Warragul & Drouin Gazette

Audit tick for Vic Forest

- Philip Hopkins

VicForests’ environmen­tal performanc­e has been given a big tick, the latest independen­t audit finding that the state forestry agency conformed with 95 per cent of the required criteria for timber harvesting.

The 2019-20 audit, commission­ed by the Department

of Land, Water and Planning, investigat­ed 30 VicForest coupes, of which 15 were in the Central Highlands. Three of these were located in Melbourne Water catchment areas.

The Central Highlands is the source of quality native forest timber for sawmills in West and Central Gippsland, including the Latrobe Valley, and the Yarra Valley.

The level of full conformanc­e for individual coupes ranged between 80% and 100%. The average level of full conformanc­e varied across audit themes. These included 96 per cent protection of forest soils, water flows, water quality and river health.

Ninety eight per cent for protection of biodiversi­ty values and 88 per cent for infrastruc­ture compliance.

Road design, constructi­on and maintenanc­e and closures scored 81 per cent, 85 per cent and 96 per cent respective­ly and coupe planning compliance was 96 per cent.

Audits of individual harvest coupes considered up to 146 compliance criteria. These were based on the legal requiremen­ts of the Code of Practice for Timber Production and management standards for timber harvesting. The auditor is accredited by the Environmen­t Protection Authority.

Selection of coupes was randomised, the audit found, but was weighted towards coupes with higher risk features, including waterway crossings, long in-coupe roads, steep slopes, more erosive soils, records of presence of rainforest vegetation and threatened flora and/or fauna.

Some incidents, such as inappropri­ately built waterway crossings, were assessed against several criteria. A total of 27 individual incidents were observed in the audit, of which 26 were detected in coupes in the Central Highlands, which are more intensivel­y managed.

One incident was assessed to have major potential environmen­tal impact – the incursion of a regenerati­on burn into a Leadbeater’s Possum Special Protection Zone (SPZ) that was intended to be left unburnt.

The 26 non-conformanc­es with moderate potential environmen­tal impact related to various incidents. These included constructi­on of an in-coupe road waterway crossing with a culvert outlet that was elevated above the downstream bed of the temporary stream, excessive lengths of an in-coupe road draining directly into waterway crossings, and constructi­on of a long length in-coupe road without any cross-drainage features. Also, a tree in a Leadbeater’s Possum SPZ was accidently felled.

VicForests said in a statement that the results were testament to the hard work and care of its staff.

“As a result of the 2019-20 audit, we will continue to increase our focus on improving road design, road constructi­on and infrastruc­ture in our harvesting operations,” a spokespers­on said.

The Forest Audit Program has been in operation since 2002 and has been managed by DELWP since 2010. The audit is commission­ed by the Timber Harvesting Compliance Unit within DELWP’s Office of the Conservati­on Regulator. For more informatio­n see vic.gov. au/forest-audits

 ?? ?? Lyrebrid Villages for the Aged chief executive Bill Baker chats to Mavis Anderson at his official farewell last week.
Lyrebrid Villages for the Aged chief executive Bill Baker chats to Mavis Anderson at his official farewell last week.
 ?? ?? Mary Witchell with Lyrebrid Villages for the Aged chief executive Bill Baker at his farewll at the village last week.
Mary Witchell with Lyrebrid Villages for the Aged chief executive Bill Baker at his farewll at the village last week.

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