By Bill Schneider, 11-28-08
For four years, I’ve been writing about what I’ve coined the “Wilderness Drought,” 25 years of frustration and infighting since we’ve seen a single acre of Wilderness designated in Montana. Now, several mainstream groups have joined forces with representatives of the wood products industry in a grand attempt to end it.
The political reality of today requires this collaborative, “bottom-up” approach because politicians are so gun-shy about Wilderness legislation. They only want lay-ups with all stakeholders already on board, which is the motivation behind this upcoming legislation. After decades of nothing, Montana wilderness advocates have decided to play the new, quid pro quo game to have some chance of success.
Regrettably, this flawed bill looks more like a half-court shot for our congressional delegation and could extend instead of end the Wilderness Drought.
You have to admire the effort. After years of hard work, thousands of miles of driving, and many dozens of meetings with agencies, timber mills, bike clubs, county commissions, three mainstream green groups (Montana Wilderness Association, Montana Trout Unlimited and National Wildlife Federation) and five leaders of the wood products industry (Sun Mountain, Pyramid Mountain, Roseburg Lumber, RY Lumber, Smurfit-Stone) developed the Beaverhead-Deerlodge Partnership (BDP) and then drafted the Beaverhead-Deerlodge Conservation, Restoration and Stewardship Act (note the absence of the word, “Wilderness"). This bill was written two years ago, but still has not been introduced. Now, the BDP partners are pressuring the delegation to go for it when the 111th Congress opens for business in January.
That still gives us enough time to fix the bill’s shortcomings and turn a good idea into legislation most wilderness advocates can support, but will this happen? Hopefully, but I’m not going to hold my breath for this to happen.
At this point, the partners seem locked into the current plan, even though everybody is not on board, to say the least. Many pro-wilderness groups oppose the current version of the bill, as do mountain bikers, plus all the usual anti-wilderness suspects--the motorized recreation industry, miners and other “single users,” and some segments of the timber industry.
So what does the BDP bill do? In short, a lot, but most significantly, it would:
The Sapphires and West Pioneers get capital letters because these aren’t your run-of-the-mill roadless lands. Both are protected under the S. 393, the Montana Wilderness Study Act, passed in 1977, when Montana had Mike Mansfield and Lee Metcalf in the Senate--and sadly, a year before Metcalf passed away and Mansfield retired.
Perhaps the most significant clause in S. 393 is Section 3(a), which states: “…The wilderness study areas shall, until Congress determines otherwise, be administered by the Secretary of Agriculture so as to maintain their presently existing wilderness character and potential for inclusion in the National Wilderness Preservation System.”
Amazingly, 31 years ago and unknown to many people, this so-called “interim protection” clause essentially made Wilderness out of the nine wild lands. If the BDP bill passes, we’ll be down to seven, which makes the BDP bill white-hot controversial among wildernuts who believe it sets a horrific precedent of, in essence, “undesignating” Wilderness.
I’ve been around a long time and actually lobbied for S.393 on behalf of the Montana Wilderness Association (MWA). I know the spirit and intent of this bill was that these nine areas would become Wilderness, but they would be studied first to determine the exact boundaries. I had the personal honor of meeting Lee Metcalf, and I suspect he’d roll over in his grave if he knew the MWA supported logging most of two of the largest, choicest WSAs in S.393.
In the BDP bill, only the highest, rockiest, non-timber-producing core of the 151,000-acre West Pioneers WSA becomes a 34,000-acre Wilderness with the rest going to the timber industry for “stewardship” logging. Ditto for the 94,000-acre Sapphire WSA, which the bill slashes into the 43,000-acre Sapphire Wilderness.
Another key tract of wild land, the West Big Hole (not included in S. 393 but should have been) suffers the same fate. The 150,000-acre roadless area becomes a 92,000-acre Wilderness.
In all three cases, the lower, flatter, more productive, timber-growing sites, the best wildlife habitat and hunting land, goes to the timber industry and the high-altitude, often treeless country--or the “rocks and ice” to opponents--that rarely is threatened with development becomes Wilderness.
Because of this loss of key roadless land, many Wilderness groups oppose the BDP bill as written. Consequently, it has done nothing but intensify the already intense impasse between Montana green groups, which has contributed heavily to--if not caused--the Wilderness Drought.
