Times Colonist

Alaska plans timber sale from old growth

-

JUNEAU, Alaska — The U.S. Forest Service is planning the largest sale of Alaska old growth timber in years.

The Prince of Wales Island Landscape Level Analysis project will harvest as much as 225 million board feet (about 53,094 cubic metres) of old growth lumber from Prince of Wales Island in Tongass National Forest.

The service said the process will be gradual because it will not allow more than 40 hectares of clearcutti­ng at one time from the southeaste­rn Alaska region.

Owen Graham, executive director of the logging industry group Alaska Forest Associatio­n, said young growth timber might employ seasonal lumberjack­s, but it’s the older trees that will keep remaining mills open.

“The old growth portion will provide mill jobs and the young growth portion will almost exclusivel­y end up getting shipped overseas,” Graham said. “But it’s providing jobs, those are good jobs.”

Critics have said the deal is a retreat from the forest service’s 2016 announceme­nt it would phase out old growth timber sales in Tongass National Forest over 15 years. “If the forest service really wants to be responsive to people in southeast Alaska, it’s going to have to figure out a way to stick to its plan to transition away from large scale old growth logging and get into more sustainabl­e forest management,” said Austin Williams, Trout Unlimited in Alaska policy and legal director.

The Alaska Department of Fish and Game raised its own concerns over losses to deer and wolf habitats, which were not addressed in the plan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada