Oregon Public
Broadcast June 8, 2006
Forest Service Head
Says Biscuit Salvage Sale Will
Happen
By Ley
Garnett
(FOLLOWED
BY:
Environmental Groups Sue To Stop
Biscuit Salvage Sale)
PORTLAND, OR 2006-06-08 The top Bush
administration official in charge of
the US Forest Service says
environmentalists have held up
timber sales in the Biscuit Fire
area in southwest Oregon for four
years.
Mark Rey says that's why a timber
sale is up for bid Friday for trees
in a roadless area of the Biscuit
Fire.
He says the government offered
environmentalists a compromise two
years ago that wasn't accepted. And
now he says the Ninth US Circuit
Court of Appeals has ruled in favor
of the federal government's position
on Biscuit timber sales.
Mark Rey: "So this is a case where a
good faith negotiation failed. The
plaintiffs thought they could
prevail in stopping virtually all
harvesting in both the roadless and
most of the roaded areas and that's
not what the courts decided."
Oregon Governor Ted Kulongoski says
the roadless sale violates a promise
made by Mark Rey and the Bush
administration.
Rey says he has a different
recollection of his discussions with
the Governor, who's running for
reelection.
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Environmental Groups
Sue To Stop Biscuit Salvage Sale
By Ley
Garnett, OPB
PORTLAND, OR 2006-06-08
Environmental groups have filed a
new lawsuit hoping to stop logging
in a roadless area where the Biscuit
Fire burned four years ago in
southwest Oregon.
On Wednesday a federal judge in
Medford will consider their request
for a temporary restraining order.
Josh Laughlin is with the Cascadia
Wildlands Project.
Josh Laughlin: "We believe that
there's significant new information
that has arisen that the Forest
Service and the Bush Administration
has failed to analyze. And by law
they need to do that before they can
proceed with a project like this."
Laughlin says the new information
includes the Donato study by an
Oregon State graduate student that
says logging in the Biscuit has
destroyed natural regeneration of
the forest.
The Forest Service says it will go
ahead with an auction of the Mike's
Gulch timber sale Friday but won't
sign a contract until after
Wednesday's court hearing.
Wednesday in a separate lawsuit, the
Ninth US Circuit Court of Appeals
denied an emergency injunction aimed
at preventing timber sales in
roadless areas.
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