While on the MWA Council, I also worked on the last Wilderness designation in Montana, the Lee Metcalf Wilderness, passed in 1983, 25 years ago. Since then, green groups have been locked in a bitter death grip over how to proceed and contributed to Montana’s delegation being either opposed to or uninterested in any Wilderness bill.
Revising the BDP bill to fully protect the Sapphires and West Pioneers and more of the West Big Hole would make it much less controversial and more appealing to the congressional delegation--and get most of the wilderness community on the same page, for once!
I support the quid pro quo approach, but not when it gives up three spectacular de facto wilderness areas, especially when two of them already have been protected by an Act of Congress. As far as I’m concerned, this is no different than wilderness advocates giving away part of the Bob Marshal or Absaroka-Beartooth. Hopefully, BDP partners will see this way before it’s too late.
Click here for a Powerpoint presentation on the BDP.
Click here for contact info and links to all BDP partners.
Click here for related articles on Montana’s Wilderness Drought
By and large, I think Bill's analysis is a bull's-eye. But I'd add on thing that always enters the passions of debate about wilderness designation : jobs, namely logging jobs.
Like many others, including Bill, it has repeatedly occurred to me that the logging jobs promised for the past quarter century were not sustainable. That is, they'd come and go. Way back when the Forest Plans started coming out in the 1980s, old hands in the environmental community were warning that the level of logging being proposed was not sustainable, and I wondered then why labor and the politicians were, without saying so, supported a logging and jobs boom that would bring Montana and other western states' communities to a bust.
Well, the '80s were certainly a period of boom, including a nationwide construction boom that began with a loosening of lending and logging standards, and ended with a crash that became known as the S&Ls;debacle and taxpayer bailout of the finance industry. And, of course, it also delivered a sudden loss of western states' logging jobs, jobs that were promised to deliver prosperity to local communities.
These job losses were foreseeable, and foreseen. For example, in its Autumn 1984 issue, the Montana Business Quarterly reported that the heavy harvest of large-diameter trees found in old growth forests would result in the loss of 1,000 to 3,000 jobs in the woods, and would thereby strip $20 million to $60 million of labor spending out of the very communities that were counting on that money. And that's roughly how things turned out. By 1987, the U of Montana's Bureau of Business and Economic Research could report that logs were coming off Montana mountainsides at record levels. I don't have the data close at hand, but someone more diligent than I shouldn't have a lot of trouble finding a late 1980s or early 1990s Flathead County report that a big chunk of the county's unemployment could be chalked up to loss of jobs for fellers and limbers.
My bias toward labor led me to conclude then that the rank and file of the logging industry got hung out to swing in the wind. And the history of logging since the '80s has firmed my concern. I'd really hate to see it happen again, and not least because it would be yet another case of jobs and forests both chopped for the sake of making temporary work, when less cutting would stretch the jobs base out over a longer period of time.
Lance
"Sacrifice more than 200,000 aces of roadless wild land to timber management." Over how many years? We burn far more than that many years and no one is requried to go in a plant a mix of species or protect riparian areas. How many areas are you ready to sacrifice to burning with no restoration?
Comment By Lance Olsen, 11-28-08Becky
You ask, "How many areas are you ready to sacrifice to burning with no restoration?"
You may have noticed that lodgepole burned in the 1988 Yellowstone fires have restored themselves, without cash outlay by the taxpayer. You may have seen much the same self-restoration of forest that was burned in another fire of the '80s -- inside the Bob Marshall Wilderness.
Long before either of those fires, glaciers snapped off trees galore as they moved down the Rockies, and forests bounced back without help as the glaciers retreated. And in the centuries between the glacial retreat and the post-fire recovery of today, forests grew and thrived without the capital-intensive kind of management called "restoration" today.
That said, rising pressure from climate-driven seems to be making claims of restoration less plausible than in the past. Like recovery after fire, recovery after management action is under strong restraint by increasing heat and drought. For example, a heat-driven dieoff of pines in New Mexico took place 50 years ago, and the foresters watching the area say the pines there show no sign of recovery after these 50 years.
