Region Archives: US West

Business & Politics

Hampton Lumber closes sawmill in Banks, blames future on Oregon Habitat Conservation Plan

By Zach Urness
The Salem Statesman Journal
January 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

A sawmill in Banks that closed earlier this year will remain shut down indefinitely due to a lack of available timber, according to its owner, Hampton Lumber. The mill employed 58 people. …Hampton CEO Randy Schillinger said the company would continue operating three other Northwest Oregon sawmills in Willamina, Tillamook and Warrenton, which employ 600 altogether. …Schillinger singled out the declining amount of timber it can cut on state forests due to potential adoption of the Habitat Conservation Plan. The plan is aimed at stopping the decline of endangered wildlife… while providing a sustainable amount of timber. But the plan has become controversial because it would bring some decline in harvest. The controversy has pushed back its adoption. …Environmental groups said Hampton was using the HCP as an excuse to close a mill that was aging. They pointed out Hampton was investing $150 million in a nearby mill in Willamina.

Additional coverage in The Banks Post: City officials react to closure of Hampton mill

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Washington County sawmill will close indefinitely, eliminating 58 jobs

By Mike Rogoway
The Oregonian
January 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

OREGON — A sawmill in Banks that closed in October will remain shuttered indefinitely, according to its owner, Hampton Lumber. Banks, is about 25 miles west of Portland, has had a lumber mill since 1961. Hampton acquired the facility in 2016 and said 58 people worked at the site until it closed last fall. Hampton said it will continue operating three other northwest Oregon sawmills in Willamina, Tillamook and Warrenton, which employ 600 altogether. Hampton said the Banks mill relies on lumber from nearby state forests and said a Habitat Conservation Plan under consideration by the Oregon Board of Forestry could reduce the size of harvests on state forests. …Michael Lang, program manager with the Wild Salmon Center, said he’s skeptical there’s any tie. …“There’s a large, private timberland holding that companies like Hampton will continue to rely on,” Lang said.

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Livingston’s R-Y Timber purchased by Sun Mountain Lumber

NBC Montana
January 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

R-Y Timber of Livingston has announced a recent acquisition by Sun Mountain Lumber of Deer Lodge. The purchase was partially funded through a loan from the Montana Department of Commerce’s Wood Products Revolving Loan Program. Operating for decades, RY Timber closed its mill in Townsend and suffered two fires at its Livingston location. …Sun Mountain Lumber is the largest sawmill in Montana as well as the largest private employer in the Deer Lodge Valley. …“This acquisition is gratifying not just for Livingston and the employees of R-Y Timber,” Mandy Rambo, Acting Director of the Montana Department of Commerce, said. “We’re proud to help good companies find ways to stay open, save jobs and leverage Montana’s abundant natural resources.” Rambo anticipates R-Y Timber will soon be back to being the third-largest employer in Livingston.

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Oregon fines Tangent lumber mill for late reporting

By Alex Powers
The Albany Democrat-Herald
January 2, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Tangent lumber mill owed Oregon $1,200 after the company was months late reporting how much pollution it emitted from boilers at its property near the intersection of Highway 34 and Interstate 5. The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality asserts the company, owned by Eagle Forest Products in Eagle, Idaho, violated accountability and transparency conditions of its air pollution permit when no one immediately filed the report. …Eagle Forest Products bought Family Pallet Lumber’s mill in December 2022, incorporating EFP Manufacturing that year. …EFP and Eagle Forest Products also assumed Family Pallet Lumber’s debts for money borrowed in 2021 to buy a machine that can stack boards of lumber at more than 300 pieces per minute.

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Woodgrain completes Trimco acquisition

Hardware + Building Supply Dealer
December 20, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Woodgrain announced that it has finalized its acquisition of Trimco Millwork. The move brings three locations to Woodgrain including Boise, Idaho; Salt Lake City, Utah; and Denver, Colorado. The deal was first announced by Woodgrain last month. Following the completion, Woodgrain now operates 35 distribution centers. Overall, Woodgrain has 45 distribution and manufacturing locations in the United States and South America. Trimco Millwork is a wholesale distributor of mouldings, exterior doors, interior doors, and other specialty building products. The company is based in Bosie. Woodgrain said a key to the deal is that it extends the company’s national footprint to the Rocky Mountain West region. Woodgrain is based in Fruitland, Idaho and produces moulding, doors, and windows.

