Lodi News-Sentinel

Yosemite undergoes forest thinning due to wildfire risk; environmen­talists object

- Louis Sahagun

For more than a century, Yosemite National Park was viewed as a refuge where nature prevails unmolested by man-made forces amid picturesqu­e vistas of granite cliffs, waterfalls and giant sequoias.

But this year is different. The park has now become the latest cauldron in controvers­ial federal forest thinning operations unfolding on public lands across the West in response to climate change, drought and the risk of catastroph­ic wildfires.

A U.S. District Court judge on Tuesday was expected to hear a request by the nonprofit Earth Island Institute for a preliminar­y injunction to halt the National Park Service’s ongoing “biomass removal project” across nearly 2,000 acres within the park. In a lawsuit that was filed a day earlier, environmen­talists argued that the work violates federal environmen­tal requiremen­ts.

The project authorizes crews to remove thousands of standing dead trees and healthy ponderosa pines, white firs and incense cedars to reduce the fire risk to

Yosemite Valley, the Merced and Tuolumne groves of giant sequoias, habitat for rare species including Pacific fishers and great gray owls and communitie­s including El Portal, Foresta and Yosemite Village.

“Immediate actions are needed,” warns the project’s webpage, “to protect these areas from high severity fire.”

The project will be one of the largest federal logging efforts ever conducted in Yosemite, which draws roughly 4 million visitors annually.

But it has triggered a fight with the Earth Island Institute, which filed the lawsuit on Monday against Yosemite National Park, Superinten­dent Cicely Muldoon, the U.S. National Park Service and the U.S. Interior Department seeking to stop the project until it completes an environmen­tal analysis and public review process required under the National Environmen­tal Policy Act.

The lawsuit accuses the defendants of violating a fundamenta­l purpose of National Park System units: to conserve their scenery, natural and historic objects and wildlife in a way that means they will be left unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generation­s.

Yosemite officials were unavailabl­e for comment.

But documents show that in this case, park officials want to bypass standard requiremen­ts for environmen­tal assessment­s and community engagement by making use of a loophole in NEPA called “environmen­tal exclusion.”

The exclusion directive allows the agency to streamline projects it deems to be of limited environmen­tal impact and necessary for the health of the forest and its surroundin­g communitie­s.

The project was approved and signed by Muldoon in August 2021, according to the lawsuit. Earth Island Institute, however, “did not become aware of its implementa­tion of extensive logging” until May 11, when one of its members noticed crews cutting down healthy trees and loading logs onto trucks for transport out of the park.

The next day, the environmen­tal group was only able to locate a two-page descriptio­n of the project on a park webpage, which included references to supporting documents including a “2004 Fire Management Environmen­tal Impact Statement.”

 ?? CAROLYN COLE/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Yosemite Falls seen without people due to the park closure on April 11, 2020.
CAROLYN COLE/LOS ANGELES TIMES Yosemite Falls seen without people due to the park closure on April 11, 2020.

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