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Contacts: Michael Garrity, Alliance for the Wild Rockies, 406-459-5936 Conservation Group Files Suit Against the U.S. Forest Service and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to Prevent Logging of Core Grizzly in the Selkirk Grizzly Bear Recovery Area in Federal District Court in Spokane on July 3, 2006. SPOKANE-- A conservation group turned to the federal courts to protect critically endangered grizzly bears in the Selkirk Mountains in northern Idaho and northeast Washington. The Alliance for the Wild Rockies (AWR) filed suit to stop the Boundary Timber sale which will log 15 million board feet of timber on 1242 acres in the Bonners Ferry Ranger District of the Idaho Panhandle National Forest. This timber sale includes helicopter logging in core grizzly bear habitat, which AWR claims will harm grizzly bears, increasing the risk of their extinction. "Grizzly bears are dying each year, as this small population struggles for survival," said Michael Garrity, Executive Director of the Alliance for the Wild Rockies. "The federal government needs to stop these money losing timber sales in critical grizzly bear secure habitat, which is key to these bears’ recovery." "Unfortunately, the Forest Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will not even follow their own regulations," said Garrity, a professional economist. "The Forest Service could create a lot more jobs and save taxpayers a lot of money by restoring this area rather than proposing more logging in critical grizzly bear habitat. The Boundary timber sale is expected to lose over $1,500,000, Garrity concluded"
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