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Title: Logging the Sequoias


ErinB - March 12, 2005 04:40 AM (GMT)
Can it get any worse?

http://www.sierraclub.org/ca/sequoia/

Sierra Club
Sequoia Task Force
Sierra Club Challenges Plan to Log
Giant Sequoia National Monument

Conservation Groups Point to Neighboring National Park for Better Way to Manage National Treasure

News Flash: 3/3/05 - California Attorney General Bill Lockyer today filed a lawsuit to block the Bush Administration’s plan to permit commercial logging in the Giant Sequoia National Monument. “The giant sequoias are more than part of the California landscape,” said Lockyer. “They are part of us. They stand as majestic guideposts to our history and treasured symbols of our state. Now, the Bush Administration, continuing to supplicate itself to the timber industry, wants to turn John Muir’s ‘big trees’ into dead wood. We have too much at stake to let them succeed.” Read full text press release (PDF).
Download 17 page Legal Complaint filed in court (PDF) (116 kb)

Sierra Club Press Release: January 27, 2005

The Sierra Club is leading five other conservation organizations to challenge the Bush administration's decision to log Giant Sequoia National Monument in federal court. The groups also encouraged the administration and the court to look to neighboring Sequoia National Park for a better way to manage the rare forest.

The Sierra Club, Sierra Nevada Forest Protection Campaign, Earth Island Institute, Tule River Conservancy, Sequoia Forest Keeper, and Center for Biological Diversity jointly filed the complaint in San Francisco Federal District Court.

"These magnificent giant Sequoia forests are found nowhere else on earth," explained Bruce Hamilton, Sierra Club Conservation Director. "It makes no sense for the Bush administration to sacrifice such a spectacular national treasure. It also happens to be illegal."

Giant Sequoia National Monument boasts two-thirds of all the Sequoia redwoods in the world, with most of the remainder found in the adjacent National Park. The popularity and awe-inspiring beauty of the Sequoia forest and its wildlife led President Bill Clinton permanently protect the forest as a National Monument under the Antiquities Act. Earlier, President George Bush Sr. had proclaimed the Sequoia groves off limits to commercial logging.

Earlier this month, the Bush administration officially reversed those policies by finalizing plans to allow what amounts to commercial logging in the Monument, including the prized Giant Sequoia groves. The administration's plan would allow 7.5 million board feet of timber to be removed annually from the Monument, enough to fill 1,500 logging trucks each year. This policy would include logging of healthy trees of any species as big as 30 inches in diameter or more. Trees that size can be as much as 200 years old.

"This plan opens up huge areas to logging and specifically targets trees big enough to sell, undermining the whole purpose of the Monument. The Bush administration is shirking its responsibility to current and future generations to take care of this ancient and treasured forest," added Carla Cloer, representing the Tule River Conservancy.

As a model for better management, the Sierra Club and others are asking the Bush administration to look to nearby Sequoia National Park, where innovative conservation and fire prevention strategies have reinvigorated the Sequoia groves and made nearby communities safer. "In stark contrast to the very successful management techniques used for decades by the National Park Service in the Sequoia National Park," reads the complaint, "[the Bush administration] approved a Giant Sequoia National Monument Management Plan... that would permit extensive logging and cause the degradation of old forest habitat and irreparable harm to the Monument’s wildlife, directly conflicting with the purposes of the Sequoia Monument."

"The plan proposed by the Forest Service reverts back to an outdated strategy that ignores the clear recommendations of fire scientists on the Monument Science Advisory Committee, that fire risk reduction is not about logging large trees," stated Craig Thomas, Director of the Sierra Nevada Forest Protection Campaign.

To view maps of the areas within the Monument where logging will be permitted, go to: http://www.sierraclub.org/wildlands/sequoiaplan

What You Can Do

Sign our Sequoia Petition
“We the undersigned want an immediate end to US Forest Service plans for commercial logging in the Giant Sequoia National Monument.”


earthmother - March 13, 2005 01:28 AM (GMT)
The only sequoias that should be logged are the behemoth Toyota Sequoias that get 15 mph. :rolleyes:

ErinB - March 13, 2005 02:55 AM (GMT)
I've never heard of that kind of Sequoia but it will be extinct if gas prices keep on going sky high.

The general public is not aware of plans to log this forest. Wonder what the admin wants to do next, blast mine the Grand Canyon? Build a big factory at Yellowstone?

earthmother - March 13, 2005 04:15 AM (GMT)
I was parked nose to nose with a Toyota Sequoia in a parking lot a while back. Now, mind you, I have a minivan--you know, the quintessential family car, for the kids, and the dog, and all our stuff. So I'm not driving around in some little subcompact, not that minivans are huge, but you get what I'm saying. This Sequoia dwarfed my minivan. I mean I felt like I was nose to nose with one of those big-wheel monster trucks. I couldn't believe how massive it looked compared to my car. Actually, I was surprised when I looked it up to learn that it even got 15 mpg. I figured it was more like gallons to the mile. :rolleyes:

ErinB - March 13, 2005 07:11 AM (GMT)
There is a diary over at DailyKos on this very subject..uh hmmm..and it made the "recommended list" this evening. :D

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2005/3/12/222035/780




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