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Utah
Environmental Congress:
In The News
Protests greet Duck Creek logging project
By Joe Baird
The Salt Lake Tribune
Published May 13, 2005
A pair of environmental groups are protesting a logging
operation in the Dixie National Forest under the rules of the Healthy Forest
Restoration Act.
The Utah Environmental Congress and Forest Guardians this week filed an
"objection" over the Duck Creek project, which has been described by the Forest
Service as a thinning operation around a cluster of vacation homes near Navajo
Lake.
The conservation groups charge that Forest Service officials violated the
Healthy Forest Restoration Act by extending the project into old-growth forests
nearly two miles away from the homes, and that they invoked the act's rules with
little notice in order to limit public involvement in the decision. The project
was previously a more conventional timber thinning/sale operation that required
an environmental study.
"Our argument is that this is a public process about a major project, which
is why they did the [environmental impact study] in the first place," said UEC
Executive Director Kevin Mueller. "If this project had focused on the interface,
we would not have objected, in fact we would have supported it. But when it
turned into an old-growth logging project in the guise of restoration, we had to
object, and we hope it will convince the Forest Service to drop the backcountry
aspect of this project."
Dixie National Forest District Ranger Dayle Flanigan calls the Duck Creek
project a legitimate fuels-reduction operation that takes in not only areas
around the residential village, but surrounding "crown areas" where a wildfire
could leapfrog and put the homes in harm's way.
"Our concern is that the forest has not had a natural fire occurrence in a
long time, so we have many more trees than would normally be there," said
Flanigan. "And there has to be a mechanical removal [logging], because the risk
of a prescribed fire impacting the community would be too high."
Citing interagency e-mails, Mueller says Dixie Forest officials rejected
recommendations from the regional Forest Service office, which frowned upon the
Healthy Forest designation because of the potential for litigation.
"The regional office raised concerns, many of the same ones we have raised,"
he said.
But Flanigan downplayed the office debate, calling it part of the normal
decision-making process.
"We discussed with the regional office the option of using the [act], because
as we discussed it, we saw that it fit," he said.
jbaird@sltrib.com