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PacifiCorp to pay $250 million in timber company settlement for 2020 wildfire

By Ryan Haas
Oregon Public Broadcasting
December 18, 2023
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

For the second time this month, the utility provider PacifiCorp will pay out hundreds of millions of dollars to end a lawsuit over its alleged role in the devastating Oregon wildfires in 2020. In a filing to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday, PacifiCorp announced it has reached a $250 million settlement with 10 timber companies to resolve a lawsuit they brought against the utility related to the Archie Creek Complex Fire in Southern Oregon. On Dec. 5, the Berkshire Hathaway-owned company dished out $299 million to settle a lawsuit brought by Southern Oregon residents who lost their homes and property in the same fire, bringing PacifiCorp’s payouts this month to more than half a billion dollars. The timber lawsuit alleged PacifiCorp’s employees ignored warnings from the National Weather Service. The suit also claimed the company failed to trim hazard trees that could have sparked power lines.

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

Seattle Convention Center’s Summit Building Awarded Prestigious LEED Platinum Sustainability Certification

ExhibitCity News
January 10, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

SEATTLE, Washington – The Seattle Convention Center (SCC) announced today that its Summit building has earned LEED Platinum certification from the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) as part of the Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) New Construction (v3) rating system. …SCC has earned three LEED certifications. In addition to Summit, which opened in January 2023, the Center’s Arch at 705 Pike building achieved LEED Silver for Operations and Maintenance, and Arch at 800 Pike achieved LEED Silver for Sustainable Construction Practices, Furnishings and Equipment. …A few of the measures taken in the Summit project that resulted in earning LEED Platinum, the highest level, include: Reclaimed wood from the building that previously occupied the site was repurposed as railings throughout the building. …Some key climate measures implemented by Seattle include: An electrical grid utilizing 90% renewable hydroelectric power – the first carbon-neutral utility in the U.S.

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Local timber company helping lead charge for mass timber

By Billy Spotz
KCBY.com 11
January 10, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: United States, US West

Mass timber continues to garner nationwide support, and use, when it comes to large scale construction. Federal and local support has increased over the last few years, as grants have been given to the Tallwood Institute, a collaborative effort between the University of Oregon and Oregon State University, in order to study and advocate for the technology going forward. Alongside these grants, Senator Jeff Merkley’s been a vocal proponent of mass timber, asking for it to be used in future federal building constructions. What you might not know is that one of the largest engineered wood producing companies in the United States is located in Springfield. Specializing in “glulam” (glue laminated) wood beams, Rosboro has been working with engineered wood technology since the 1960s.

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Forestry

Lawsuit challenges logging, burning project planned in Bitterroot National Forest

By Blair Miller
Daily Montanan
January 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A consortium of conservation groups have again sued the U.S. Forest Service and other federal agencies over a forest thinning and prescribed burn project planned in the Bitterroot National Forest they say disregards the Endangered Species Act and National Environmental Policy Act. The lawsuit, filed Thursday in federal court in Missoula on behalf of Alliance for the Wild Rockies, Native Ecosystems Council, Yellowstone to Uintas Connection, Friends of the Bitterroot and WildEarth Guardians, challenges the Mud Creek Vegetation Management Project, which involves logging, thinning, and burning 48,486 acres within the Bitterroot National Forest southwest of Darby and was signed off  last January. The lawsuit contends that the USFS, Bitterroot National Forest managers, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are violating the two critical conservation acts by failing to tell the public where exactly within the plan area the logging and burning will take place…

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Nez Perce-Clearwater National Forests Improve Forest Health and Reduce Wildfire Risk

By Cyrus Forman, US Forest Service
Big Country News Connection
January 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

KAMIAH, IDAHO – A project designed to improve forest health and reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfire in the Elk City area has been approved by Forest Supervisor, Cheryl Probert on December 15, 2023. The Limber Elk project is located approximately seven miles north of Elk City, Idaho, and is situated within firesheds with a more than 90 percent “high” or “very high” risk of wildfire. All resulting project activities are designed to reduce fuels and improve forest health by increasing resiliency to insect and disease infestations. …The Limber Elk decision approves commercial timber harvest on up to 2,657 acres and includes post-harvest fuel treatments and site preparation for planting. Additional protection for nearby communities is achieved through hand thinning and pruning of the understory adjacent to private property. All treatments will reduce hazardous fuels in this area. …Post harvest, forest openings will be planted with new, healthy trees resistant to the diseases found in the project area.

