistics on the dwindling
timber harvest.
He said that last year's Oregon
Department of Forestry figures reported that only 173 million board feet
of timber were harvested from federal lands in Oregon.
"That's not enough to sustain
even one medium-sized mill," he said. "Fifty years from now there won't
be any mills left to handle the forest that's growing today." |
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