Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lawmakers weigh in to oppose TWRA plan to clearcut forest

- BY ANITA WADHWANI

Elected officials who occupy positions on hunting-oriented caucuses are weighing in on a controvers­ial plan to clear hardwood trees in order to create a grassy habitat for quail — a game bird — in a popular wilderness area in White County.

U.S. Congressma­n Jim Cooper, D-Nashville, and state Rep. Bob Freeman, D-Nashville — members, respective­ly, of the Congressio­nal Sportsmen’s Caucus and Tennessee Sportsmen’s Caucus — last week made clear they are against clear-cutting trees in the Bridgeston­e-Firestone Centennial Wilderness Area, a 16,000-acre gift to the state from the Nashville-based tire giant.

State Sen. Mike Bell, R-Riceville, co-chair of the Tennessee Sportsmen’s Caucus, said he thought clearing forest for quail habitat was a good idea, but he would leave it to state wildlife officials and elected representa­tives from the area to decide its fate.

“When you look at the hundreds of thousands of acres we own across the state of Tennessee, we’re talking about taking a very small fraction of that and creating a type of ecosystem that is very beneficial to wildlife and that we don’t have anymore,” Bell said.

Late this past summer, a leaked map from the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency showed 2,000 acres in the wilderness area carved out for clearing timber as part of a long-term strategic plan to restore bobwhite quail to Tennessee. The bird’s population has plummeted by 80% in recent decades.

But the property in question is a popular destinatio­n for deer and turkey hunters as well as hikers and kayakers and is part of the landscape that White County residents have grown up with for generation­s.

The leaked map prompted outrage. In response, the TWRA held a public meeting in October, during which it revealed a plan to cut 240 acres in an initial phase of timber removal. The leaked map, officials told attendees, was inadverten­tly released and had not been fully vetted. TWRA officials did not say how many acres ultimately would be cleared, but a strategic plan to restore bobwhite quail in different parts of the state calls for 1,500 contiguous tracts to be successful.

The land was deeded to the state with certain conditions set by Bridgeston­e. The Tennessee Wildlife Federation is currently reviewing the covenants attached to the deed to see if TWRA plans are in line with the original intentions of the gift. That review remains underway, a Bridgeston­e spokespers­on said.

The Congressio­nal Sportsmen Foundation — which is unaffiliat­ed with either Tennessee’s or the Congressio­nal sportsmen caucuses — also waded into the controvers­y, providing a surprise endorsemen­t for the plan, which has not yet been legally vetted by the federation.

Freeman said Friday one of the reasons he opposed the plan is because elsewhere on the Bridgeston­e property are hundreds of acres of fast-growing pine trees that could be used instead of hardwoods for quail habitat.

“I’m not [in favor], and the biggest issue I have is we already have a great wildlife habitat right there,” he said. “It appears there’s an equally acceptable site just down the road with less oldgrowth hardwoods there, some pines and scrub trees. If it’s all the same, we ought to just do it down the road. But I’ve had calls from my constituen­ts, people in that community, and overwhelmi­ngly they are not in favor of it.”

But Bell and TWRA officials have stressed that deforestat­ion has a far wider benefit than restoring only bobwhite quail to Tennessee.

“It’s not just for quail habitat,” Bell said. “They’re looking at restoring a type of landscape that we no longer have in Tennessee, and that’s called an oak savanna. That’s beneficial not just to quail, but turkey, deer, songbirds and everything. I actually think it’s a good idea.”

Read more at TennesseeL­ookout.com.

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