Mattole Forest Futures & the PTEIR

Promoting the recovery of Mattole forests

Forests develop over decades and centuries, a fact that calls upon Mattolians to apply long-term thinking to the future of the forests of our watershed.

The logging of Mattole old growth from the 1940s through the 1990s left the watershed's forests in need of restoration and recovery. The second-growth stands tend to be so dense and thick that they pose a significant risk of catastrophic wildfire. Such a conflagration would deal a devastating blow both to the human community, scattered as it is amid the re-growing forests of the Mattole, and to the recovery of the watershed. Widespread severe fire would expose soil to the harsh pounding of winter rains, likely triggering erosion that would muddy the waters and reverse the healing that has taken place since the spate of logging and road-building that took place in the last century.

At the same time, the Council's mapping efforts have revealed that 72,000 acres of the Mattole -- more than one-third of the watershed -- were last logged before 1962. With the age of the second-growth forests there coming up on half a century, those forests are approaching the age when they might be harvested for timber. From a survey returned by more than 100 landowners, we know that most landowners would consider harvesting timber from their land, a figure that rises to 80 percent for owners of parcels over 640 acres, who control the majority of the private land base.

Accordingly, we are developing a mechanism to make it easier for those landowners who wish to harvest their timber to do so with a light touch. The Mattole Restoration Council is preparing a Program Timberland Environmental Impact Report (PTEIR) that will give landowners streamlined approval for their logging plans, provided they are conducting light-touch harvesting as described in the PTEIR. For more details, visit the PTEIR pages or follow the links at the bottom of the page.


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.
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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.
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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

PTEIR Frequently Asked Questions

On these pages, you can find the answers to some common questions about the PTEIR. If you have a question that you think should appear in this list, please email it to seth <at> mattole [dot] org.

FAQs, Part I: Forest Practices and the PTEIR

Will clearcuts be allowed under the PTEIR?

Clearcuts and other forms of even-aged management (such as seed tree or shelterwood) will not be allowed under the PTEIR. The project description includes individual tree and group selection as options, both considered varieties of uneven-aged management. Group selection allows openings of up to 2.5 acres, with trees required to be retained in any opening larger than one acre. In addition, we have designed a special prescription for hardwood-dominated stands in the Mattole known as the all-aged prescription, which will allow a mixture of small group openings (2.5 acres or less) where Douglas-fir would be planted, along with thinning in the rest of the stand.

Will all logging in the Mattole have to follow the PTEIR rules?

No. Landowners who prefer will still be able to file traditional THPs, Non-industrial Timber Management Plans (NTMPs) or any of the exemptions that they can currently use. The PTEIR is an option that landowners can select voluntarily.

Besides individual and group selection, what kinds of silviculture would be allowed under the PTEIR?

Commercial thinning is the other standard prescription from the Forest Practice Rules that would be included in the PTEIR. Like individual and group selection, it requires that a well-stocked stand of trees remain after harvest. In addition, our foresters have drafted a new prescription tailored to help landowners shift the composition of their forests away from the hardwoods that took over many sites after logging in the 1950s and '60s which preceded the state replanting requirement. It's called "all-aged management," and will allow small groups of trees (no more than 2.5 acres, with trees retained in any patches larger than half an acre) to be cut, and for leave trees and planted seedlings to both be counted toward the restocking of the land.

Will old-growth trees and forests be protected under the PTEIR?

Yes. All trees that pre-date 1850 willl have to be left standing, provided they meet certain minimum diameter requirements: 42 inches for redwood, 40 inches for Douglas-fir and grand fir, and 32 inches for hardwoods. In addition, late-seral habitats, even if they are in stands more recent than 1850, will be managed to maintain or enhance the late seral nature of the stand during any PTEIR logging. Policies in the project also require landowners to preserve wildlife trees and snags, and encourage the designation of legacy trees.

How will streams be protected under the PTEIR?

Stream protection under the PTEIR is stricter than the Forest Practices Rules, even after the 2009 adoption of the Anadromous Salmonid rules. There are larger "no-harvest" areas around streams (including a complete no-harvest buffer of 75 feet on either side of fish-bearing streams, and a 30-foot buffer on either side of Class II streams, which support aquatic life but not fish), reduced allowances for road construction, higher standards for stream crossings, and stricter limitations on operating on steep slopes.
 