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20-year study confirms prescribed burning, forest thinning reduce risks of catastrophic wildfire

By Guy McCarthy
The Union Democrat
January 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Scott Stephens

A 20-year experiment in the north-central Sierra Nevada recently confirmed what many local, state and federal agencies have been saying for years — that forest management techniques such as prescribed burning, restoration thinning, or a combination of both, effectively reduce risks of catastrophic wildfire in California. Beginning in 2001, the lead investigator, Scott Stephens, Ph.D, a professor of fire science at the University of California, Berkeley, and a team of other researchers focused on prescribed fire and thinning for two decades in the same location, Blodgett Forest Research Station, a 4,000-acre experimental forest located about 65 miles northeast of Sacramento. …Stephens’ 20-year study underscores the fact that fire intensity decreases with the decrease in available fuels, and it’s important to note that the combination of thinning and prescribed fire is the key to long term success, said Gary Whitson, the Tuolumne-Calaveras Unit unit forester and pre-fire division chief.

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Coast Redwoods Are Enduring, Adaptable Marvels

By Daniel Lewis
Scientific American
January 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Coast redwoods – enormous, spectacular trees, some reaching nearly 400 feet, the tallest plants on the planet – thrive mostly in a narrow strip of land in the Pacific Northwest of the United States. …They have grown by slowly responding to moisture and rich alluvial soil over millennia, combined with a genetic payload that pushes them to the upper limits of tree height. They are at risk – down to perhaps 70,000 individuals, falling from at least a half-million trees before humans arrived – but that’s not a new story, for we are all at risk. Redwoods, like all trees, are engineered marvels. …They are born to change, just as humans are born to change. …But redwoods also are adapting. …A 2018 survey of nine large redwood trees found a total of 137 species of lichen growing on the trees, including several that were new to science.

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Alaska Challenges Reinstated Protections for Tongass National Forest

By Aliyah Elfar
Columbia Climate School
January 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Though it’s hardly the most famous forest in the US, Alaska’s mighty Tongass National Forest happens to be the largest, stretching nearly 17 million acres or an area roughly the size of West Virginia. The Tongass is also a major American carbon sink, responsible for 44% of the carbon absorbed by the country’s national forests (which themselves absorb over 10% of US annual greenhouse gas emissions). …The current legal protections for the Tongass originated in the “Roadless Rule,” regulations established in 2001 by the Clinton administration to ban roadbuilding and logging on nearly 60 million acres of national forest lands. But in 2020, Trump repealed this rule to allow more acreage of forest—mostly old-growth timber—to be logged. Although there was widespread citizen opposition to the exemption, Alaska Republicans lobbied heavily for this change and its ability to boost the Alaskan economy, and the Trump administration proceeded with the repeal.

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Timber industry tied to proposal shifting wildfire protection costs from landowners to public

By Alex Baumhardt
The Oregon Capital Chronicle
January 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Timber companies appear to have played an influential role in a new legislative proposal to find sustainable funding for fighting wildfires. If passed, it could save the industry millions of dollars in fees they now pay to the state for fire protection and shift more of the cost to all Oregon property owners.  Sen. Elizabeth Steiner, D-Portland, will present the proposal on Wednesday morning to the Senate Natural Resources and Wildfire Committee for consideration during the session. It would impose a $10 fee on all property holders in Oregon to pay for fighting wildfires… The proposal would reduce the per-acre fees that private and public forest and range landowners now pay to the Oregon Department of Forestry for protection. …Critics say it shifts the costs of protecting billions of dollars in private timber assets away from the companies that own much of the land at risk to average Oregonians.

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Proposed tax for timber companies would pay for wildfire prevention, response

By Makenna Marks
KDRV ABC Newswatch 12
January 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

ASHLAND, Ore. — State Senator Jeff Golden, D-Ashland, wants to tax timber companies to acquire funding for wildfire prevention and response programs. Golden … said Oregon needs to make sure its communities have enough resources to protect its residents from wildfires. He said it’s much cheaper to prevent wildfires than it is to recover from them. …According to Golden, the proposal is similar to the timber severance tax that was eliminated decades ago. Golden said some parts of the timber industry help local economies but there are other parts of the industry that are solely focused on profit. …Golden said there are still some details to figure out but told NewsWatch 12 the tax would total a rough estimate of $75 million. …Ultimately, Golden wants his tax proposal to end up on the November 2024 ballot, so Oregonians can decide for themselves.