And those lodgepole pines will burn again and again until there aren't enough nutrients in the soil for them to grow for quite some time. Why not log and replant with species appropriate for our current climate conditions. How much after-fire erosion are you willing stand? How many noxious weeds?
Comment By Lance Olsen, 11-28-08Becky
You ask "Why not log and replant with species appropriate for our current climate conditions?"
You're getting close to something recently suggested by CIFOR, the Jakarta-based forestry group. And close to something that might find the two of us in agreement.
I say "close" partly because our current climate conditions can't last, and will become more severe. So, when CIFOR released its very recent report on adapting forest management to the next rounds of cimate change, it suggested replanting but not with the species currently found at present day locations.
I also say you're close because this sort of management planning is only in the early stages of thinking, not settled science, and would be pretty much an experimental thing. But I think it's well worth trying, certainly not everywhere, but certainly on at least some of the acreage we've already logged. After all, if the assumption is that we really can extract wood on a sustainable level, the proving grounds are on the grounds we've already logged.
Sustainability is a key question here, including sustainable jobs.
So far, we've seen that lands where timber was available for logging -- and cut -- in the '80s has not produced lasting flow or jobs; timber available in the '80s is gone, and plenty of jobs with it.
I woudn't support logging pushed into fresh ground -- roadless country -- until the industry side can show me that it can manage sustainably on the ground it's already had made available to it. On that ground, I see real opportunity for ideas like replanting with tree species that stand a chance under new climate conditions.
Are there details in need of sorting out? Sure. But there's a lot of acreage out there that's already been cut, and that's where the real action is going to be.
i think this year would be an excellent time for Schweitzer, baucus and tester to put their heads together and pass a statewide wilderness bill that tells the country we are serious about protecting Montana. i think that trout unlimited and wildlife interests are to be commended for working on this compact and that many of the components herein are useful to pursue consideration of a statewide omnimbus wilderness bill, i think it reflects a different political era and is way too conciliatory to mining and timber interests. the current political climate augers well for a much more protective bill- one that finally puts us on the map as THE state serious about protecting our wildlife and watersheds.
Comment By Mike, 11-28-08This is always a very interesting discussion. However, due to the Obama landslide and mandate, the aspects of the bill calling for the opening of roadless areas will be have to be removed.
In the meantime, congress will be working to just pass NREPA and this will be a moot point. Let's hope this happens.
Passage of NREPA will be a crucial advance in Western forest, fish, wildlife, and economic policy. Among other things important to western communities of every size, it will leave the timber industry and associated conservation organization plenty of opportunity to prove that they can really achieve sustainable logging -- and provide a sustainable jobs base -- on the acreage that has already been cut. That's a change we can all welcome.
Comment By jed, 11-30-08Sounds like tree farming rearing its head under becky's handle...
Comment By Lance Olsen, 11-30-08I see some room for tree farming. The big risk, though, is that it might be promoted as a one-size-fits-all, do-it-on-every-acre scheme. My own take is that it's best left out of the national public forests, and especially left out of what's left of the roadless acreage there.
It probably has a best economic and ecological fit on private lands. And it would likely work best there if public forests weren't used to dump lots of wood on the market, in effect competing unfairly with private landowners who might want to try for a sustainable commercial plantation.
Bill, I became involved in this proposal very early,testified and also sent in two letters to the USFS on it. This so-called plan started out as a hoax and still is. It's a trade off of public resources(ILLEGAL UNDER THE LAWS) and loss of wildlife habitat and public land access. The process was illegal and I told the USFS just that.Only the US Congress can make a decision on wilderness. Each wilderness area must recieve and EIS as well. Ramsey in Dillon cannot make a wilderness decision.The wilderness proposals will result in 1000's of acres of our public land off limits to public land access and hunting with no access,no hunting.Cowboy Heaven wilderness proposal was custom designed for Ted Turner as well. In my view we have too much public land locked up in wilderness already. With the NWF involved everyone should be suspicious nearly 100% anti-hunting.We can barely get into the Lee Metcalf wilderness Area. Turner has most all the access locked up.The USFS did not even mention the wolf problem and impacts on elk and other species as well in all their 'office wisdom'.
