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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Rare trees were logged by mistake, Forest Service says

Jeff Barnard Associated Press

GRANTS PASS, Ore. – The U.S. Forest Service admitted Wednesday to making a “serious” mistake that allowed 17 acres to be logged inside a rare tree reserve as part of the salvage harvest of timber burned by the 2002 Biscuit fire.

The logging inside the 350-acre Babyfoot Lake Botanical Area, created in 1966 to protect Brewer spruce and other rare plant species on the Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest, was discovered last week by environmentalists after the Fiddler timber sale was harvested and a forest closure intended to bar protesters was lifted.

Forest Service personnel mismarked the border of part of the Fiddler timber sale next to the botanical area – though just who did it or how it happened was not immediately clear, said Illinois Valley District Ranger Pam Bode. Normally trees are marked with stapled tags and paint to show the boundaries of timber sales and reserves within them.

“It is the Forest Service’s intent to manage the Babyfoot Lake Botanical Area to minimize human intervention in the ecological process,” Bode said. “For us to have changed the ecology in that area through removal of these dead trees is a serious error. And we will do all we can to determine the best path to move forward from here.”

Barbara Ullian, conservation director of the Siskiyou Project group that discovered the damage, called for a formal investigation into the blunder and said it demonstrated the importance of allowing the public monitor logging operations on national forests.

“This is no small little slip across the border and a few trees,” Ullian said.

The Forest Service closed the area to the public in March after protesters attempted to block logging roads and sit in trees.

“The big picture we’ve seen is that the Forest Service has done a poor job of marking and monitoring many of its sales,” said Forest Fleischman, a policy advocate for Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics, which won a court order forcing the Forest Service to use its own personnel, rather than loggers, to mark trees left for wildlife on the Fiddler sale.

Spokeswoman Patty Burel said the Forest Service would look into the problem, but any issues regarding employee performance would remain confidential.

“There is a real difference in the Forest Service between performance problems and misconduct,” Bode said. “At this point I don’t have any information that would lead me to think there was misconduct. This would have been a performance error.”

Siskiyou Project counted 290 stumps inside the botanical area, including one that measured three feet in diameter that was 234 years old, Ullian said.

There was nothing left after the logging to indicate the boundary had been marked, but it could be clearly recognized from a map because it ran across the top of a ridge and included part of a road, Ullian said. A new logging road was bulldozed along the ridgetop.