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The future of fire is female

By Julianne Nikirk, Colville National Forest
US Department of Agriculture
January 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

McClane Moody came across a wildland firefighter training program specifically for women in Alpine, Arizona where she got a taste of the physical and mental challenges that come with being a wildland firefighter. And learned that she could do it. “I am definitely going to apply for a job in the field,” Moody said after completing the week-long intensive program that introduces wildland firefighting to women. With under 15% of wildland fire employees identifying as women, the Women in Wildfire Training Program aims to overcome barriers to equity that are still very much present in the industry. For participants, the intentional inclusion of women signals a “safe space” to learn and be among peers, encouraging people to explore a career in wildland fire management. In fact, many program participants would not have applied for the program if it was not geared specifically towards women.

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USDA awards Hanford $1 million for urban and community forestry initiative

The Hanford Sentinel
January 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

HANFORD, CALIFORNIA — The City of Hanford is preparing to undertake a new urban and community forestry initiative in partnership with the GreenLatinos, which invests $1 million in the city. In September 2023, the City received the $1 million grant award from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service as part of their investment of $1 billion to provide competitive grants that fund nearly 400 projects throughout the country. According to a USDA news release, community and urban forestry investment demonstrates the commitment to improving physical and mental health, lowering average temperatures during extreme heat, increasing food security, and creating new economic opportunities. …This project will include planting trees and empowering individuals from disadvantaged communities through specialized training in tree care and maintenance, equipping these individuals with urban forestry skills and job pathways.

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Coast redwood trees are enduring, adaptable marvels in a warming world

By Daniel Lewis, California Institute of Technology
The Conversation US
January 3, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Coast redwoods – enormous, spectacular trees, some reaching nearly 400 feet, the tallest plants on the planet – thrive mostly in a narrow strip of land in the Pacific Northwest of the United States. …They have grown by slowly responding to moisture and rich alluvial soil over millennia, combined with a genetic payload that pushes them to the upper limits of tree height. They are at risk – down to perhaps 70,000 individuals, falling from at least a half-million trees before humans arrived – but that’s not a new story, for we are all at risk. …Redwoods have come into their own through the inexorably turning wheels of natural selection and evolution, responding to environmental pressures, genetic drift and mutation. …New fire dangers put them at risk, and more frequent floods erode the big trees’ footing. But redwoods also are adapting. …As I write in my forthcoming book, “Twelve Trees: The Deep Roots of Our Future.”

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Regional leaders seek path toward a community forest

By Diana Zimmerman
The Wahkiakum County Eagle
January 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Columbia Land Trust met with commissioners from Wahkiakum County and Pacific County to talk about an opportunity that might benefit local communities in a variety of ways: a community forest. …Ian Sinks, the Stewardship Director for CLT discussed conversations their organization has had with community leadership and landowners, regarding issues being faced in this watershed, brought on by heavy logging, soil type, rain, and sedimentation issues, along with concerns about fishery resources and recreational access. “It led us to a conversation about a community forest, where maybe there are things we can jointly work on together to provide access, to provide economic benefit, and change the land cover and land practices in the watershed,” Sinks said. “My goal is to keep these lands in timber,” Wahkiakum County Commissioner Dan Cothren said. “I don’t want to see this place turned into real estate, where you have houses everywhere.”

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Disappointed in Nez Perce-Clearwater National Forest draft decision

By Kathy Mcallister, Chris McCarthy-Ryan, Deb Gale & Kari Gunderson
The Missoulian
January 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

…To say we are disappointed in this draft decision is a huge understatement. Our concerns are specific to the proposed management of the Hoodoo Roadless Area; commonly known as the Great Burn. …It is only a matter of time before the Great Burn will be permanently designated wilderness, unless a USFS decision jeopardizes its future. Sadly, we’re afraid that time has come. …The decision proposes snowmobiling and mountain biking in some of the wildest parts of the Great Burn as well as in areas where it will be next to impossible to keep snowmobilers from trespassing onto the LNF where snowmobiling is prohibited. …To appease a handful of elite high-mark snowmobilers and snowbikers who have been illegally snowmobiling in areas of the Great Burn that have been closed to snowmobiling and snowbiking since 1986.

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Oregon needs more money to fight big wildfires. Who should pay for it?

