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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 7, 2004
Native
Ecosystems Council - Dr. Sara Jane Johnson, 406-285-3611
The Alliance for the Wild Rockies Michael Garrity, 406-459-5936
The
Ecology Center Jeff Juel 406 728-2320
Targhee
National Forest's revised forest plan threatens Yellowstone grizzly bears
and other wildlife.
Conservation
Groups File suit challenging illegal Forest Plan for Targhee National
Forest
MISSOULAToday, three conservation organizations filed a comprehensive
lawsuit in Federal District Court in Missoula against the U.S. Forest
Service management plan for the Targhee National Forest in southeastern
Idaho. The Targhee National Forest is next to Yellowstone and Grand Teton
National Parks. The Forest is home to a diverse number of wildlife and
fish, including threatened and endangered species. The lawsuit challenges
the new forest plan's lack of protection for old growth forest and old
growth forest dependent species such as grizzly bears, great gray owls,
and goshawks.
The Targhee National Forest ("TNF") adopted its first forest plan in
1985, and was the first National Forest in the country to adopt a Revised
Forest Plan ("RFP") in 1997.
"The Targhee National Forest eliminated the few rules they had to protect
fish and wildlife in its new forest plan," said Sara Jane Johnson Ph.D.
Dr. Johnson worked for the U.S. Forest Service, including the Targhee
National Forest, for 14 years as a wildlife biologist. Dr. Johnson said,
"The Forest Service would like to turn back the clock to the days when
logging was king, and species concerns were only entitled to feel-good
lip service."
Michael Garrity, Executive Director of the Alliance for the Wild Rockies,
said, "Government research has found that grizzly bears are more than
5 times more likely to die in roaded areas than in unroaded areas. This
plan is not good for grizzly bears because grizzly bears can't hide in
clearcuts. The Targhee National Forest goal is to manage for money losing
clearcuts rather than wildlife."
"This Revised Forest Plan exemplifies the Bush administration's approach
to managing national forests," stated Jeff Juel of the Ecology Center.
"After repeatedly losing in court trying to ignore the original Forest
Plan's old-growth protection requirements, the Targhee's Revised Forest
Plan was written without any obligation to protect old growth, and with
no recognition of the habitat and social values of these ancient forests."
Dr. Johnson believes that, "clearcutting in the Targhee National Forest
has reduced old growth dependent species including the grizzly bear, gray
wolf, wolverine, fisher, pine marten, lynx, and goshawk to isolated and
fragmented populations."
Dr. Johnson said, "The issue of providing for the larger landscape needs
of far-ranging forest carnivores reveals the need to utilize the principles
of Conservation Biology on a landscape level. If we want the animals in
Yellowstone Park to survive in the long run, linkages out of the Park
with other core areas need to be established, providing sufficient habitat
components so the linkages, or corridors, are functional for genetic interchange
purposes."
"The Forest Service could create far more jobs by complying with the
law and restoring these forests, rather than continuing to build roads
and log in grizzly bear habitat," said Alliance for Wild Rockies executive
director and economist Michael Garrity.
The groups are being represented by Forest Defense of Missoula. According
to attorney Tom Woodbury, "This revised plan is shocking for its complete
lack of scientific credibility. Even the Targhee's own wildlife expert
warned them against adopting it, and once adopted, warned them against
implementing it." Woodbury expects a hearing this summer on injunctive
relief to protect species while the courts determine the plan's legality.
Websites with pictures of clearcuts on the Targhee N.F.
http://www.forwolves.org/ralph/cc-targ.htm
http://www.redtailcanyon.com/items/18921.aspx?imageId=40231
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/9703/hilights_splash003.html#dthe
Related Articles
Targhee
National Forest's revised forest plan is the target of a comprehensive
lawsuit
Groups
file lawsuit against U.S. Forest Service
By
Dan Boyd
6/8/04 Idaho State Journal
POCATELLO - Targhee National Forest's revised forest plan is the target
of a comprehensive lawsuit, filed Monday by three conservation organizations
in Federal District Court in Missoula, Mont.Native Ecosystems Council,
The Alliance for the Wild Rockies and The Ecology Center, all Montana-based
regional conservation groups, joined together to file the lawsuit against
the U.S. Forest Service.
The suit alleges the revised forest plan, released in 1997, fails to
adequately protect grizzly bears, great gray owls and the forests in
which they reside.Michael Garrity, Executive Director of the Alliance
for the Wild Rockies, said the Forest Service's decision to place a
higher emphasis on logging and timber sales than restoration in the
Targhee National Forest is unwise both biologically and economically."Grizzly
bears can't hide very well in clearcuts." Garrity said.He added that
restoring clearcut sections to the forest would result not only in better
animal habitat, but more jobs and more long-term profitability as well."Why
lose money instead of protecting endangered species?" Garrity said.
The Targhee National Forest, north of Ashton, is seen by scientists
as a key piece of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. It borders Yellowstone
National Park, lies in close proximity to Grand Teton National Park
and is seen as having the potential to serve as a wildlife corridor
into the mountains of central Idaho.Officials at the U.S. Forest Service
office in Idaho Falls were unaware of the lawsuit Monday afternoon.
They declined comment.
