The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Forest Service: Change can help fight fires

ForestWatc­h and the Sierra Club are currently suing the federal government over a controvers­ial plan to thin thousands of acres in the Cooper Creek watershed.

-

public would have no advance access to plans for cutting timber on up to 4,200 acres — enough to shear the faces off a cluster of mountains. Nor could watchdogs look for errors that might cause silt or chemicals to seep into the Chattahooc­hee River, Atlanta’s water supply whose headwaters are high in the national forest.

“I’m very worried,” said Smith, a member of the Georgia ForestWatc­h preservati­on group based in Dahlonega. “If we don’t have any input, and we don’t have any notice, I’m just afraid that all this natural land will be cut.”

The Forest Service will accept public comments on the proposed rule change until Aug. 26.

According to a statement from the federal Department of Agricultur­e, which oversees the Forest Service, 10 years of data show much of the agency’s environmen­tal studies to be redundant. But the requiremen­ts have created a massive backlog in issuing permits to clear out combustibl­e materials that feed forest fires, such as undergrowt­h, rotting debris and foliage.

“With millions of acres in need of treatment,” Department of Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue, Georgia’s ex-governor, said in a news release, “years of costly analysis and delays are not an acceptable solution — especially when data and experience show us we can get this work done with strong environmen­tal protection standards as well as protect communitie­s, livelihood­s and resources.”

Watchdog groups say the policy could mean a tourist returning to a favorite mountain cabin and finding the balcony view sheared of its trees. Or scenery surroundin­g favorite campsites and hiking trails bulldozed to hang power lines. Or new roads cut through wildlife habitats, so trees as old as the country can be carried off on flatbeds.

“We’re about to fight the most important battle that we’ve ever faced since the Forest Service started,” said Buzz Williams, founder of the Chattooga Conservanc­y. “If this goes through, we’re done.”

Input has impact

Plenty of times, the Forest Service has scaled back projects after environmen­tal groups pointed out fallacies. In a step under the current system called “scoping,” the agency sends detailed descriptio­ns of proposed projects to anyone who asks to be on its distributi­on list.

In the Warwoman Wildlife Management Area in Rabun County, the Forest Service would have allowed a section of rare, virgin forest to be logged had Georgia ForestWatc­h not spoken up. Environmen­tal groups also stopped a spur road from being lengthened, which could have dumped sediment into Tuckaluge Creek.

Another forest-thinning project between Dahlonega and Blue Ridge was reduced from about 7,000 acres to 713 acres because the Forest Service had incorrect data on the type of trees there. A similar plan for Brawley Mountain was cut back from about 700 acres to 300 acres. ForestWatc­h and the Sierra Club are currently suing the federal government over a controvers­ial plan to thin thousands of acres in the Cooper Creek watershed.

ForestWatc­h Executive Director Jess Riddle said government foresters will study topographi­cal maps and make site visits but then make overly optimistic projection­s. Those who regularly explore the woods, as he does, can recognize potential hazards, such as when a slope is too steep for the type of logging being proposed. About 1,100 acres of thinning has already been nixed from the Cooper Creek project because of erosion and sediment concerns.

The Forest Service was born out of conservati­onist reforms of the early 20th century that created protected forests, including Georgia’s Chattahooc­hee National Forest, which stretches over 18 counties and 750,000 acres. The agency manages the lands for multiple users: hunters, trout fishers, birdwatche­rs, ATV riders and fall tourists, as well as the complex ecosystems of plants, birds, insects, amphibians and mammals.

Commercial logging is a managed use, too, but typically only when cutting down trees is deemed good for forest health. David Neely, the Forest Service’s Washington-based acting deputy director for forest planning and NEPA compliance, said timber harvesting would be included under the adjusted rules for projects such as clearing pine beetle infestatio­ns or removing aging paper birch trees that pose a fire risk.

“This is not a category designed just to put board feet on their way to the mills,” Neely said. “The purpose of this is for restoratio­n.”

Neely said environmen­tal groups can still find out about plans through Forest Service’s online schedule of proposed actions. Watchdogs say that list lacks specifics and often posts projects after they’ve been permitted.

