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Another WOPR setback.


Byline: The Register-Guard

The Western Oregon This article is about the region of Western Oregon. For the University, see Western Oregon University.
Western Oregon is a geographical term that is generally taken to apply to the portion of the state of Oregon that is west of the Cascade Range.
 Plan Revision is a dead plan walking.

Those exact words weren't used by the team of government scientists that recently reviewed the Bush administration's proposed forest management plan. But it's the underlying message that should be clear to Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne, who should immediately yank Yank

steamship stoker vainly tries to climb the social ladder, then fails in attempt to avenge himself on society. [Am. Drama: O’Neill The Hairy Ape in Sobel, 339]

See : Failure



(jargon) yank
 the plug on the U.S. Bureau of Land Management's hopelessly flawed proposal to nearly triple logging on 2.2 million acres in Western Oregon.

In a scathing 100-page report, the team of federal and state experts said the BLM's proposal failed to consider the most current and relevant data on fundamental concerns such as wildlife habitat and water quality.

The report said the computer models used by the BLM BLM n abbr (US) (= Bureau of Land Management) → les domaines  were overly simplistic sim·plism  
n.
The tendency to oversimplify an issue or a problem by ignoring complexities or complications.



[French simplisme, from simple, simple, from Old French; see simple
 and failed to take into account the loss of spotted owl and other wildlife habitat to logging and wildfires. The models also failed to take into account budgetary, political and legal factors, and generally ignored climate change and its potentially profound impacts on Western Oregon's forests.

It's the latest in a series of setbacks for the BLM proposal. Last month the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service reversed its earlier proposal to sharply reduce the area of critical habitat for the marbeled murrelet Murre´let

n. 1. (Zool.) One of several species of sea birds of the genera Synthliboramphus and Brachyramphus, inhabiting the North Pacific. They are closely related to the murres.
, a threatened bird that nests in the old growth forests of Oregon's Coast Range. Those forests are an integral part of the BLM's plans to increase logging and federal timber payments to rural counties.

Six separate scientific peer reviews, five of them funded by the federal government, have agreed that the Fish & Wildlife Service's draft recovery plan for saving the spotted owl fails to adequately consider the importance of protecting the Northwest's remaining stands of old growth.

The Bush administration's own Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and  has warned that the BLM plan lacks a sound scientific basis and would cause long-term damage to water quality. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Noun 1. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration - an agency in the Department of Commerce that maps the oceans and conserves their living resources; predicts changes to the earth's environment; provides weather reports and forecasts floods and hurricanes and  says the plan fails to adequately protect steelhead and salmon.

The BLM plan is the result of the Bush administration's sweetheart settlement of a lawsuit by the timber industry and rural counties. The lawsuit charged that the BLM had failed to fulfill its obligations under the 1937 federal O&C Act. The act requires the agency to log on a sustained yield sus·tained yield
n.
1. The continuing yield of a biological resource, such as timber from a forest, by controlled periodic harvesting.

2. The quantity of a resource harvested in this manner.
 basis the checker-board of forest lands in Western Oregon that once belonged to the Oregon & California Railroad - and it requires that O&C lands be managed for "permanent timber production" and for rural counties' economic stability.

As a result of that settlement, the BLM drafted the WOPR WOPR Wodne Ochotnicze Pogotowie Ratunkowe (Polish: water rescue teams and lifeguards)
WOPR Woody's Office POWER Pack
WOPR Western Oregon Plan Revisions
WOPR Workshop on Performance and Reliability
, which the agency says would ramp up Ramp Up

To increase a company's operations in anticipation of increased demand.

Notes:
A company might 'ramp up' operations if they just signed a contract creating substantially more demand for their product.
See also: Demand, Economies of Scale
 Western Oregon logging to yield up to 720 million board feet of timber a year. It also would add 1,000 miles of new roads, reduce spotted owl reserves by 36 percent, and eliminate 57 percent of the tree buffers along rivers and streams where salmon spawn.

It should be clear by now that there is no chance this plan will survive the inevitable lawsuits charging that it violates the federal Endangered Species endangered species, any plant or animal species whose ability to survive and reproduce has been jeopardized by human activities. In 1999 the U.S. government, in accordance with the U.S.  Act's stringent habitat requirements.

The administration already has wasted time by continuing to push this misguided plan. Instead, it should have crafted an alternate strategy that increases timber production - and provides funding to rural counties - by thinning crowded stands of younger trees, rather than clear-cutting and logging old growth.

BLM officials say they will take the latest scientific criticism into account while preparing to issue the final version of the WOPR. That's a mistake. The BLM plan is so thoroughly flawed that it must be replaced, not fixed.

If Kempthorne won't give WOPR the early execution it deserves, then Congress should intervene with legislation that protects old growth.

What part of "dead plan walking" doesn't the Bush administration understand? Why is it stubbornly continuing to push a plan that has as little chance of surviving judicial scrutiny as a condemned man does a trip to the gas chamber?
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Title Annotation:Editorials
Publication:The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
Article Type:Editorial
Date:Apr 1, 2008
Words:653
Previous Article:Oregon needs rail links.
Next Article:LETTERS IN THE EDITOR'S MAILBAG.



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