Blog Baby Goes Green : We must not allow the privatization of our public heritage. Please look at the record of the neocon administration and see what is going on.
Updated: 5/1/2003; 12:14:49 PM.

 


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Monday, April 21, 2003

Reprint of this article:

10 Good Reasons to End Logging on Public Lands

1.         Public Lands Belong to the People: Nearly 200 million acres of public forestland belong to all Americans and to future generations. 4% of America’s original forest cover remains, almost entirely on public land. Our natural heritage should not be liquidated for the profit of private corporations.

2.         Public Support: Americans are strongly in favor of environmental protection. A nationwide poll conducted in 1998 concluded that 69% of Americans now oppose allowing timber companies to log our National Forests.

3.         Native Forest and Habitat Protection: Native forests play an important role in creating soils and minimizing soil erosion, lessening flood and drought and maintaining clean air. Public forests contain over half of this nation’s remaining wildlife habitat.

4.         Direct Subsidies and Indirect Costs: The public lands logging program operates at an increasing loss each year; in 1997, the US Forest Service lost $1.2 billion (source: John Muir Project, verified by Congressional Research Services). Taxpayers, not industry, pay for administrating the timber sale program, constructing logging roads, replanting and restoring degraded habitat. The costs of deforestation to biodiversity, clean water and air, fisheries, tourism and our spiritual well-being are incalculable.

5.         Timber Supply: "Production of timber volume from the National Forests accounts for less than 5% of the total volume of timber produced in the United States" (US Forest Service). 72% of the timberland in the US, and most of the highly productive land, is in private ownership. The timber industry says it can meet domestic consumption from its own land.

6.         Waste: Half of the trees cut in this country are wasted through inefficient utilization and lack of recycling.
Eliminating this waste would save more than 3 times the amount cut on public forests. Despite the existence of alternative pulp fibers, such as hemp and kenaf, about half of the trees cut each year are turned into paper products. 50% of the landfill waste in America is wood and paper fiber.

7.         Automation and Exports: Between 1979 and 1988, while logging increased, more than 26,000 timber jobs disappeared due to automation. In the Southeast, new chip mills being built can consume 200 square miles of forests in 3-5 years, while employing as few as 4-12 workers per shift. In the Northwest, nearly half of all timber cut is exported raw or minimally processed. Every million board feet of lumber shipped overseas takes 7 direct jobs and 14 more indirect jobs with it.

8.         Jobs: The billions of dollars currently spent subsidizing the logging of public lands could instead employ tens of thousands of people to restore forests rather than destroy them. In 1996, the Forest Service issued a report predicting that by the year 2000, recreation, hunting and fishing on National Forests will contribute over 30 times more to the national economy than the National Forest logging program.

9.      Benefits to Private Timberland Owners: Subsidized public timber artificially lowers wood prices, providing an incentive for sustainable management of private timberlands. Government sale of cheap timber devalues all timberlands. It’s time for the Forest Service to abandon it’s role as a producer of commodities.

10.       Lawlessness: In 1991, Federal Judge William Dwyer accused the federal land agencies of a "systematic and deliberate refusal" to comply with environmental laws. If the Forest Service cannot obey existing laws, why should we expect them to comply with "better logging" laws? The laws must be changed to stop the logging!

- Get involved with the National Forest Protection Campaign -

Local Contact:

Allegheny Defense Project (ADP)

P.O. Box 245

Clarion, PA 16214

(814) 764-5763, adp@envirolink.org

 

National Campaign Contact:

National Forest Protection Alliance

P.O. Box 8264

Missoula, MT 59807

(406) 542-7343, russell@wildrockies.org

Produced by: Protect Our Public Lands, P.O. Box 25431, Eugene, OR 97402; (541) 349-8733

 


9:46:48 PM    talk to Baby! []

I found this Site

That has lots of thought provoking articles.  With my interest in the current rules that Bush signed that seem to have turned the forests I love into industrial sites, I found this one about the march to privatize all public lands particularly heartrending. 

My Dad and I once stood on a forest road in the White Pass area of the Cascades.  He pointed out the steep slopes and said confidently that I could expect to have my grandkids see the same trees.  He said that the slope of the land was just too steep to warrant logging that old growth timber.  He died in 1980.

I made the same trip several years ago.  Those slopes were then denuded of trees.  I saw the diagonal slashes of logging roads purchased with my tax dollars as they zigzagged up the mountain as though someone had hacked the land with a machete.  And from each road hung the yellow traces of the erosion of the fragile forest soil.  They looked like dead fingers.  You can not count out the ingenuity of man when he has helicopters and the lumber is valuable due to scarcity so that the effort to log is worth it.

The fact is that I am a bleeding heart when it comes to being robbed, raped, and looted by my own government.

I do not hate America.  I do not hate George Bush.  I do however wish that people would open their eyes to see what is being snatched from them.  And I do think that George Bush needs to be defeated.


5:13:02 PM    talk to Baby! []

© Copyright 2003 Marie Foster.



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