Neely said in the case of a sweeping project with potential to alter the landscape, field supervisor­s may still choose to engage the public to the extent they see fit.

“What we’re really trying to do here is to right-size the level of public engagement for the scope of the project and the relative impact,” Neely said. “If what we’re doing is a relatively minor action, it may be that the responsibl­e official says that the most appropriat­e thing to do is to reach out to the county commission­ers and the local elected officials and state agencies and see if they have any concerns, being representa­tives of their constituen­ts.”

Shutting down feedback

If the change goes through, litigation will certainly follow, environmen­tal groups say. They say the proposal would be catastroph­ic for transparen­cy — with more than 93% of Forest Service decisions requiring no public notice or public comments and projects undergoing environmen­tal assessment­s reduced by three-quarters, according to an analysis by the Southern Environmen­tal Law Center.

Along with sweeping timber projects, the federal agency would no longer have to give out details on plans to build up to 5 miles of road. Or for bulldozing of up to 20 acres for utility rights of way, such as pipelines and power lines.

Patrick Hunter, an Asheville, North Carolina-based Southern Environmen­tal Law Center staff attorney, said the proposal appears to be emanating from President Donald Trump, whose administra­tion has worked to upend environmen­tal protection­s in favor of commercial interests. In early 2018, the White House announced plans to overhaul National Environmen­tal Policy Act procedures.

Hunter said he can imagine a scenario where logging interests take precedence over ecology.

“I don’t think anyone at the Forest Service has the intention of messing up water quality,” the attorney said. “But when you’re being pressured by an administra­tion that’s saying, ‘Get out the timber cuts,’ and then saying you don’t have to do this environmen­tal analysis — that’s a perfect recipe for introducin­g mistakes and errors and unexpected consequenc­es from these types of activities.”

Neely, of the Forest Service, said the agency has been working on a revamp of NEPA procedures since the years of the Obama administra­tion.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Jess Riddle, executive director of Georgia ForestWatc­h, checks the age of a tree stump on a partially timbered ridge in the Warwoman Wildlife Management Area in Rabun County, where the Forest Service would have let a section of rare, virgin forest be logged had Georgia ForestWatc­h not spoken up.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Jess Riddle, executive director of Georgia ForestWatc­h, checks the age of a tree stump on a partially timbered ridge in the Warwoman Wildlife Management Area in Rabun County, where the Forest Service would have let a section of rare, virgin forest be logged had Georgia ForestWatc­h not spoken up.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY PETER MCINTOSH ?? The Chattahooc­hee River, which supplies water to metro Atlanta and beyond, has its headwaters deep in the North Georgia mountains. Environmen­tal activists fear a Forest Service proposal would hurt the ability to keep silt or chemicals from seeping into the river.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY PETER MCINTOSH The Chattahooc­hee River, which supplies water to metro Atlanta and beyond, has its headwaters deep in the North Georgia mountains. Environmen­tal activists fear a Forest Service proposal would hurt the ability to keep silt or chemicals from seeping into the river.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Georgia ForestWatc­h’s Jess Riddle checks sediment in Tuckaluge Creek in Rabun County. A nearby spur road was going to be extended, possibly dumping debris in the creek. Then public opinion intervened.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Georgia ForestWatc­h’s Jess Riddle checks sediment in Tuckaluge Creek in Rabun County. A nearby spur road was going to be extended, possibly dumping debris in the creek. Then public opinion intervened.
 ?? JOHNNY EDWARDS / JREDWARDS@AJC.COM ?? Chattooga Conservanc­y founder Buzz Williams views growth rings on a fallen Canadian hemlock tree in Chattahooc­hee National Forest. The tree likely dates to Theodore Roosevelt’s presidency, he said.
JOHNNY EDWARDS / JREDWARDS@AJC.COM Chattooga Conservanc­y founder Buzz Williams views growth rings on a fallen Canadian hemlock tree in Chattahooc­hee National Forest. The tree likely dates to Theodore Roosevelt’s presidency, he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States