Posted on 01/27/2005 9:09:22 PM PST by SmithL
SAN FRANCISCO -- Environmentalists sued the federal government Thursday over plans to log in central California's Giant Sequoia National Monument, home to two-thirds of the world's largest trees.
The Sierra Club and four other environmental groups called the U.S. Forest Service's decision to include widespread logging in its plan for managing the 327,769-acre monument a scientifically suspect strategy meant to satisfy timber interests under the guise of wildfire prevention.
"This plan opens up huge areas to logging and specifically targets trees big enough to sell, undermining the whole purpose of the monument," said Carla Cloer of the Tule River Conservancy, one of the organizations challenging the federal plan.
The lawsuit filed Thursday in San Francisco federal court seeks to block the plan and have it vacated.
Forest Service spokesman Matt Mathes said the agency's plan to allow "thinning" of some trees in Sequoia was motivated by fire prevention goals and does not permit commercial logging.
(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...
Clinton could not have done this , declaring it a national monument in Aprill 2003, as the article states. He was not president then, could have wished he were.
Frannie
The issue here is not "logging", but thinning fuels. Wish they had done that at Bandelier National Monument,
instead of "controlled burns". But they didn't, and the resulting "controlled burns" burned 200 homes here in Los Alamos. And the mountains west of town are still a black wasteland after almost 5 years.
One difference is that sequoias essentially don't burn. Then only reproduce when the other trees are burned out around them.
Why not sell the trees to the highest bidder and use the money to maintain the park?
"President Clinton created the monument in April 2003"
Anyone have half a brain over there??
Interesting point in the article is that in never says that anyone is authorized to cut a Redwood tree. It talks about bigger trees, but not what kind. Other fir and pine trees grow among the Sequoia's, and these other tree are worth big $$$.
Something doesn't seem right in this issue.
Wull... Heck yeah! Those envirowhackjobs are always moaning and groaning about sustainability and such anyways, right?
This ligigation is for drama and to make business look bad. Shame on industry for not getting out the word.
Maybe they were "almost virgin"-- or perhaps "virgin once again". I remember dating a girl like that.
BTTT!!!!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.