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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 9, 2006
Contact:
Paul Hughes, executive director: (415) 974-4201; paul@forestsforever.org
Marc Lecard, communications manager: (415) 974-4202; marc@forestsforever.org
Rep.
Anna Eshoo introduces Act to Save America’s Forests
Measure would put Sequoia National Monument under Park Service
The Act to Save America’s Forests (H.R. 6237) was introduced
on Sept. 27 by Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-Atherton) in the House of Representatives.
The bill would, among other things, make the National Park Service
the administrator of Giant Sequoia National Monument, removing it
from the management of the U.S. Forest Service.
A companion bill, S. 1897 was introduced in the Senate by Sens.
Jon Corzine (D-NJ) and Christopher Dodd (D-CT) on Oct. 19, 2005.
Recent court decisions have shut down the Forest Service’s
logging plans in the monument, home to more than half of the world’s
remaining giant sequoia groves, but the agency will certainly come
up with new plans as destructive as the ones thrown out in court
unless the big trees are taken out of its hands.
“The Forest Service record shows that they plan to take timber
out of the monument, regardless of negative effects on wildlife
and the big trees themselves,” said Paul Hughes, executive
director of Forests Forever, an environmental organization in San
Francisco dedicated to protecting the forests of California.
The 327,769-acre Giant Sequoia National Monument in the southern
Sierra was established by President Bill Clinton’s proclamation
in 2000. The decree explicitly banned logging in the monument, though
projects already authorized were allowed to continue for two years.
The Forest Service has repeatedly extended this deadline, until
recent court decisions halted the remaining projects.
“One way to end the legal wrangling with the Forest Service
over its timber projects is to take the monument away from them
permanently,” Hughes said. “This bill would accomplish
that.”
The Forest Service claims that logging is needed to thin the forest
and “preserve the ecosystem” in the monument. Yet the
Park Service, which manages the adjacent Sequoia National Park,
has eschewed logging as a management technique, using prescribed
fire to maintain its sequoia groves very successfully.
In addition to placing the monument under the Park Service, the
Act to Save America’s Forests would end clearcutting on all
federal lands and stop logging and roadbuilding in the last wild
roadless forests. It would require federal forest agencies to restore
native biological diversity and protect old growth and roadless
areas.
Forests Forever has campaigned for more than ten months in support
of the Act to Save America’s Forests, H.R. 6237/S. 1897.
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