First Mattole Forest Futures logging plans filed

The Mattole Forest Futures Project is an approach to forest management that gives landowners streamlined approval for their logging plans, provided their harvest meets significant light-touch standards.

* January 2012 update *
The first three plans have been filed to harvest timber as part of the Mattole Forest Futures Project, under the Council's newly approved Program Timberland Environmental Impact Report (PTEIR):
Plan 1-11-100-HUM-PTHP: 67 acres of selective harvest on Wilder Ridge - approved by Calfire Dec. 27,
Plan 1-11-116-HUM-PTHP: 61 acres of selection, commercial thinning, and all-age harvest near Whitethorn, &
Plan 1-11-123-HUM-PTHP: 30 acres of selective harvest, also near Whitethorn.
These can all be downloaded from the Calfire harvest plan library.

The kinds of selective harvest contemplated as part of the Mattole Forest Futures Project will support the recovery of the Mattole watershed in four important ways:

1. Logging would leave behind some of the largest trees in each stand and maintain forest cover over all of the wooded landscape, helping to develop bigger, older forests. In turn, those mature forests will provide habitat for threatened creatures whose populations were diminished by the post-World-War-Two logging boom.

2. Compared with clearcut forestry, which leads to forests being replanted to highly flammable young stands, forests logged as part of the Mattole Forest Futures Project will be less vulnerable to fire hazard, as they will be composed of older trees that are more fire-resistant.

3. Logging permits under the PTEIR will be less expensive, enabling landowners to realize the same net income while cutting less timber. In addition, because the permits will be cheaper to obtain, large landowners may be able to garner enough income from their land base that they will be less inclined to subdivide their land in order to maintain the financial stability of their operation.

4. Logging as part of the Mattole Forest Futures Project would require road upgrades to reduce sediment delivery into streams, providing a source of funds for ecologically necessary road work that may become harder to support with public money owing to the state's financial difficulties.

In September 2011, the Program Timberland Environmental Impact Report (PTEIR) for the project won final approval from Calfire, after a four-year process that incorporated several rounds of input from the Mattole and North Coast communities.

The Mattole Forest Futures Project received the endorsement of the Institute for Sustainable Forestry in 2010, citing the project's "carefully crafted practices." The full resolution is available for download below.

For a summary of the specific provisions of the Mattole Forest Futures Project, download either of the first two files below.
The complete draft PTEIR is available below.
To read a resolution about the project adopted by the MRC board of directors, download the file below.
For an overview of the process by which the Mattole Forest Futures Project is proceeding, click here.
To read answers to some commonly asked questions about the Mattole Forest Futures Project and the PTEIR, go here.
For a page of resource documents and links, including the classic 2005 workshop from the Forest Reptile and Amphibian Working Group (FRAWG), go here.
AttachmentSize
Two-page summary of the main provisions of the project87.47 KB
Full project description, including geological flow charts (20 pages)335.87 KB
Draft Mattole PTEIR, May 2011 (533 pages)7.55 MB
Draft Mattole PTEIR Executive Summary, May 2011 (12 pages)162.06 KB
CAL FIRE's Notice of Availability, with addresses for written comments52.63 KB
MRC Board Resolution, August 201030.24 KB
Endorsement from the Institute for Sustainable Forestry, Oct. 2010147.02 KB
KMUD News segment about the PTEIR, June 1, 20111.63 MB

PTEIR Resource documents and links

This is a work in progress, with resources and links being added as time permits.

For starters, we are pleased to host a collection of materials produced by the Forest Reptile and Amphibian Working Group in 2005, as part of a workshop entitled, "Ecology and Management of Forest Headwater Streams, Seeps, Springs, Ponds, and Wetland Habitat."

FRAWG was formed in 1996 primarily to address conservation of the southern torrent salamander and other sensitive forest amphibians and reptiles on the north coast.  At the 2005 workshop, the topic of stream classification into Class II (supporting non-fish aquatic life) and Class III (capable only of moving sediment) was addressed. We offer this as a resource for people concerned -- as we are -- with the conservation of herpetofauna in the face of logging. For the time being, the maps chapter is unavailable because of size limitations in our web-hosting software.
AttachmentSize
Title Page and Front Matter261 KB
Geomorphology1.19 MB
Herpetofauna362 KB
Plants179 KB
Sterilization84 KB
Workshop questions42 KB
Proposal on stream classification188 KB
Proposal on seeps, springs, and wet areas99 KB