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Jun-18-2014 14:05printcomments

Conservationists Seek to Halt Logging Near Crater Lake National Park

The Bybee Timber Sale is located on the Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest, adjacent to Crater Lake National Park.

OR-7 Puppies
As Oregonians celebrate the recent discovery that wolf OR-7 has found a mate and sired pups in southwest Oregon, conservationists on Wednesday took legal action to halt a reckless logging project that would destroy a potential wilderness area near Crater Lake National Park and may harm the new wolf family. Photo Courtesy: Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife

(EUGENE, Ore. ) - As Oregonians celebrate the recent discovery that wolf OR-7 has found a mate and sired pups in southwest Oregon, conservationists on Wednesday took legal action to halt a reckless logging project that would destroy a potential wilderness area near Crater Lake National Park and may harm the new wolf family.

The Bybee Timber Sale is located on the Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest, adjacent to Crater Lake National Park in the southern Oregon Cascade mountain range. With the Bybee sale, the U.S. Forest Service proposes to build roads and log more than 2,000 acres, much of it pristine forest that has never been logged.

The project’s scope includes more than 800 acres of road-less and potential wilderness areas, which provide important habitat for imperiled species such as the northern spotted owl. The road construction and logging would preclude this area from being designated as Wilderness by Congress.

“Given its proximity to Crater Lake National Park, the Bybee Timber Sale was an ill-advised plan to begin with,” said John Mellgren, a staff attorney at the Western Environmental Law Center, who represents the plaintiff in the litigation.

“The discovery of Oregon’s newest wolf family nearby is just one more reason why the Forest Service must go back to the drawing board to ensure that its timber harvest operations do not harm our treasured natural resources.”

The Bybee Project’s environmental analysis was prepared well before the confirmed presence of wolf OR-7 and his new family on the Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest in the vicinity of the project.

“Oregon Wild has long advocated for additional protection for the unroaded areas adjacent to Crater Lake,” said Doug Heiken, Conservation and Restoration Coordinator for Oregon Wild. “We have also supported active forest restoration on other portions of the landscape.

Unfortunately, the Bybee Project goes too far, and fails to protect critical unroaded areas on the National Forest, to the detriment of imperiled species, pristine water quality, and unparalleled recreational opportunities. We hope that we are able to work with the Forest Service to craft a project that can both restore the forest and protect this special place.”

Gray wolves in western Oregon are protected as endangered species under federal law.

Source: Western Environmental Law Center




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TW Scott June 19, 2014 9:49 am (Pacific time)

This is another example of using the endangered Species Act to block an agency from doing its job. Usually the animal is more "warm and fuzzy," but a wolf hardly fits that image. If recent NS Owl history is any indicator - pretty soon they will be talking about"virtual wolves" - areas where wolves might someday want to wander thru! Since Wolf OR-7 is a "traveling man," that could include most of the state. Other wolf groups have increased rapidly to the extent that they have been taken off the protected list.

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Sean Flynn was a photojournalist in Vietnam, taken captive in 1970 in Cambodia and never seen again.

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