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Preventing natural forest fires (and logging) not the greenest idea The Dalles
Chronicle June 18, 2009 editorial That’s what Curtis Qual, the Forest Service’s partnership and stewardship coordinator for the Malheur National Forest, told The Oregonian.. “Not only are we going to have fires, we’ll have bigger fires that are not just going to take out our environment, but maybe a town, too.”Reporter Amy Hsuan also talked with Diane Vosick, restoration program director for The Nature Conservancy, which is working to save Malheur Lumber, which operates the last lumber mill in Grant County. Vosick said she had worked in Arizona to actually bring mills back to life after they had shut down. That’s because maintaining forests is prohibitively expensive for the Forest Service without a mill nearby to process the logs, and wood waste goes to landfills.That’s right, landfills — and that’s waste, pure and simple, no matter what side of the political spectrum you’re on. Not only has the closing of the mills been an economic disaster for Oregon, it’s also been a waste of human potential andClean up the dangerous underbrush in national forests, Use contractors to put Oregonians back to work in the woods, andUse the harvested material as biomass to generate electricity... Unfortunately, some environmental groups, notably the Natural Resource Defense Council, have been adamantly opposed to classifying biomass as a renewable energy resource. You’d think it grew on trees or something.
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