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>Front page, above the fold. Paul
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>Redwood logging plan criticized By Robert Salladay EXAMINER CAPITOL BUREAU
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>Wednesday, December 2, 1998
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>SACRAMENTO - A respected federal scientist says the environmental plan
designed to protect the Headwaters Forest from loggers is inadequate and
will cause more mudslides and the probable elimination of a run of
endangered coho salmon.
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>Leslie M. Reid, who works for the U.S. Forest Service, warns in a report
to be made public Wednesday that logging of the Humboldt County forest by
Pacific Lumber could strip away vital vegetation that protects streams from
erosion and provides cool waters for the dwindling numbers of coho.
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>Reid's report, which was requested by U.S. Rep. George Miller, D-Martinez,
is being touted by environmentalists who want to scuttle an agreement with
Pacific Lumber over the fate of the Headwaters Forest, the last privately
owned, pristine, old-growth redwood forest in the world.
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>Along with Reid's report, environmental groups have gathered some allies
in their fight: Humboldt County residents worried that continued logging by
Pacific Lumber will cause ruinous mudslides and foul their drinking water.
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>Some Stafford residents have already sued Pacific Lumber over a New Year's
1997 mudslide that crashed down a clear-cut hillside and destroyed 10 houses.
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>"We have been trying to say, "Stop, already,' " said Nona Kraus, 69, who
lives near Eureka on 15 acres across a road from the north fork of the Elk
River. "(Logging) is really doing a lot of damage to the stream. It has
absolutely destroyed the fishery in the north fork. They have slide after
slide after slide. The value of our property is declining, along with the
water quality."
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>The hard-fought Headwaters deal calls for taxpayers to spend $480 million
to buy and permanently preserve about 10,000 acres of redwood groves owned
by Maxxam Inc., which owns Pacific Lumber and is controlled by financier
Charles Hurwitz.
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>Wrapped up in the deal is an environmental plan covering about 180,000
acres surrounding the new Headwaters preserve. That plan is being
scrutinized by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Marine
Fisheries Service, but it has powerful supporters, including President
Clinton, U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., Gov. Wilson and the
Legislature, making it unlikely the plan will be altered.
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>Now comes Reid's report, which is highly critical of the environmental
protections the plan promises. Reid, who prepared the report for Miller and
the Environmental Protection Agency, is an expert on logging erosion and
has worked for 20 years with fisheries biologists.
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>In a letter to Miller, she wrote:
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>*The Pacific Lumber environmental plan is not strong enough to prevent
logging-related landslides, particularly near small streams. The plan will
"decrease the likelihood of survival of any coho salmon migrating through"
erosion-choked streams.
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>*The agreement does not allow for sufficient amounts of woody debris to
collect downstream. For coho salmon and other species to survive, cooling
shade is needed to cover streams and filter debris as it travels.
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>*Unless the plan is changed, mudslides will cause "increasing damage to
downstream properties and infrastructure, destroying salmon (spawning
grounds) and newly hatched fry, and increasing rates of downstream bank
erosion and stream-side landsliding."
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>*Because the plan protects Pacific Lumber from liability, "American
taxpayers would become fiscally responsible for addressing" any problems
that come up after the plan is approved.
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>But Pacific Lumber questions Reid's fairness, and points to other
scientists who have praised the environmental plan. Company President and
CEO John Campbell said Pacific Lumber had agreed to study and find ways to
correct erosion problems over the next five years and, in the meantime,
will not log within 100 feet of large streams and 30 feet of smaller streams.
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>"We recognize Dr. Reid is a good scientist," Campbell said Tuesday, "but
we're disappointed she appears to have abandoned her scientific objectivity
in this review. . . . I think on this particular review, it's important to
understand that this is the opinion of just a few scientists."
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>Reid did not immediately return a message left at her Arcata office.
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>Environmental groups hope that by enlisting Humboldt County residents they
can persuade federal authorities to reconsider Pacific Lumber's
environmental plan.
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>The logging company, which has been cited by state forestry officials for
134 violations since 1996, was cited again in September for continually
running heavy logging equipment through a large stream, said Karen Terrill,
a spokeswoman for the state Department of Forestry, which recently
suspended Pacific Lumber's logging license until at least Jan. 1.
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>Residents and environmentalists worry about additional violations under
the new Headwaters agreement.
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>"It's very real," said Paul Mason, president of the Garberville-based
Environmental Protection Information Center. "The claims that logging
doesn't have an impact on watershed are hollow. People who have lived at
the bases of these watersheds for 50 or 60 years have seen the shape of the
stream change from being a narrow, deep channel to being filled with silt."
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>Nona Kraus' husband, Ralph Kraus, 71, says he's seen the Elk River rise
significantly in just hours when it used to take days, and their water
quality decline. "Our domestic water supply has been ruined," said Kraus, a
40-year Eureka resident and former science teacher. "Even in the winter, it
has a distinct taste of rotting vegetation."
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