The other part of the plan is to exploit our wildlife habitat. Don't you find it unusual that the Montana Cooperative Elk-Logging research recommendations are not even mentioned? Nothing on habitat of mule deer,wild sheep,bear, and many other species.The USFS also violated Title 18 USC The False Statements Act..a felony.This plan should die a fast death and never see the light of day, it's a hoax.The USFS could manage timber now under current laws if they wanted to without this rediculous plan.Don't be led down primrose path that there is something in this plan for wildlife,public land access and hunting. Trade offs of public land resources is illegal and I finally got the USFS to admit it.This plan should go to the recycle center and a total waste of our taxpaying dollars.
Jack, with all due respect your post didn't really make any sense and contained several erros:
1. Wilderness areas allow hunting
2. Wilderness areas allow public access
3. Ted Turner does not own USFS land and has no say in blocking any established USFS access routes.
While I may not agree with parts of this plan, I do fully support wilderness protection.
Fire and beetles are part of a natural cycle for lodgepole pine forests. Logging can make a tiny dent in the burned timber. Logging CANNOT halt fire or beetles. As other commentors have pointed out, a forest needs no help from humans to sustain & manage itself. Most of what we do simply creates more problems.
A HUGE problem with the proposed Beaverhead-Deerlodge Partnership Plan: it whacks the Big Hole with the bulk of the logging. At risk: elk security, sediment runoff & native fishes (grayling & cutthroat), and scenic views around popular campgrounds.
The proposed Big Hole clear cuts need to be reduced by about 100,000 acres per year--perhaps this acreage to be clear cut can be shifted to the West Madison. Oh no, I forgot: the Greater Yellowstone Coalition won't allow that. Too bad the Partnership folks didn't ask Butte activists about clearcutting the Big Hole.
It would be enormously embarrassing to Senator Tester for a Wilderness Bill to go down in flames because it is opposed by Butte-area environmentalists.
The Partnership Plan (catchy title) was flawed from the beginning and now more than ever it should be abandoned. With construction at a virtual standstill the timber industry is in the crapper again. This Plan was never self supporting as touted by MWF, NWF, TU, and MWA and with the current price of timber it will require taxpayer subsidies to fulfill the obligations of the Plan. Construction, thus timber prices will not be going up for years. This is just one of many elements of this Plan that is a fallacy to sell out prime Montana Public own forest.
Jack, you should be pleased to know that Bush on his way out the door has declared that the U.S. Forest Service will no longer be allowed to transplant Bighorn Sheep on Public Lands. Just think of all the prime Bighorn Sheep habitat there is in the B-D Forest, NOW all off limits to native Bighorn Sheep. You can thank the Helle’s (big domestic/public lands welfare grazer) and the American Sheep Council for their support of this privatization of our Public Lands in the name of grazing. Which many welfare ranchers mistake as a right and not the legal privilege it is.
Ask NWF, MWF, and TU how their Plan covers grazing on the B-D and who is going to pay to buy out the privileged. This is no way to protect one of the last best places of Montana
Timothy, politics is the art of compromise (and a lot like making sausage), which is why we get only "ice & rocks" in most wilderness bills (and many good people don't want to be involved). The Partnership Plan was conceived by a bunch of good people that worked very hard at it.
But the Plan needs to be modified in some respects in order to gain grassroots support, especially among those most likely to be strong supporters. As you point out, the recession has wiped out the "timber economy" for the foreseeable future. That leaves wilderness activists, elk hunters, etc to support the bill.
Let's get the best bill we can. EcoRover blog http://ecorover.blogspot.com
EcoRover, the Partnership Plan is a sell-out of wilderness, fish and wildlife. The Plan is not fixable and putting lipstick on the pig will not help. If you truly want the best bill then start with NREPA work from there.
Comment By Dave Skinner, 12-02-08The BDP deserves to die. The science was there to show that much of the landscape deserved management by other than fire, and deserved better than to be placed into wilderness.
The Metcalf bill called for a STUDY of wilderness designation, but again, it seems that anything STUDIED is automatically supposed to be wilderness by the lights of the wilderniks...who have one way of looking at the land, and only one.