   Perhaps most importantly, the PTEIR includes several policies to steer logging away from unstable slopes -- the best way, we have concluded, to avoid triggering landslides or other "mass-wasting" events that are responsible for the bulk of sediment entering Mattole streams.

Are winter operations allowed?

Under the PTEIR ground-based yarding, road construction or reconstruction, and road rocking would not be allowed from November 15 to April 1, regardless of rainfall. Log hauling on permanent, rocked roads would be allowed so long as it did not cause a measurable increase in turbidity downstream. Also, the PTEIR prohibits timber harvest activities during "measurable rain events", which are defined as more than 1/4 inch of rain in a 24 hour period. Land owners would still be able to do some fuel treatments, such as hand piling and burning, hand fire line construction, or other activities which do not involve the use of heavy equipment or timber hauling.

How about herbicides?

No synthetic herbicides may be used to control native vegetation (such as tanoak) on any active plan under this PTEIR.

FAQs, Part II: Other benefits of a PTEIR for the Mattole

Why is the Mattole Forest Futures Project a particularly good idea now?

Over the last two decades, a changing regulatory climate has greatly increased the cost of securing timber harvest permits in California. Non-industrial forestland owners who prefer to log with a lighter touch have been particularly hard-hit by these changes. The cost of permitting has made light harvests less feasible, creating economic pressures to either subdivide large land holdings, log more intensively than landowners would prefer, or leave the forest unmanaged, thereby allowing a hazardous build-up of fuels.

We want landowners to be able, through light-touch timber harvest, to accelerate the return of previously logged forests to ecological maturity, to have the means to upgrade their roads so they are not dumping sediment into the river, and to have an incentive to retain their lands instead of subdividing them. Further, we hope light-touch logging will make possible a modest, sustainable harvest of timber that could support a moderate level of forest-based livelihoods in the Mattole.

Where did the MRC get the idea for the Mattole Forest Futures Project?

The Mattole Forest Futures Project -- to be implemented through a PTEIR -- was conceived at the California Forest Futures conference in Sacramento in 2005, the brainchild of then-MRC executive director Chris Larson, along with Richard Gienger (involved for many years in restoration and the reform of forestry regulation in the Mattole and nearby areas) and Sally French (Mattole timberland owner, and member of the board of Forest Landowners of California).

The project grew out of the recognition that the high cost of a THP increases the pressure to harvest more than would be ecologically beneficial, and that THPs focus their environmental analysis tightly on a single harvest, missing the effects on the broader landscape. At the same time, with second-growth timber across the Mattole beginning to reach harvestable age, the pace of logging is apt to pick up soon, making these issues more pressing than they have been in recent years. 

FAQs, Part III: The MRC and Commercial Logging

Why is the MRC involved in a commercial logging project?

As described here, the logging that will occur under the PTEIR will actually benefit the recovery of the watershed. In a forest whose structure was altered so substantially by all-at-once logging half a century ago, judicious logging can promote the return of old-growth habitat, and protect the continued recovery of streams that provide habitat for salmon, steelhead, and other aquatic life.

But even beyond those aims, we see sustainable logging as right livelihood that makes honorable use of the gifts that Mattole land has to offer. Since the founding of the MRC in 1983, sustainable harvest has been part of our vision of learning what it takes to live in this watershed for the long term.

Our mission statement lays out our aim of "the restoration of natural systems in the Mattole River watershed and their maintenance at sustainable levels of health and productivity, especially in regards to forests, fisheries, soils, and other native plant and animal communities," and directs us to pursue this goal by (among other ways):

    Pursuing the education and involvement of watershed residents and landholders in ... sustainable
    harvest techniques;

    Conducting research and encouraging the development of land-use techniques and
    cultural and economic activities which further the sustained productivity of the resources
    base in the Mattole watershed;

    Encouraging the development of regional and watershed-based self-reliance through creative,
    productive and interdependent human relationships with the Mattole watershed.

These aims have been part of the MRC's mission statement since its incorporation in 1985.

