SitNews - Stories in the News - Ketchikan, Alaska

Delegation Says Final Tongass Plan Has Dire Implications for Southeast Economy

 

December 15, 2016
Thursday AM


(SitNews) Washington, D.C. - The U.S. Forest Service issued a Final Record of Decision for an amendment to the Tongass Land Management Plan (TLMP) last Friday, marking the final step of a two-year process. In response to the plan, the Alaska Delegation expressed their displeasure with the final plan saying it has dire implications for the economy of Southeast Alaska.

The Delegation says the Record of Decision (ROD) rushes to lock in the proposed transition to young growth timber rather than following the recommendations of the Tongass Advisory Committee (TAC). Rather than completing an inventory to determine the appropriate timeframe for an economic program that will ensure the industry has adequate supply during the transition from old growth to young growth, the Alaska Delegation says the ROD adopts a ‘ready, fire, aim’ approach by beginning that transition without scientific support or knowledge of how it will turn out.


jpg Final Tongass Plan Has Dire Implications for Southeast Economy

A glimpse of the Tongass National Forest, covering 17 million acres, is the nation’s largest National Forest.
Photo courtesy U.S. Forest Service

They say the plan continues to pick and choose among the TAC’s recommendations and does not guarantee that old growth timber sales will provide the volume of timber that the industry needs to survive. The Forest Service also fails to provide a clear understanding about where the wood for bridge timber will come from during the transition.

In addition, the Delegation says the plan does nothing to assure developers of mineral and energy projects that they will have access to their sites through Inventoried Roadless Areas – including so-called “roaded roadless” areas – to construct needed roads and power lines. Instead, it states that all decisions on such projects will be made on a case-by-case basis, which provides no reasonable assurance to investors who are deciding whether to risk their capital in this region.

U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) said in a prepared statement, “By finalizing a new plan on its way out of office, the Obama administration has blatantly disregarded some of the Tongass Advisory Committee’s most important recommendations and imperiled the economic future of Southeast Alaska.”

Murkowski said. “Under this plan, the Tongass will no longer be managed to work for communities, but against them. The Forest Service’s insistence on locking in an accelerated transition to a young growth program without an inventory to show whether that is even possible is both harmful and misguided. And the timber industry is not the only one threatened by this plan – so, too, are energy development, mining, and others.”

“This is the latest attempt in a death by a thousand cuts from this administration and extreme environmental activists who for years have been trying to kill off the last remaining timber industry in the Tongass,” said U.S. Senator Dan Sullivan (R-AK).

Sullivan said, “Thankfully, the Obama Administration has only weeks left in office, after which we can turn this decision around and bring active management to our federal forests for the benefit for Alaska and America's economy.”

“The transition from old to new growth timber harvests in the Tongass is more than a blow to the Alaskan timber industry, it sets a terrible precedent for timber harvesting across the nation,” said Congressman Don Young (R-AK).

“The U.S. Forest Service has time and time again proven they have zero interests in properly managing our national forests; sentiments echoed by the State of Alaska and Southeast timber communities," said Young.

Young said, "Under this new management plan, Southeast will not have enough young growth timber to supply even one single sawmill. We’ve already seen great support for overturning this shortsighted action, including passage of an amendment in the House Natural Resources Committee that would forbid this transition from taking place until a full inventory of young growth timber can be taken in the Tongass. I remain committed to reforming the federal government’s broken system of forestry management and will continue to push for the enactment of my legislation, the State National Forest Management Act.”

The delegation said they will explore options to overturn the plan amendment saying there is a strong record supporting a reversal of the ROD, as the Forest Service largely dismissed the 1,000 objections voiced to the plan during the new “objector” process, including substantive complaints from both the environmental and timber industries. Quoting a news release, this decision puts the cart before the horse by implementing a plan that is based solely on vague assumptions, not data, on whether it can work.

The Tongass National Forest, covering 17 million acres, is the nation’s largest National Forest. Despite this, Alaska had – by far – the lowest level of timber development of any Forest Service region in the fourth quarter of Fiscal Year 2016, with just 14.1 million board feet cut and sold. That is just a fraction (0.5%) of the harvesting allowed in National Forests in other parts of the country during that timeframe.

 

On the Web:

December 2016 Final Record of Decision
http://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/fseprd527420.pdf

December 2016 Tongass Land and Resource Management Plan
http://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/fseprd526842.pdf

 

Related:

Amended Tongass Forest Plan Focuses on Transition to Young Growth Harvest and Renewable Energy Development
SitNews - December 11, 2016

 

 

Editing by Mary Kauffman, SitNews

 

Source of News:

U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski
www.murkowski.senate.gov

U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan
www.sullivan.senate.gov

U.S. Rep. Don Young
www.donyoung.house.gov

 

 

Representations of fact and opinions in comments posted are solely those of the individual posters and do not represent the opinions of Sitnews.

 



Submit A Letter to SitNews

Contact the Editor

SitNews ©2016
Stories In The News
Ketchikan, Alaska

 Articles & photographs that appear in SitNews may be protected by copyright and may not be reprinted without written permission from and payment of any required fees to the proper sources.

E-mail your news & photos to editor@sitnews.us

Photographers choosing to submit photographs for publication to SitNews are in doing so granting their permission for publication and for archiving. SitNews does not sell photographs. All requests for purchasing a photograph will be emailed to the photographer.