By Alex Baumhardt
Oregon Capital Chronicle
January 3, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Oregon Department of Forestry needs more and consistent funding to fight wildfires. That much was clear following the 2020 Labor Day fires that burned nearly 850,000 acres of forests and became the state’s most expensive disaster in history. But lawmakers are split on how to pay for it. Two Democratic senators recently unveiled competing proposals to address long-term wildfire funding. Sen. Jeff Golden, D-Ashland, wants a tax on the value of industrial timber harvests to pay for protection that he says disproportionately benefits private forest owners. “There is a segment of the timber industry that’s more than able to shoulder more of the load, and when we think about the protection that they get from ODF, they should be picking up more of the baggage here,” Golden said. Sen. Elizabeth Steiner, D-Portland, wants to charge every property owner in the state an annual fee to pay for what she sees as a statewide issue.

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Pacific Northwest sees increased popularity in ‘assisted migration’ as tree species face decline

The Associated Press in KPTV.com
December 29, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

As native trees in the Pacific Northwest die off due to climate changes, the U.S. Forest Service, Portland, Oregon and citizen groups around Puget Sound are turning to a deceptively simple climate adaptation strategy called “assisted migration.” As the world’s climate warms, tree growing ranges in the Northern Hemisphere are predicted to move farther north and higher in elevation. Trees, of course, can’t get up and walk to their new climatic homes. This is where assisted migration is supposed to lend a hand. The idea is that humans can help trees keep up with climate change by moving them to more favorable ecosystems faster than the trees could migrate on their own. Yet not everyone agrees on what type of assisted migration the region needs — or that it’s always a good thing.

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Extreme heat represents a new threat to trees and plants in the Pacific Northwest

By Nathan Gillies
Oregon Public Broadcasting
December 31, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

From June 25 to July 2, 2021, the Pacific Northwest experienced a record-breaking heat wave that sent the normally temperate region into Death Valley-like extremes that took a heavy toll on trees as well as people. … In a matter of a few days, the 2021 heat dome turned many of the green leaves and needles on the region’s trees to orange, red and brown. …Still is part of a growing number of scientists investigating what they say is a new, woefully underestimated threat to the world’s plants: climate change-driven extreme heat. …Driven by above-normal temperatures, hot droughts can be far more damaging to trees than droughts that result simply from a lack of moisture. Hot droughts not only dry out soil; they also dry out the air. This stresses trees, and can cause water-carrying tissues inside them to collapse — a process called “hydraulic failure.”

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Pine beetles are hammering the Tetons’ whitebark pines, again

By Mike Koshmrl
The WyoFile
December 27, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

WYOMING — Vegetation ecologists monitoring the latest mountain pine beetle epidemic fear for the survival of the Teton Range’s remaining ancient whitebark pine stands. A keystone species that gained Endangered Species Act protections early this year, whitebark pines were hit hard by a plague of mountain pine beetles that spanned from 2004 to 2012. A cold snap ended that wave, giving the region’s embattled whitebark pine a temporary reprieve. Four years ago, however, scientists monitoring the gnarled high-elevation conifers started to see a larger concentration of “brood trees” harboring increasing numbers of the bark-boring insects. “It’s just another beetle epidemic happening because they are not being slowed down by cold falls and springs — like they naturally were before,” said Nancy Bockino, a Northern Rockies Conservation Cooperative whitebark pine field ecologist. “And it’s getting worse.”

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Debate intensifies over conservation of Pacific Northwest’s old-growth forests

By Lynda Mapes
The Spokesman-Review
December 20, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The fight over the future of the last old and mature forests in America intensified Tuesday when the Biden administration called for preservation of old-growth trees. The administration, after creating an inventory of the nation’s old growth, wants to amend 128 forest land-management plans to conserve and steward 25 million acres of old-growth forests and 68 million acres of mature forest across the national forest system. For the Pacific Northwest …an effort is already underway to overhaul and update key old-growth protections in the Northwest Forest Plan of 1994… More than 1 million acres of old and mature forest in Washington, Oregon and Northern California that were explicitly set aside for logging within the boundaries of the plan are under scrutiny. …The American Forest Resource Council, panned the old-growth initiative as unnecessary and burdensome. “Existing federal environmental laws and forest plans provide direction on managing and protecting old growth,” council President Travis Joseph said

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Rabbit Fire in Sequoia National Forest proves useful in fight to protect land