The MRC board of directors adopted the following resolution at its August 2010 meeting:

Recognizing:
  1.  the MRC’s mission to educate and involve watershed residents in sustainable forest management techniques;
  2. the goals stated in the project description for the Mattole PTEIR, and the Mattole Forest Futures Project as a whole;
  3. that unmanaged or poorly managed forests can hinder us in our mission by:
        a.    Increased evapo transpiration
        b.    Increased fuel density leading to more intense wildfires;
  4. that well-managed forests can assist us in our mission by:
        a.    Encouraging the development of mature to late successional stands
        b.    Maintaining or improving wildlife habitat, particularly by developing late-seral habitat for listed species
        c.    Creating sustainable economic opportunity in the watershed;
  5. the rigorous scientific review of the project conducted by the Mattole Technical Advisory Committee;
  6. the potential for human activity to have a positive impact on the natural systems in our watershed;
The Mattole Restoration Council Board of Directors hereby:
  1. endorses the project description and the Mattole PTEIR as a positive and dynamic alternative to conventional forestry permitting;
  2. confirms our lasting commitment to the PTEIR and sustainable forest management including:
        a.    monitoring and evaluating the results and impacts
        b.    insuring the PTEIR process is meeting the project goals
        c.    facilitating a continued effort to listen to and address questions and concerns;
  3. encourages landowners who are already considering a timber harvest on their property to learn more about the Mattole PTEIR;
  4. encourages all landowners and residents of the Mattole to learn more about sustainable land management practices and continue the conversation.
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MRC Board resolution in support of the Mattole Forest Futures Project and PTEIR30.24 KB

FAQs, Part IV: The PTEIR Process

What is a PTEIR?

The letters stand for "Program Timberland Environmental Impact Report". The California Board of Forestry established the PTEIR process in the mid-1990s to consider entire programs of timber harvesting as a whole, instead of examining logging units on a plan-by-plan basis. The expected impacts are all examined up front. Subsequently, landowners who want to log under the terms of the PTEIR file PTHPs (Program Timber Harvesting Plans), which are site-specific logging plans tailored to the conditions of the individual stand.

The PTHP includes a checklist to demonstrate whether the intended logging is an implementation of what was envisioned in the PTEIR. In terms of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), this means that the PTHPs are "tiered" to the PTEIR.

Who decides what is in the PTEIR, and who is writing it?

The MRC is responsible for the content and submission of the draft PTEIR to CAL FIRE. The MRC has hired Baldwin, Blomstrom, Wilkinson and Associates, a forestry firm in Arcata, to write the PTEIR under the direction of MRC staff, with the advice of the Mattole Forest Futures Steering Committee.

The PTEIR is an analysis of the likely effects of the Mattole Forest Futures Project. The project description -- the specific forestry practices that could be followed under the PTEIR permit -- was devised in consultation with a broad-based steering committee made up of 9 members -- including two foresters, two Mattole landowners, and members of local environmental and forestry groups -- who represent a variety of viewpoints on land use in the Mattole.

The project description is the document available here (or here, in abbreviated form). The draft PTEIR is available now for public comment, and includes an assessment of how timber harvesting under the project will affect the Mattole, as well as a comparison of the effects of this project with three other alternatives, including the scenario in which no PTEIR is approved for the Mattole.

CAL FIRE is the "lead agency" for this project, meaning that it approves whether it may go forward and receives official public comment. The public comment period runs from May 20 to July 5, 2011, with a public meeting to be held at the Mattole Grange Hall on June 13 at 5 p.m. (The MRC is open to comments from Mattole residents, landowners, and others at any time.) After the close of public comment, CAL FIRE will respond to comments before issuing a Final PTEIR.

Has the public been able to provide input on the project?


Yes. Neighborhood meetings were held from April to June 2007 in 4 places in the Mattole, with outreach conducted through KMUD, the Independent, posters, and mailed notices. About 50 people attended these meetings. In January 2008, the project's Notice of Preparation, a required document informing the public that the plan would be written, was filed, inviting official scoping comments. A scoping meeting was held February 11, 2008 at the Mattole Grange Hall between Petrolia and Honeydew. Representatives of the Calif. Dept. of Forestry and Fire Protection (CalFire) were there, along with the Council and its forestry consultants, BBW Associates of Arcata. In addition, six scoping comments were received by CalFire.

After the scoping process, we met with people who had concerns about the project to take their comments into account as we wrote a final project description. In addition, we drew on the expertise of the Mattole watershed's Technical Advisory Committee, which includes scientists from federal and state agencies. Most recently, in July 2010, we held two public meetings, in Ettersburg and Petrolia, to describe the project we have in mind, and hear remaining concerns from Mattole residents and landowners.

What is the schedule for finishing the PTEIR?