The Partnership was a "give us our wilderness, hose everyone else, and we'll not sue your logging to a standstill" kind of deal, yet the language has no prohibitions against other parties monkeywrenching the economic portions. It's all front-loaded wilderness designation, and there's no guarantee that wood will be available -- no matter the market. So Sherm's mill dies anyway, the wilderness happens, and the affected counties are reduced to selling necklaces and condos.
Perfect.
the politics and economics of the country have changed so much since the BDP was hammered out that i doubt if any of the parties involved thinks there is a snowball's chance in hell of this moving forward. Conrad Burns is gone. Bush is fading away like inspector dreyfuss from return of the pink panther when he accidentally turned the laser on himself. everything is different now, and wilderness supporters are waking up like slumbering bears from a long 8 year hibernation and we are hungry for protecting these lands from any more degradation.
if you like to fish, wilderness is the best way to ensure good watersheds. if you like to hunt elk, wilderness is the only way to insure good calving grounds. if you just like to drink clean water and breathe clean air then wilderness is the best option for all roadless lands in Montana. it is going to surprise many people how much support for wilderness there is out here. we have been sleeping through the Bush years but we are awake now and the time is right for a truly comprehensive wilderness bill for montana in 2009. Montana is as good as it gets right now- and that is pretty good. but, if we miss the opportunity to protect these areas now it can only go downhill.
as my logger uncle said at a wilderness hearing years ago "if these lands were worth anything for timber, believe me, we would have logged it by now. leave it alone. it don't cost anything and we get way more value out of those areas from wildlife and clean water. leave it alone..." real conservationists like my uncle who used to work in the woods for a living knew how valuable roadless lands were to the health of the forest. there is little enough left. it is time to protect them all.
I agree with problembear that we need new Wilderness in Montana, and I don't like George W. Bush's policies either. However, I don't see exactly how he is the reason for the 25 year Montana "Wilderness Drought". On http://www.wilderness.net/ you can see that there were 42 new wilderness areas designated since 2002, just none of them in Montana. Also, wilderness designations are passed by Congress, and I haven't been able to find any incident where W vetoed a wilderness designation. If Wilderness advocates were in hibernation (it looked more like infighting to me) the last 8 years, they have only themselves to blame.
Comment By problembear, 12-03-08when the truck is up to it's axles in gumbo lukas, it doesn't do a lot of good to spin your wheels. between judy martz (remember that brian has only been guv for 2 years) conrad burns (tester 2 years) and rehberg there was no chance of ever even trying a serious bid at a wilderness bill. bush was a huge obstruction also.
now the political landscape bodes well for lots of good things to happen. why not a comprehensive wilderness bill that really sends the message that montana is serious about protecting our most important watersheds and wildlife habitat for future generations.
infighting was really only the ability of savvy right wing republican politicians and their aides playing wilderness groups for fools. and boy did it work. totally new atmosphere now with brian, tester and the new congress. and max was just being max. he can't help it. i think pat williams can talk some sense into max now that obama is prez. the politics was just not there then. it is now if the leaders of the various groups can set aside ego long enough to agree that we don't have to pander to timber industry now (dead) and nobody likes the mining industry anymore after cleaning up their mess for the last 100 years, and finally we don't have to listen to congressional aides trying to play one group against another group to try to get us to compromise way before it is necessary. it will take a lot of beer but i think we can get the mwa and awr together to form an alliance and agree that the last acres of wild land left is little enough to save. that's why.
I thought this was a about BDNF now its all roadless areas . Oh wait I forgot this is New West the abosolutley lamest western blog ever. Ripe full of brainwashed UM enviro grads with nothing better to do like their professors told them. New West where the readers do nothing but hike and birdwatch and maybe in Wild Bills case ride your mountain bike on paved roads only. Because the woods are not for anything else in the New West.
I love it when roadless areas burn right through Salmon and Steelhead habitat and full the stream with silt and mud. Talk about clean water!! I love to go in wilderness areas outside of Bozeman and hike and see the trails unmaintained and mostly a pain in the ass the hike on. Full of downfall and the like.