By Meade Trueworthy
Visalia Times-Delta
December 21, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Prescribed burns are part of the cycle to keep the forest thriving, as odd as that may sound. And one fire this year proved especially beneficial. “The Sequoia National Forest is at risk of wildfire due to heavy fuels buildup, drought, beetle outbreaks, climate change, and other forest stresses,” rangers said. In 2023, the Sequoia National Forest fire-management crews burned more than 5,695 acres of fuel – approximately 10,125 piles were burned across the forest. This resulted in a reduction of over 100 tons/ per acre of hazardous fuels. …The 2023 lightning-caused Rabbit Fire was managed to promote natural fire effects, like those mimicked in prescribed burns. Operations were conducted to bring the fire to healthy parts of the forest. That operation ended on Oct. 22, reducing nearly 3,000 acres of excess fuel that risked the potential for much bigger fires. The footprint around The Rabbit Fire had not seen fire for almost 100 years, officials said.

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Congress shows support for another look at expansion of the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument

By Drew Winkelmaier
The News Review
December 21, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

OREGON and CALIFORNIA — The American Forest Resource Council announced Monday that 29 members of Congress are showing support for another look at an Obama-era expansion of the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument. The Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument was created to protect forest and grasslands at the junction of the Cascade Range and the Siskiyou Mountains, in southwest Oregon and northwest California. The American Forest Resource Council and the Association of O&C Counties are petitioning the Supreme Court of the United States to review the alleged “overreach” of the executive branch. The Congressional members include three senators and 26 representatives, including Cliff Bentz, R-Oregon, who represents Douglas County constituents as part of district two. …This expansion encroaches on O&C land. By expanding into O&C lands, the objectives for those lands will deviate from timber harvest, the main objective of the Association of O&C Counties.

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Extreme heat represents a new threat to trees and plants in the Pacific Northwest

By Nathan Gilles
Columbia Insight
December 21, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

From June 25 to July 2, 2021, the Pacific Northwest experienced a record-breaking heat wave that sent the normally temperate region into Death Valley-like extremes that took a heavy toll on trees as well as people. Seattle and Portland, Ore., recorded their hottest-ever temperatures, reaching 108 degrees Fahrenheit (42.2 Celsius) and 116 Fahrenheit (46.6 Celsius), respectively. …But, as recent research suggests, tree foliage didn’t simply dry out in the heat dome. Instead, it underwent “widespread scorching.” “A lot this reddening and browning of leaves was just that the leaves cooked. It really wasn’t a drought story,” said Chris Still, professor at Oregon State University’s College of Forestry and a leading researcher on the effects of heat on trees. …“Plants can control their temperature to some degree, but if the heat is extreme enough, some plants won’t be able to get through it even if they have a ton of water,” he said.

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“Dr. Christmas Tree” working to prevent disease in Northwest conifer trees

By Lauren Paterson
Northwest Public Broadcasting
December 21, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

More Northwest Christmas trees have fallen victim to disease in the last couple years and scientists are trying to find out why. “There’s a variety of diseases, many of them are caused by fungi,” said Gary Chastagner, a plant pathologist at Washington State University and longtime Christmas tree expert. To Northwest growers, he’s known as “Dr. Christmas Tree.” Two organisms have been causing problems for Northwest Christmas trees, Chastagner said. One is a fungus called Armillaria. …“The other is a fungus-like organism called Phytophthora.” …In addition, high temperatures in the summer have been stressing Northwest fir species leaving them more susceptible to disease. …Among the most affected trees are Pacific Northwest Noble Firs, Douglas Firs and Fraser Firs, the most popular varieties for Christmas trees, Chastagner said. …Eurasian tree species such as Turkish Fir might be more resistant to the pathogens and changing weather conditions in the Northwest, Chastagner said.

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Second lawsuit filed over South Plateau logging project

By Isabel Hicks
Helena Independent Record
December 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Environmental groups filed a new lawsuit to stop the South Plateau Landscape Area Treatment Project that would expand logging and clearcutting near West Yellowstone — arguing the project would negatively impact habitat for endangered grizzly bears. The Forest Service approved the project in August, saying it’s important for forest resilience, timber harvest and fuel reduction to mitigate wildfires. The agency’s environmental analysis found “no significant impacts” to the ecosystem. The project sets aside some 16,500 acres in the Custer Gallatin National Forest for treatment, including 5,500 acres of mature forest for clearcutting and 6,600 acres for logging over the next 15 years. The Gallatin Wildlife Association, Native Ecosystems Council and WildEarth Guardians filed the lawsuit on Monday. The Western Environmental Law Center is representing the conservation groups. A similar lawsuit was filed in the same court on Sept. 20 by the Center for Biological Diversity, Alliance for the Wild Rockies, and the Council on Wildlife and Fish.

