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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. |
Conservationists
offer vision for safer forests CAMP SHERMAN,
Ore. (AP) -- Against the spectacular backdrop of the head waters of the
Metolius River, a busload of people listened raptly as Scott Aycock talked
about making flooring out of skinny little pine saplings.
Why would anyone be listening
when there was so much beautiful scenery to gawk at? Because Aycock was
describing one local vision of a brave new world of wood products manufacturing
based on making the forests of the West safer from wildfire.
His presentation was part
of a collaboration between The Nature Conservancy, the U.S. Forest Service
and the U.S. Department of Interior called the North American Fire Learning
Network. It brings together scientists, public lands managers, community
groups and other interests to share success stories on their new relationship
with wildfire.
The two-year, $2 million program
has tapped 150 people for a series of four weeklong workshops around the
country focusing on 25 different ecosystems and elements of the National
Fire Plan, a $2.2 billion national strategy for dealing with wildfire.
"What is driving a lot of
this is the fact that this National Fire Plan is such a huge undertaking,"
said Art DuFault, fire and fuels liaison for the director of BLM. "We
need to have collaborative support and interaction with a whole range
of players to have this thing make sense."
Such close collaboration between
federal agencies and a conservation group is unusual, especially at a
time when the Bush administration has faced off against so many of them
over issues such as oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge,
logging on national forests, and industrial pollution.
But the Nature Conservancy
is different. Rather than trying to influence legislation or public policy,
it buys and manages land to protect it as fish and wildlife habitat.
"My experience working in
Utah and Nevada is that the communities are very anxious and very receptive
to moving ahead," DuFault said. "They just need a little direction. This
blueprint coming out of the Nature Conservancy is a good one to follow."
Around the nation, wildfires
this year burned 6.7 million acres and $1.4 billion was spent putting
them out, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.
"With the attention paid very
recently because of huge conflagrations, not only this last year, but
also in 2000, we finally have an opportunity with the general public to
get in and create some community-driven efforts," said DuFault.
One community that took a
leap forward is Camp Sherman, a vacation and retirement settlement along
the Metolius River where the organization Friends of the Metolius created
a demonstration of what various approaches to thinning forests would look
like on the ground.
"If you came to the Metolius
to play, you had to run into it," said Gregory R. McClarren of the Friends
of the Metolius.
The Heritage Forest Demonstration
Project includes 11 different plots, culminating in a demonstration of
what a ponderosa pine forest looked like at the turn of the century, before
the Forest Service began putting out all the fires.
"People say, 'What's commercial
thinning,' and we can say, 'It's this one here,"' McClarren said.
Aycock said it is easy to
build community consensus over where to do thinning: the WUI -- pronounced
WOO'-ey, for Wildland-Urban Interface, where the vacation homes meet the
forest. The hard part is finding agreement over what kind of thinning
the Forest Service and BLM should do.
That problem with public trust
grew out of the fast-paced logging of the 1970s and 1980s, which led to
the spotted owl lawsuits of the 1990s and the current battle over President
Bush's Healthy Forests Initiative, which would ease environmental regulation
to speed logging to thin overstocked forests, even in remote areas far
from homes.
"A lot of it is based on gaining
a common understanding of what kind of forest you want, and what is an
acceptable way to do that," said Kris Martinson, environmental coordinator
for the Sisters Ranger District of the Deschutes National Forest. "People
are very, very alarmed about logging because of what happened on the national
forests in the 1970s and 1980s."
The difficulty is compounded
by direction from the top changing with each new occupant of the White
House, she added.
"We look forward to a 180-degree
switch every four years," she said. "That is part of the difficulty and
that is part of the public trust.
"That makes it difficult regaining
the public trust when the administration proposes things that alarm people."
The approach to thinning needs
to be different for each landscape, said Merrill Kaufmann, a Forest Service
research ecologist.
For example, mature ponderosa
pine, with its thick bark and high crowns, is adapted to survive low-intensity
fires that clear out brush and saplings.
Lodgepole pines have cones
that release their seeds after being heated, so that new forests sprout
from the ashes of the old ones.
Other ecosystems, such as
subalpine forests, have little relationship to fire. |
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