Good luck trying to do that in Montana once they figure out Problembear wants to end recreation. It might be purple but it aint green dood. So take your MWA AWR rhetoric spin it sideways and stick it sraight where only your boyfriend goes!
sounds like some timber beast woke up on the wrong side of the coffin today. i work in a warehouse and have no degree but thanks for stopping by and gosh darn it, toothless, we'll see about that spin you're talking about as soon as i get off this forklift after loading this semi. please post again soon because you are endearing yourself and really shining a good light on that demographic of homophobic, ignorant rabble you represent.
see you at the congressional field hearings next fall, fella. we'll see how that type of talk goes over with tester and baucus. i try to be bigger than annoying gnats like yourself so you'll excuse me if i ignore whatever meaningless aimless hate filled babble you spout next.
The author's view fits closely with my perspective. I could get behind the wilderness bill if its language that allows for pillaging huge swaths of roadless terrain, particularly in the West Big Hole and West Pioneers, was deleted. The growth-driven "enviro" groups behind this bill should get their due for compromising away hundreds of thousands of acres of vital wildlife and aquatic habitat. It seems they're more interested in sound-bite advertising than protecting ecological systems. I see Trout Unlimited is also willing to sell out vital stream flows to irrigators for a dam removal agreement on the Klamath River, supposedly for salmon restoration. "Wilderness" and "dam removal" can make for sexy headlines and with lazy journalism and a sound bite society, crucial details might get swept under the carpet and future generations end up with a depleted natural world. But I see a new day dawning where consciousness will prevail.
Comment By Lukas Geyer, 12-04-08toothless wrote: "New West where the readers do nothing but hike and birdwatch and maybe in Wild Bills case ride your mountain bike on paved roads only. Because the woods are not for anything else in the New West. [...] I love to go in wilderness areas outside of Bozeman and hike and see the trails unmaintained and mostly a pain in the ass the hike on. Full of downfall and the like."
I find it unfortunate that mountain bikes are not allowed in Wilderness areas, but nobody is proposing to turn every acre of roadless area into Wilderness, there will always be enough mountain bike trails left. I'd rather give up a mountain bike trail than see wild areas destroyed by off-trail ATV use, oil and gas exploration etc.
OK, now let's see your second claim about "Wilderness areas outside Bozeman". First of all, there aren't any within 20 miles. Within 30 miles there is the Spanish Peaks and Beartrap Canyon areas of the Lee Metcalf Wilderness, and the northwestern part of the Absaroka-Beartooth Wilderness. All of these have well-maintained and (sometime too) heavily used trails, in much better shape than many non-Wilderness areas. Which Wilderness trails were you talking about?
trout unlimited gets a pass on this from me because they have to deal with many issues concerning private water rights that wilderness groups do not. what i could not ever understand is the stance of "aim, drop rifle and run away..." approach to saving wildland that MWA has taken. it just doesn't make sense to me. it seems to me that if you want to save wild land you stick to your guns and stand your ground like groups who support NREPA.
why doesn't someone of the stature of pat williams just invite the leaders of these groups to meet and hammer out these differences and get back to saving wild lands in a united fashion again? it would be awful hard for any leader to turn down an invitation for this meeting and doubly hard to not agree to disagree and bury differences so that they can form a united front again considering the changed political landscape of this country and our governor. come on you guys - yer burning daylight!
The political sun appears to be rising, I agree it's time to make as much hay as possible. But I do not understand why TU "gets a pass" on compromising public lands away just because it also deals with water rights. By the way, on the Klamath it is the tribes who hold the fishery-based senior water rights, not the demanding wealthy farmers above the dams. So giving away Indian water needed by Klamath fish ("for dam removal") fits with cutting deals on public lands in Montana ("for wilderness"). Two wrongs don't make a right.
Comment By Cycle Sense, 12-05-08I applaud the intent and spirit of the B-D Partnership Plan but it is euphemistic to call it a “partnership.” As a cyclist and outdoor enthusiast, I enjoy the attributes of Wilderness like the most ardent wild land supporter. The cycling community is open to supporting new, socially responsible Wilderness designations when it is part of a larger land access picture that can include other permanent alternative designations, non-Wilderness corridors or cherry stems and boundary adjustments or trail re-routes that will protect the land and allow continued bicycle use. Cyclists don’t want or need access to every trail or area – just the historically and economically important ones. The Partnership plan in its current configuration would result in a tremendous loss of access to mountain biking trails throughout the B-D forest. Cyclist were not included for input to this plan and the 16 proposed Wilderness areas cuts the heart out of much of the cherished high alpine riding in southwest Montana. Bicyclists appreciate the desire for new Wilderness areas, logs for the mills and pro-active stewardship forestry, but it is short sighted to not seek support from a quiet, self-powered user group that has an equal, vested interest in the fate of this forest. Promoting east-of-the-divide logging with its boom and bust cycles as the Partnership’s only economic development plan is laughable in the era of green and sustainable geo-tourism. Montana has more to offer and deserves much better.