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Program aims to educate youth on careers in forestry, natural resources

By Erica Zucco
KING5.com
December 20, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

SEATTLE — The Washington Department of Natural Resources is coordinating a program to expose more students to outdoor learning experiences, in hopes they’ll consider careers in fields like forestry, geology, habitat restoration and trail design. The agency’s Youth Education and Outreach Program (YEOP) currently provides field trips to state lands to hear from subject matter experts, works with educators to help them highlight opportunities, and coordinates educational opportunities wherever possible. “We’re trying to be really nimble and flexible, with community events that people can come to with their kids, guest speakers, summer programs and camps, working with teachers,” WADNR YEOP Manager Clare Sobetski said. …The agency is hopeful work can be expanded with more funding, in order to reach more students across the state.

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State finalizes deal for 20,000 acres of logging lands in southwest Washington

By Bill Lucia
Oregon Capital Chronicle
December 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Washington’s natural resources agency and a nonprofit group have finalized a $121 million purchase of about 20,000 acres of logging lands in the southwest corner of the state. The deal, which closed last Friday, is the state’s largest land acquisition in more than a decade, according to the Department of Natural Resources. The department revealed last month that it planned to buy about 9,115 acres of forestland in Wahkiakum County for $55 million that would be managed to generate revenue from timber harvests. …The deal is linked to an announcement Franz made on Monday, where she proposed that 2,000 acres of land in five counties be shifted out of the state’s timber portfolio and into conservation. With that change in status, the land would be protected and no longer open to industrial logging to generate revenue for the state.

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Whitebark pine has been decimated by deadly fungus. Conservationist are teaming up to restore it

By Zakary Sonntag
Casper Star-Tribune
December 19, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

More than 10,000 feet above sea level, in the backcountry of Grand Teton National Park in the areas beyond Surprise and Amphitheater Lakes, Dr. Libby Pansing spent a month imitating the Clark’s Nutcracker. She planted hundreds and hundreds of whitebark pine seeds. Pansing is director of restoration science with the conservation group American Forests. In a month’s time she and a dedicated team managed only to burry 1,300 seed caches; a single Clark’s Nutcracker, on the other hand, might intern as many as 100,000 whitebark pine seeds each year. But desperate times call for special measures. The worsening spread of a fungus known as Blister Rust has driven dramatic whitebark die-off in critical ecosystems around the West, including Wyoming’s Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Parks. …advocates like Pansing are ramping up restoration efforts as part of an agreement between American Forests and the National Park Service to fulfill a piece of its National Seed Strategy.

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When Forests on Land Burn, Forests Underwater Feel the Impact

By J. Besl
Eos by American Geophysical Union
December 18, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

CALIFORNIA — Much like forests on land, kelp forests are a bonanza for biodiversity. …But kelp forests are fickle. They can boom and bust under the influence of marine heat waves, the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO), or storms. New research shows that forest fires in coastal watersheds also play a role. By comparing two data sets in an unexpected way, a team of researchers is exploring how forest fire size relates to kelp beds downstream. The team presented some of their findings at AGU’s Annual Meeting 2023 in San Francisco. …Preliminary research shows there’s an impact. The Woolsey Fire, for example, burned nearly 940 million square meters in November 2018, sending sediment into Malibu Creek. Before the fire, the spring 2018 kelp canopy covered 46,606 square meters near Malibu. The following spring, kelp covered only 9,543 square meters and has yet to recover to prefire levels.

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Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary Franz Announces 2,000 Acres of Forests Designated for Conservation

Washington Department of Natural Resources
December 18, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Commissioner of Public Lands Hilary Franz on Monday released the locations of 2,000 acres of structurally complex state forestland proposed to be set aside for conservation as funded by the Climate Commitment Act. The land will join the more than 900,000 acres of forestland that the Washington State Department of Natural Resources (DNR) already manages for conservation in western Washington. The parcels are spread across five counties – Clallam, Jefferson, King, Snohomish, and Whatcom. The Department of Natural Resources worked with the counties to identify parcels that are most valuable to protecting fish and wildlife habitat and natural and cultural values. These parcels are adjacent to existing conserved high-value habitat areas, improving fish and wildlife habitat connectivity and avoiding isolated small fragments of fish and wildlife conservation. In addition to these 2,000 acres, DNR will be closing on the purchase of more than 9,000 acres of working forests in Wahkiakum County.

