The Federal District Court in Alaska just issued an Order granting our motion against the Tongass National Forest,
stopping four old-growth timber sales in Southeast Alaska for a second
time because of concerns related to logging effects on wolves, deer, and
subsistence hunters.
So raise a glass! The Scott Peak, Traitors
Cove, Overlook and Soda Nick timber sale, near the communities of
Petersburg, Ketchikan and Hydaburg on Alaska's rainforest archipelago,
are back off the chopping block.
This case has been a mini-saga showing the
fun & maddening ways environmental litigation works. Cascadia and
Greenpeace, represented by the top-notch legal talent at CRAG law
center, first sued back in 2008. It took a couple years of legal
ping-pong until, in 2011, we finally got our win in the 9th Circuit. The
court found the Forest Service had not explained how the project, which
we had argued reduced deer habitat capability far below the established
thresholds (18 deer/ sq mi), was in compliance with their own Forest
Plan. The Forest Service had been mis-using a computer model in a way
that masked those effects.
So, the court kicked it back to the Forest Service to correct its model and explain itself (in legalese: a "remand").
If the Forest Service could adequately explain how the sales were
kosher with the Forest Plan, then logging could proceed.
Trouble is, the sales aren't really
consistent with the Forest Plan. Combined with past logging, not
enough old-growth would be left for deer to achieve the promises they've
made about wolves and subsistence. The best science says the computer
model needs to show 18 deer/ sq mile to have enough actual deer to feed
wolves and human subsistence hunters. Remove too much habitat, and the
whole system unravels. Places like these are at that breaking point.
So
again, the Forest Service tried to obscure the problem on the ground
with clever paperwork, applying the wrong rule to their new decisions.
That
all took another couple years. When we saw the Forest Service
hadn't really corrected its errors, we filed a motion to enforce the
mandate on remand, which is what the court granted yesterday.
The Forest Service now has a choice whether to invest more taxpayer money pushing these sales forward, or to let it drop. Theoretically they could re-do their anlysis, do it right, and log the sales.
That's the frustrating thing about
environmental law, the only things you can win on are procedural. The
government gets infinite chances to try and make things square with the
law.
But
fundamentally I hope Forest Service leadership recognizes that the
underlying problem here is not legal procedure. There is a fundmantal
contradiction between the political desire to use the forest to feed a
timber industry, and the reality that the forest ecosystem is at a
breaking point. Deer hunting in some of these areas is already highly
restricted, and wolves (who feed on deer) are on a path to an ESA
listing or extinction. The only way you can rationally decide it's OK to continue logging the Tongass is to make a mistake.
So the struggle continues on many fronts,
but for now, we're celebrating a nice victory. Alaska's subsistence
hunters, deer and wolves are a little safer today than they were
yesterday. That's movement in the right direction.
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