The economic, social and health contributions of mountain biking around the affected towns should be nurtured and promoted as an integral piece of forest planning and a lucrative component to the regional recreation mix. Until cyclists are included at the table as equal partners when the future of the B-D forest in being discussed, the B-D Partnership Strategy Plan is little more than a slick pr campaign for a controversial and exclusionary proposal. At first glance, who can resist the feel good image of loggers waltzing with Wilderness folks?
Ironically, a precedent setting agreement has already been negotiated in the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest in the form of the High Divide Agreement. Representatives from cycling organizations from Anaconda, Butte, and Helena were able to sit down in 2007 with the Montana Wilderness Association and other non-motorized users and forge this agreement that supports new Wilderness while protecting and extending the riding opportunities in those areas including continued bicycle access to the Continental Divide National Scenic Trail. While MWA is actively and loudly promoting the High Divide Agreement as proof that they work with cyclists, they refuse to have a similar dialog concerning the rest of the B-D National Forest and the CDNST. In the spirit and success of the High Divide Agreement, the Partnership proposal falls short on building the level of collaboration needed to protect the entire B-D NF resources while enabling the communities to fully profit from the type of quiet, clean and green bicycle tourism that well maintained and promoted trail systems will attract. There are proven business models from around the world where mountain bike tourism has revived and sustained small town economies. Cyclists are respectful guests and spend money in pursuit of riding and enjoying beautiful singletrack trails - the holy grail of mountain biking. It will be a win / win for the towns that embrace the greater cycling community as willing, responsible and appreciative partners in preserving, protecting and promoting our public trail resources.
The Partnership Plan’s current configuration needs to be completely overhauled by seeking a broad base of support or scrapped all together.
The Beaverhead Deerlodge Partnership Plan should by pulled, brought home, and refined. But the plan should not be pulled just for the reasons Bill states, concerning not enough Wilderness protecting enough special areas. It doesn’t respond to society, only to logging and a limited wilderness vision, and this must be fixed. It’s made out to be a sweet deal, but only for the members of the MWA, about 6,000 strong if I remember correctly.
Logging is not a cure-all for forest health, nothing is. But logging can reduce fire intensity, and it is needed to keep the wood processing infrastructure in place in Montana. Every so often the lawn needs to be mowed. Logging can take a dying forest and rejuvenate it’s health and animal habitat. In defense of the Partnership Plan (BD-PP), I believe that the logging component is appropriate. The plan fails because of the critical point that any planned logging sales are not guaranteed to be litigated. This failing must be corrected to give the plan legitimacy, or the entire premise of the plan becomes a Wilderness front-loaded sham.
The BD-PP deserves to be completely developed. It should be removed from congress and brought forth to all of the ignored stakeholders for adjustments. Some Wilderness would be removed, but other areas would be added. Other alternative land designations should be applied as well, because Wilderness is the biggest hammer in the box, and not always the appropriate answer to every land management question.
The visionary partnership, which collaborated on this plan, must be commended for efforts thus far. But their failing is that they lost the courage to allow their vision to stand up to the complete spectrum of stakeholders. If the plan is pulled, but not killed, it can be saved with some more work. Plans such as this have realistic chances of success, because of micro scrutiny, and area-by-area detailed analysis. Montana citizens deserve to get past the divisive politics, so we can truly enjoy life in our great state. We all deserve a hand in shaping a statewide Wilderness bill, not just professional collaborators. We need to work with Idaho legislators as well on protection for our shared border, not just locking up the Montana side while letting the Idaho side turn into a motocross course. Protection does not always mean Wilderness, but it would probably mean some sort of additional control over access that we currently enjoy. It likely would mean a hands-off management policy in places, leaving some areas open to fire, but not mining or mechanized logging. I repeat, Wilderness is not the only answer.