Although the revised forest plan was released seven years ago, conservation
groups had to run through an extended appeal process before filing a
suit.Tom Woodbury, a lawyer with Forest Defense who will represent the
three conservation groups, said the Forest Service hasn't upheld the
standards required by national wildlife laws."(The revised forest
plan) has none of the standards that would have any value at protecting
wildlife," Woodbury said.Woodbury said he views the suit as a test case
- a new type of clash between conservation groups and the Bush administration."I
really believe they're using this to see how much they can get away
with," he said.Woodbury expects a hearing to be held in July or August
regarding a possible injunction to stop timber sales while the case
proceeds. The entire case will likely last for more than a year.
Enviros
challenge wildlife protection in Targhee plan
6/9/04
Natalie M. Henry, Greenwire reporter
PORTLAND, Ore. -- A lawsuit filed this week by environmentalists over
wildlife provisions in the Caribou-Targhee National Forest management
plan represents the first challenge to a revised forest plan in nearly
30 years, since the 1976 passage of the National Forest Management Act.
Environmentalists said the management plan, drafted by the Forest Service
in 1997 before Targhee merged with the Caribou National Forest, allows
too much logging in old-growth areas and fails to protect habitat for
several high-profile species, including grizzly bears which could use
the forest as a wildlife corridor between Yellowstone and Grand Teton
national parks and bear reserves in Canada.
The Forest Service began revising many of its forest management plans
in the 1990s as an entire generation of plans, some dating back 15 years,
began expiring. The Caribou-Targhee plan was the first to become ripe
for judicial review, according to Tom Woodbury, an attorney for Forest
Defense. As such, it has become an important test case for how the service
will balance commercial and economic interests in the national forests'
for years to come.
The plaintiffs in the lawsuit -- Alliance for the Wild Rockies, Native
Ecosystems Council and the Ecology Center -- initially appealed the
Targhee forest plan directly to the Forest Service, but the agency failed
to respond to questions posed, and last summer Forest Service Chief
Dale Bosworth denied the administrative appeal outright.
The lawsuit maintains that the Targhee plan violates the National Forest
Management Act because it fails to ensure viable populations of fish,
mammals and plants throughout the forest's range. "By having no
enforceable standard to protect fish and wildlife, they're not following
[the law]," said Michael Garrity of the Alliance for the Wild Rockies.
Woodbury noted that management guidelines adopted under the plan in
1997 "say weird things, like the forest has a vision of some day
obtaining [viable populations of wildlife], but not necessarily during
this forest plan.
"They're just completely unenforceable," he said of the guidelines.
The Forest Service maintains that the Caribou-Targhee plan complies
with the act. "We are within the legal bounds of NFMA and that
has been affirmed by the administrative process," said agency spokesman
Lynn Ballard in Idaho.
Ballard said the agency has made no secret about its efforts to increase
logging under the plan in recent years. "It is kind of on the upswing,
we definitely have come up, but we identified that in the forest plan,"
he said. Even with the recent gains, Ballard said logging in the forest
remains well below what was harvested during the 1980s and has dropped
20 fold since the 1970s.
But while logging is up under the plan, so are protections for bears
and other wildlife, Ballard said. For example, the service has eliminated
400 miles of roads in the forest's "bear management units"
to comply with the Endangered Species Act. Outside the bear units, the
service has removed 250 miles of roads, with an additional 150 miles
planned for elimination.
The Fish and Wildlife Service had identified road density as a key threat
to bear habitat as well as for elk. Moreover, the roads were expensive
to maintain, Ballard said.
Garrity agreed reducing road density has been an important step toward
saving bears and other species, but he maintains it is not enough. Grizzly
bears, among the largest and most mobile of all wild mammals in the
United States, need still more habitat in the Targhee and its neighboring
forests, he said.
Currently, grizzlies in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, of which
the Targhee is a part, are isolated from other grizzlies in the northern
Rocky Mountains and Canada. Biologists say if grizzlies are to survive
in the lower 48, they must mingle and breed with larger populations
in Canada. That means providing habitat corridors between the Greater
Yellowstone Ecosystem and Canada.
Recently proposed timber sales in the Targhee will diminish that habitat,
according to Sara Jane Johnson of Native Ecosystems Council, one of
the plaintiffs in the lawsuit. Johnson was a Forest Service wildlife
biologist for 14 years and spent some of that time working in the Targhee
forest.
"If we want the animals in Yellowstone Park to survive in the long
run, linkages out of the park with other core areas need to be established,"
Johnson said. Without such corridors, Johnson said isolated bear populations
are likely to inbreed, which would result in an overall weakening of
their genetics.
The former Targhee forest plan, adopted in 1985, had some enforceable
rules to protect fish and wildlife, according to Johnson, but the 1997
plan was markedly weaker on wildlife issues.
For example, the plan eliminated a goal of maintaining 3 percent of
the forest as old growth for species dependent on it, like grizzlies
and northern goshawks, a prized predatory bird native to the region's
forests. Biologists indicate that goshawks need habitat with up to 20
percent old growth to survive, and many other species need at least
10 percent old-growth habitat, according to Woodbury.
Garrity also questioned the economic viability of the forest plan. "They
lose money on almost all their timber sales there, so it doesn't make
any sense ... destroying habitat for endangered species," he said.
Forest restoration, on the other hand, would create more jobs because
it is more labor intensive, he said.
Woodbury said the lawsuit is foremost about government accountability.
"The bottomline is just public accountability and stewardship,"
he said. "These are the stewards of our public lands. It's not
just a matter of adopting lofty goals and saying that you're going to
pursue them, it's too late for that. ... They're no longer managing
the forest for wildlife."
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