Joint fuel reduction project in Mont. starts after 3-year delay PDF Print E-mail
After a three-year delay, national forest land outside Missoula, Mont., will be treated to reduce the risk of unnaturally intense wildfires under an unusual partnership among federal land managers, environmentalists and loggers.

Starting next week, hundreds of acres in Lolo National Forest's Sawmill Gulch will be thinned, about half using special environmentally sensitive equipment.

Overcrowded stands of ponderosa pine, Douglas fir and western larch -- the legacy of more than a century of fire suppression -- pose a major fire risk, with hundreds of homes nearby.

After catastrophic, tree-top scorching wildfires burned through the area in the summer of 2003, local members of the Sierra Club and the Society of American Foresters begin to talk about what could be done to reduce fuel loads in the forest.

The following year, in collaboration with the Forest Service, they came up with a plan to thin 754 acres, remove brush in the understory and keep new growth at bay with prescribed fires.

But a lawsuit over a separate but similar project prompted the Forest Service to delay implementation of the work at Sawmill Gulch, out of concern that the lawsuit could result in a legal precedent that would hamstring the project. It was also stymied by a lack of bids on the thinning contract.

Not named in suit

The lawsuit is still in the courts, but the Forest Service decided to move forward with the Sawmill Gulch project because it was not specifically named in the suit and there was support from both environmental groups and industry to proceed. Tricon Timber, a local mill that uses small-diameter wood to make tongue-and-groove flooring, signed on to take the wood and oversee thinning.

"Private citizens and companies stepped up to make this project happen," said Matt Arno, a local forester who hatched the idea with the Sierra Club's Bob Clark when Arno was president of the Montana chapter of the Society of American Foresters.

The project, which will be conducted over five years, will reduce the number of trees by up to 50 percent in the treatment area. All of the mechanical treatments will be within 1,800 feet of residential property, said Bob Clark of the Sierra Club's Bitterroot Mission chapter in Missoula.

Thinning to remove the trees -- mostly the spindly, small-diameter trees that have grown in the absence of fire -- will be done in the winter, when the ground is frozen, and summer, when the ground is dry, to minimize impacts, said Steve Clark, a Forest Service timber management staffer. Tricon Timber has agreed not to remove trees larger than 21 inches in diameter, he said.

About 98 acres of the project will be thinned using a special, low-impact logging machine that cuts a tree at its base, then shears off the limbs and crown, and hauls out the logs. Another 80 acres of the project area will be thinned using traditional "whole-tree yarding," involving heavy skidder equipment, the Forest Service's Clark said. The rest will be hand-thinned by crews on foot, due to the inaccessibility of those tracts, he added.

Bob Clark of the Sierra Club said he is happy with the project's design and hopes the process behind it can be a model for other communities facing the daunting task of clearing fuels in the wildland-urban interface, where forest meets city.

"It exemplifies common ground between nontraditional partners on natural resource issues," Clark said.

Arno agreed, adding that the project is better-designed and "less likely to be appealed" because of the collaboration among different interests.

"Maybe it's time for people to take a deep breath and start working together instead of being contrary about it," added the Forest Service's Steve Clark.

He noted that the project, with its emphasis on reducing environmental impacts using special logging equipment, would be more expensive than traditional thinning projects. Bob Clark of the Sierra Club called it "almost a community service for the contractor" but believes the added cost is worth it to reduce damage to the forest floor.

Volunteers have cleared a few acres of brush, but an access road needs to be stabilized before thinning equipment can be brought in, Clark of the Forest Service said. The initial 98-acre, low-impact portion of the project is scheduled to begin within the next few weeks.
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 14 November 2007 )
 

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