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Forestry board hears concerns about draft habitat conservation plan

By Nicole Bales
Seaside Signal
December 18, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

While there is some disagreement between the Oregon Board of Forestry and the Forest Trust Land Advisory Committee on how to proceed with a proposed habitat conservation plan, there is consensus that new timber revenue projections over the life of the plan will pose challenges for some counties and the state. The 70-year plan would designate protected habitat areas across nearly 640,000 acres of state forests — mostly in Clatsop and Tillamook counties — to keep the state in compliance with the federal Endangered Species Act. During a special meeting on Dec. 14, the Board of Forestry reviewed the results of new modeling of the plan. The Forest Trust Land Advisory Committee, which participated in a facilitated discussion with the board about the results, reviewed the modeling last week. …Jim Kelly, the chairman of the Board of Forestry, said the question about whether the plan gives away too much land to conservation has been a challenge.

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“Landless” legislation passes committee for the first time in history

By Hannah Flor
KFSK Community Radio Alaska
December 15, 2023
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

ALASKA — “Landless” legislation passed a new milestone on December 14 after winning approval of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources committee. The bill still has a long way to go to become law. But if it does, it would return land to the original occupants of five Alaska Native communities in Southeast Alaska. Those communities were left out of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of 1971. Senator Lisa Murkowski, who sponsored the bill, said in a statement that the omission was “hampering their ability to support development and opportunity while protecting their traditional ways of life. Alaskans have been trying to right this wrong for 51 years.” ANCSA put millions of acres of land in the control of more than 200 newly formed local and regional Alaska Native corporations. …Opponents have voiced concerns that the new corporations would log their land, clearcutting swaths of what had been the Tongass National Forest.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Researcher: Managed forests needed to fight climate change

By Brian Gawley
Sequim Gazette
December 20, 2023
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

Edie Sonne Hall

Wood products and managed forests are necessary for climate mitigation, a 20-year forest management researcher told the Clallam County commissioners. Dr. Edie Sonne Hall of Three Trees Consulting in Seattle gave a presentation Nov. 27 on the role of forest management in climate mitigation. She was invited by commissioner Randy Johnson as part of the commissioners’ ongoing focus on timber harvest issues. …Hall has more than 20 years of experience and connections developing sustainable forestry strategies and policies at the state, regional, national and international levels. She has a Ph.D. in forestry from the University of Washington, where she specialized in forest carbon accounting and life cycle assessment, and a bachelor of science degree in biology from Yale University. …“We have a growing population and we have non-renewable resources,” she said. “There’s real climate benefits to using renewable resources.”

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Scientists might be using a flawed strategy to predict how species will fare under climate change

By Mikayla Mace Kelley, University Communications
University of Arizona
December 18, 2023
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: United States, US West

For decades, scientists have used the space-for-time substitution to predict how a species will fare in climate change. But according to new research, that method might be producing results that are misleading or wrong. University of Arizona researchers found the method failed to accurately predict how ponderosa pine has responded to the last several decades of warming. This implies that other research relying on space-for-time substitution may not accurately reflect how species will respond to climate change over the next several decades. The team found that ponderosa pine trees grow at a faster rate at warmer locations. Under the space-for-time substitution paradigm, then, this suggests that as the climate warms at the cool edge of distribution, things should be getting better. But when the team used tree rings to assess response to changes in temperature, they found the trees were consistently negatively impacted by temperature variability.

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Health & Safety

A known carcinogen is showing up in wildfire ash, and researchers are worried

By Joe Hernandez
National Public Radio
December 19, 2023
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

CALIFORNIA — It’s widely known that wildfire smoke is bad for your health, but a group of researchers recently found a known carcinogen in California wildfire ash, raising concerns about just how harmful it could be to breathe the air near a blaze. According to a study in Nature Communications, researchers discovered dangerous levels of hexavalent chromium in samples of ash left behind by the Kincade and Hennessey fires in 2019 and 2020. Workers in the manufacturing industry who’ve been exposed to elevated levels of hexavalent chromium, or chromium 6, have higher rates of lung cancer, according to the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. …Though the researchers only found hexavalent chromium in samples of wildfire ash and not wildfire smoke itself, Scott Fendorf said they inferred that it was likely also present in the smoke. …Hexavalent chromium is also known as the “Erin Brockovich chemical,” from the film starring Julia Roberts.

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