![]()
|
|||||||||
|
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. |
FS
brings citizens into forest planning As the result
of a 1999 congressional mandate, the Forest Service was granted a new tool
in forest management -- common sense -- and it's being used in the Metolius
region.
Under a stewardship program
called "multi-party monitoring," diverse interests are sitting down at
the same table and walking the woods together in an effort to achieve
the best possible results for forest management.
In implementing this program
for the Sisters area, the Forest Service has brought together a team with
membership that ranges from Sierra Club activists to commercial loggers.
Last week, the team held what
it termed a "contracting primer" session and field trip to explore some
of the options that are available in implementing the new forest plan
for the Metolius Region, which is set forth in a draft Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS) released last month.
One of the key features of
the EIS is a plan to thin concentrations of young trees that are a detriment
to long-term forest health.
The single biggest hurdle
to achieving the plan's goals is, of course, the cost; and that's part
of what the monitoring team hopes to tackle.
Marcus Kauffman, of the Watershed
Research and Training Center in Eugene, explained that sales contracts
are awarded to the highest bidder and service contracts are awarded to
the lowest bidder.
Traditionally, contracts for
"services" such as thinning and contracts for "sales" of trees have been
as different as apples and oranges. Cindy Glick, Assistant Forest Service
Silviculturist and a driving force behind the local stewardship program,
senses a change.
"It's not apples and oranges,
anymore," she said. "It's all just fruit."
It's now possible to blend
the two contracts together into what Kauffman termed "hybrid" contracts.
According to Kauffman, "This
allows for the job to go to the best contractor, not necessarily the one
who puts up the most money."
This process, which may involve
"less than free and open competition," permits the Forest Service to enter
into agreements that make good sense for the goals of a particular project.
Kauffman explained that "best
value contracting" is now the rule for a multi-party monitoring pilot
project such as that envisioned for the Metolius.
Criteria for awarding a contract
under this policy may include price, past performance and technical capability
of the contractor, local economic effects, and optimal product utilization.
The bottom line is that the Forest Service has more control over contractor
selection and can use its experience and insight to make the most sensible
choice.
"We're just really delighted
that we have the opportunity to use these new contracting methods," said
Glick. "We have a lot of small trees with minimal commercial value, and
it gives us a chance to get these removed from the forest and into different
markets such as firewood, hog fuel, posts, rails and small timber."
The Forest Service likes the
plan because it improves forest health in a cost efficient manner that
produces other benefits as well.
"When we remove this material
from the site, it reduces the wildfire potential and reduces smoke in
the area because we don't have to burn it," Glick said.
Another benefit to the new
contracting method is that it's not necessary to cover everything in a
single all-encompassing contract.
Vickie Dunaway, Timber Sale
Administrator for the Forest Service, recommends multiple contracts for
a big project like the Metolius so that it can be completed more efficiently
in what she termed "little bites."
Sisters District Ranger Bill
Anthony, who also attended the meeting was among those welcoming the stewardship
pilot project and its more flexible guidelines.
"We've added these tools in
our stewardship role," he said. "When we implement this project we will
consider all these tools plus traditional tools.
"It will be my goal to implement
this project as quickly as we can," Anthony said.
The project is slated to get
underway later this year, and a public meeting to discuss the Metolius
project is scheduled for Saturday, January 18, from 9 to11 a.m. at the
Camp Sherman Community Hall.
Information is available at
the local Forest Service office.
|
|
|||||||