It is a wonderful day for redwoods. That improvident deal that allowed
Pacific Lumber to continue cutting down ancient redwoods has been
knocked down by a California Superior Court Judge. The SF Chronicle
story follows.
We take this opportunity to report to you that Paul Gallegos, the
Humboldt County District Attorney was very heartened by your notes of
encouragement. We received letters from all over the country -
beautiful letters. Thanks to every one for your heartfelt and
insightful letters.
Tuesday, May 20, 2003 (SF Chronicle)
Northern
logging plan tossed/Humboldt pact doesn't ensure environmental
protection,
judge rules
Jane Kay,
Suzanne Herel, Chronicle Staff Writers
A judge has struck down Pacific Lumber Co.'s state-approved 100-year
logging plan, handing environmentalists a major victory in their fight
to reduce cutting on the company's 211,000 acres in Humboldt County.
The tentative ruling, released Monday in Eureka by visiting Superior
Court Judge John Golden, found that the state Forestry Department hasn't
ensured that the plan would protect endangered species and watersheds.
Those protections were a key part of the deal for public acquisition
of Headwaters Forest, 7,500 acres of environmentally sensitive old
growth redwoods.
The Environmental Protection Information Center in Garberville, the
Sierra Club and the United Steelworkers of America sued the state in
1999 -- 30 days after the state and federal government signed the $480
million deal to buy the ancient redwood groves from Pacific Lumber.
Part of the purchase, brokered by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif.,
and called a historic model for future agreements, was the 100-year
logging plan designed to preserve habitat for the imperiled marbled
murrelet and the northern spotted owl, prevent excessive logging and
protect streams.
In the suit, the groups charged that the state departments of
Forestry and Fish and Game didn't follow the state Forest Practices Act,
Endangered Species Act and Environmental Quality Act as well as the
Fish and Game Code when they reviewed and approved the long-term
logging plan and other permits.
The suit asked the court to rescind the Forestry Department's
approval of the plan and prohibit the agency from approving any Pacific
Lumber logging operations that rely upon the plan.
The judge tentatively ruled that the petition filed by environmental
and union groups should be granted. Attorneys from both sides can submit
legal points to the judge before he issues a final decision after June
30.
PROBLEMS WITH APPROVAL
Among other things, Golden said the Forestry Department approved two
plans with different contents, which isn't authorized by law, hence "the
approval never became effective."
Stanley Young, a spokesman for the state Resources Agency, which
oversees the Forestry and Fish and Game departments, declined to comment
until "we read the decision."
Pacific Lumber President Robert Manne issued a statement saying the
company disagrees with the judge and "will be considering all legal
options."
"It is impossible to speculate on the effects of this decision;
however, they could clearly have a significant impact on our company,"
said Manne.
"We will continue to implement the stringent environmental
protections required under (the plan) and continue to harvest on a
sustainable basis while these matters are resolved in the courts," Manne
said.
Sharon Duggan, Berkeley lawyer for the environmental groups, was
elated at the news and said the judge's ruling basically said that "the
whole state side of the deal crumbled."
"I believe that he found it compelling when the project manager of
the Department of Forestry testified at the beginning of the (March)
trial, under penalty of perjury, that Pacific Lumber had never provided
to the state the consolidated (plan), required in the Headwaters deal,"
said Duggan.
For four years, Pacific Lumber has been logging at a high rate without
the required long-term plan in place, she said.
PACIFIC LUMBER LOGGING
"During this time, they have cut in old growth at such an accelerated
pace that, in our opinion, it has harmed the habitat of the sensitive
species, the marbled murrelet, the northern spotted owl and coho
salmon," Duggan said.
The main thrust now, Duggan said, is "what are these resource
agencies going to do in the next day or week to carry out their
statutory obligations to protect public resources?"
Paul Mason, forest representative for the California Sierra Club and
a close observer of the Headwaters negotiations, recalls that the
conditions of the 100-year logging plan were key negotiating points and
at one time held up the deal.
The steelworkers joined the suit because Pacific Lumber needed to
show that "its logging wouldn't result in boom-bust employment levels
and would benefit the community," said Dave Foster, district director of
District 11
of the United Steelworkers.
Humboldt County District Attorney Paul Gallegos, who recently has
come under fire from the logging industry for filing a related suit
against Pacific Lumber, said Monday's decision could have a tremendous
impact on the logging industry -- and his own lawsuit.
Gallegos' suit alleges that Pacific Lumber submitted plans containing
fraudulent harvesting data to government agencies.
"Every tree that's been harvested was unlawfully harvested because
the (plan) should never have been granted," he said.
If Pacific Lumber has logged trees unlawfully, he said, the courts
will have to decide how, and whom, to compensate -- a potentially
expensive proposition in a sagging economy. The decision calls into
question the role of the state in regulating
logging, he said.
"These are the people who are supposed to be policing these
organizations," he said. "Who owns the police? The people or the
organizations?"
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Copyright 2003 SF Chronicle
"Thank God, they cannot cut down the clouds!"
-- Henry David Thoreau