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By Jake Kreilick
National Forest Protection Alliance
Even since I started planting trees on the Kootenai National Forest, I've had
a keen interest in forest restoration. From 1988-92, I planted thousands of trees
across dozens of clearcuts. The days were long and the work was exhausting but
I valued the experience gained, not to mention the money earned. In the end,
these experiences would shape my career path and influence my view of restoration.
When I started planting trees, I believed I was aiding forest recovery. However,
within a few seasons I felt like an unwilling accomplice to the wholesale liquidation
of massive, ancient forests and colossal roadbuilding projects that were so en
vogue under the forest policies of the Reagan and first Bush administrations.
Essentially, we were replacing the rich biological diversity of this mixed conifer,
cool temperate forest with an even-aged tree farm composed of the most commercially
valuable species. What's worse, we were making the forest more vulnerable to
natural disturbances like insect infestations and fires.
This revelation forced me to conclude that tree planting on national forests
was not being done for restoration purposes nor to improve forest health, but
rather to perpetuate an ecologically destructive, money-losing federal logging
program. Granted, this program allowed mills like Owens & Hurst in Eureka,
who recently announced they are closing, to flourish for nearly 25 years before
a combination of market forces, corporate greed and environmental concerns changed
the timber industry landscape in our region.
My tree planting years fostered a deeper understanding about the many impacts
logging has had on our national forests. Despite the fact that the overall cut
on national forests has declined from a high of 12.6 billion board feet in 1989
to around 2 billion board feet, the logging legacy lives on in many forms.
Consider the following:
- There are 445,000 miles of roads on national forests - enough to circle the
Earth 18 times - and the Forest Service faces a $10 billion road maintenance
backlog.
- An estimated 50 percent of riparian areas on national forests require restoration
due to impacts from logging, roadbuilding, grazing, mining and off-road vehicles.
- Less than 5 percent of America's ancient, old-growth forests remain.
- 421 wildlife species that call national forests home are in need of protective
measures provided by the Endangered Species Act.
Clearly, America's national forests, rivers and wildlife deserve better and
would benefit greatly from an ecologically-based restoration program, to say
nothing
of the tremendous social and economic benefits restoration activities would bring
to our local workforce.
Since 2005 marks the Forest Service's centennial, we believe there is a golden
opportunity to make the focus of the next 100 years of Forest Service management
the "Restoration Century."
To this end, the National Forest Protection Alliance and our member groups have
been involved with a three-year bridge-building effort between community forestry
advocates and restoration workers. The goal has focused on developing agreement
on an ecologically based framework for restoring our nation's forests that's
not only good for the land, but also good for communities and workers. While
it has not always been an easy process, it has resulted in us finding a surprising
amount of common ground.
One of the results of this process has been the development of a set of Restoration
Principles (www.asje.org/resprinc.pdf) as a national policy statement to guide
sound ecological restoration. The Principles are an essential tool for stakeholders
and decision-makers at all levels to develop, evaluate, critique, improve, support
or reject proposed restoration projects.
Here in western Montana, NFPA, Native Forest Network, Wildlands CPR and other
environmental groups have used the Restoration Principles to work in a more collaborative
fashion with the Lolo National Forest. Following a series of field trips and
meetings, we believe the Lolo staff is gaining a better understanding of our
restoration approach and they are exploring some of our restoration ideas and
proposals.
For example, we have taken numerous trips with the Forest Service, restoration
workers and a Pyramid Mountain Lumber representative to the proposed Monture
Creek Fuels Reduction project north of Ovando. While we remain concerned that
this project removes too many trees and that mechanical harvesters will damage
sensitive soils, the district ranger has agreed to let us put the Restoration
Principles to work on a portion of this project.
This spring, together with Wildland Conservation Services - a local restoration
company that has received a service contract from the Forest Service - we will
demonstrate the viability of forest restoration approaches that will enhance
ecological integrity, protect soils and reduce fuels while putting money in the
pockets of some local workers.
Another exciting restoration opportunity looming on the horizon is a water quality
restoration plan for Upper Lolo Creek. While the Forest Service's assessment
for Upper Lolo Creek is nearly complete they lack funding to complete the needed
road and watershed restoration work to improve water quality and fish habitat.
We feel this is a perfect opportunity to collaborate locally with the recently
formed Lolo Watershed Group, community leaders and restoration workers to ask
Montana's congressional delegation to find money for this project.
We know that moving forward with a comprehensive restoration program for America's
national forests is going to take time and it isn't always going to be easy.
However, the National Forest Protection Alliance and our 130 member groups across
the country are committed to making the "Restoration Century" a reality.
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