The MWA and the BD-PP are trying to reflect the realities of the economy, environment, and national politics. This is a far more pragmatic approach than the idealism and selfishness of the NREPA. The NREPA completely misses these targets. One point I must make, you people embracing the NREPA as the best environmental answer are living in a fantasy world. You must learn to share the Rockies with others. You are not alone in the world.
The vision of the NREPA must be commended. A plan that would attempt to return the Northern Rockies into a fairyland of wildlife corridors is really cool. But it’s reality just plain sucks. It is wasting everyone’s time, energy, and emotions. One could base a TV drama series on all the things that could go wrong if it passed. One of the most tragic would be the very realistic specter of the cheapening of the Wilderness Act. The disrespect by so many citizens of the Act, because of this overreaching bill, could easily lead to the eventual dismantling of the Act itself. Wilderness is too permanent and important to be designed so carelessly. The “wildest bill on the hill” is a joke; it should be called the “most irresponsible bill on the hill”.
At one time I believed that every single acre of roadless land should be protected as wilderness, and further, that many areas should be restored through road removal and revegetation, and left as defacto wilderness. I'm no longer sure this is realistic, and I have to agree that some level of sustainable timber harvest and a viable timber industry in Montana are desirable.
The biggest problem with this whole issue is an ingrained lack of trust among all parties. Many conservationists quit believing the Forest Service years ago when it talked about how it would do things right. And many in the timber industry quit trusting the FS years ago when it demonstrated that it couldn't deliver on the promises of timber it had made.
If the FS and the loggers who get contracts to cut timber could be trusted to actually do the job right, and then remove roads, revegetate, and also restore other adjacent areas in the process, then the impacts on the forests would be more acceptable. However, too many examples exist of horrendously bad logging practices in the past to justify great optimism today that the work can be done prudently and with minimal impact.
I support NREPA, but I also support a viable timber industry - built around small operators and independent mills, not Plum Creek et al - that can exist over the long term.
I don't regard the partnership as a sell out, I regard it as a legitimate attempt to move forward with sensitivity to small rural communties as well as the land. Those interests are not mutually exclusive.
That being said, I don't support the release of the Pioneers or the west Big Hole from wilderness protection. I also don't support obtaining nothing more than rocks and ice wilderness when those high elevation areas aren't threatened to begin with. Perhaps there is room for some compromise on the fringes of roadless areas, but the ecosystems themselves should be protected, and any logging that is allowed on the fringes should include removal of all roads and future management that includes no motorized access.
In my younger days, I was willing to disregard the feelings of many rural folks regarding wilderness and logging and access. While I don't agree with many of their viewpoints today, I do recognize that their concerns have merit, and the future of rural Montana communities shouldn't be utterly disregarded when addressing forest management issues.
I will always be a wilderness advocate, but that doesn't equate to being opposed to all logging on public lands. Surely there is some kind of reasonable compromise that can be reached short of eliminating all logging on public lands or, conversely, making short term and unsustainable incursions into roadless lands for a short-term fix to the logging industry's woes.
Those woes currently have less to do with access to roadless land (subsidized by taxpayers) and more to do with brass tacks economics.
The partnership plan may be flawed, but I don't think the intent is bad at all. What is most dangerous, in my opinion, is the increasing schism between Montanans regarding public lands management. Any attempts to sit down and talk about those issues, with open minds and open ears, can't be all bad.
Bob Phillips says, "I support NREPA, but I also support a viable timber industry - built around small operators and independent mills, not Plum Creek et al - that can exist over the long term."
Me too. And passage of NREPA can take us closer to that goal, not further from it.
As one Forest Service staffer told others, later circulated when the meeting minutes were printed, "We sure skinned a lot of country out there." Well, the place to kick off the region's sustainable timber industry is out there, on that country that's already been logged.
Managing the already-logged acreage on a truly sustainable basis, which means managing it for jobs that can last, is way overdue, and the region really needs us to try for it now. But continuing to open the roadless unlogged sells the region's timber industry short, and perpetuates a dependency on lands best set aside for all the other purposes that roadless spaces will serve.