Los Angeles Times

Judge halts logging project in Yosemite

Environmen­tal group sued over plan that authoritie­s say would remove fuel for fires.

- By Felicia Alvarez

A controvers­ial plan to expand logging in Yosemite National Park has been temporaril­y halted under a recent court order from a federal judge.

The National Park Service has sought to allow logging across nearly 2,000 acres of Yosemite. Federal authoritie­s say the forestthin­ning project would be aimed at removing dead trees that can provide fuel for wildfires.

But the Earth Island Institute, an environmen­tal nonprofit, filed a lawsuit in federal court last month alleging that the park service began logging for commercial purposes in Yosemite without public notice or assessing environmen­tal risks. The lawsuit was filed against the National Park Service and Cicely Muldoon, superinten­dent of Yosemite National Park.

On July 1, a federal judge ordered the National Park Service to halt the logging operation and to continue operations under its 2017 fire management plan. That plan largely leans on prescribed burns over tree thinning and removal, according to the John Muir Project, a project under the Earth Island Institute that has spoken out against the logging proposal.

The court order calls for only limited rehabilita­tion work along Merced Grove

Road and states that “no trees will be cut during this work.”

According to the lawsuit, the National Park Service began commercial logging under a new “biomass removal and thinning” project around May 11. At that time, the nonprofit became aware of a new forest thinning and logging plan that was posted to the National Park Service’s website, it said.

Scientists have spoken out about the risk around commercial logging projects that fall under the fold of fire management but may increase the severity of wildfires. Last year, more than 200 scientists signed a letter to Congress and President Biden warning of commercial logging’s potential to increase carbon emissions and worsen the climate crisis, according to the John

Muir Project. The letter stated that “thinning” and “fuel reduction” efforts could remove mature, fireresist­ant trees that are needed for forest resilience and could increase wildfire intensity.

Representa­tives from Yosemite National Park did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The park service’s proposed logging project in Yosemite would span the Merced and Tuolumne groves of giant sequoias, Yosemite Valley, and the communitie­s of Yosemite West, Wawona, El Portal, Foresta and Yosemite Village.

Project plans state that “immediate actions are needed to protect these areas from high severity fire.” The plan calls for thinning conifer trees that are less than 20 inches in diameter, standing dead trees and downed trees that died after the 2012-16 drought, according to project documents.

“We are pleased that the Park Service and its attorneys were willing to work with us to avoid the need for a temporary restrainin­g order,” Tom Buchele, an attorney representi­ng the Earth Island Institute, said in a statement.

Buchele added that halting this project will “provide the greatest protection­s to communitie­s from fires” and prevent logging in areas that would cause “irreparabl­e harm” to Yosemite’s forests.

The court order was delivered as both parties in the lawsuit await a formal hearing on a preliminar­y injunction to halt the logging project, which is scheduled for Aug. 15.

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