The California state fiscal crisis led to a 10-month interruption in the project, while state bond funding was suspended from December 2008 to September 2009. Thereafter, we finished revising the Project Description to reflect the public comments we received during our "scoping" period as well as consultation with CAL FIRE on maintaining robust timber inventory on logged parcels. The Administrative Draft of the PTEIR was submitted to CAL FIRE in November 2010, with comments received in February 2011, and the public draft released on May 20, 2011.

This Draft is to further public comment and input. The Final PTEIR is scheduled to be released in summer 2011, with the first PTHPs being filed in late summer or early fall of 2011.

Can I still provide comments about the PTEIR?


Yes. Mail them to the MRC at PO Box 160, Petrolia, CA 95558; or email them to seth (at) mattole [dot] org, or call us at 707-629-3514. Comments may also be left at the bottom of this page. Instructions for making official comments to CAL FIRE, due July 5, 2011, can be found here.

Update on the Mattole PTEIR


Learn more about

the Council’s upcoming

Light-touch Timber Harvest option for Mattole landowners,

the PTEIR (Program Timberland Environmental Impact Report)

A conversation about the project took place on
KMUD's The Environment Show
Tuesday, June 29, 2010 from 7 to 8 pm
moderated by David Simpson, former president of the Institute for Sustainable Forestry and board member of the Redwood Forest Foundation, Inc., with guests Richard Gienger (long-time forest activist) and Seth Zuckerman of the MRC.
You can download that show here or click here to play it from the KMUD archive.

Also available: download the files below to hear a half-hour-long conversation between the MRC's Seth Zuckerman and Scott Greacen, executive director of the Environmental Protection Information Center, broadcast in June 2010 on KHSU's Econews Report.

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KHSU Econews Report June 10, 2010 - part 16.47 MB
KHSU Econews Report June 10, 2010 - part 25.05 MB

PTEIR concept and process

Background:  Over the last two decades, a changing regulatory climate has greatly increased the cost of securing timber harvest permits in California. Non-industrial forestland owners who prefer to log with a lighter touch have been particularly hard-hit by these changes. The cost of permitting has made light harvests less feasible, creating economic pressures to either subdivide large land holdings or leave the forest unmanaged, thereby allowing a hazardous build-up of fuels.
    At the same time, the forest -- now recovering from its original logging in the 1940s to 1990s -- can actually be helped by light-touch logging. Thinning trees can accelerate the forest's return to late seral habitat, can avoid the cycle of clearcutting young forests which carpets the landscape with young, highly flammable stands, and can fund the rehabilitation of failing roads and stream crossings that are poised to deliver sediment to creeks.

PTEIR: an innovative solution.  Program Timberland Environmental Impact Reports (PTEIRs) can offer a route through this regulatory tangle. Authorized by the state Forest Practice Rules (Sec. 1092), PTEIRs include many of the environmental reviews that individual projects would normally undergo, such as wildlife studies, watershed issues, and cumulative effects, saving landowners from having to repeat the same reviews in their logging plans.

Another advantage is that nearby projects can be evaluated together instead of piecemeal, making the environmental analysis more closely reflect the overall impact. PTEIRs apply to specific land-management practices in a specific area. Once a PTEIR is completed for that area, landowners can file Program Timber Harvest Plans (PTHPs) if they are proposing to use those practices, with far less paperwork than a regular THP. Logging must still meet the forestry standards in place at the time of harvest. One forester who has prepared a PTEIR and related PTHP estimates the cost savings at 40 to 65 percent.

Coming soon: a Mattole PTEIR.  The Mattole Restoration Council has prepared a draft PTEIR for the entire Mattole basin, which can be downloaded in three parts here. The MRC convened neighborhood meetings and a scientific advisory committee to gather the best local and technical knowledge about the state of the watershed. A steering committee composed of local landowners, forestry practitioners and non-profits, and environmental activists has guided the process at key steps along the way.

Because the watershed is so large, it was analyzed in several parts, or sub-basins. After public comment, responses to public comments (and possible adjustments as a result), and certification by the director of CAL FIRE, Mattole landowners who work within the framework of the PTEIR will able to log under a PTHP - like an "EZ" form THP.

The MRC's goal:  We advocate the sustainable use of Mattole forests and rangelands as a key foundation of local livelihoods. A PTEIR will give landowners further incentive to use light-touch logging, and may enlarge the area of the Mattole under active forest management - thereby creating new opportunities for woodsworkers and reducing fire hazard.

The need for an 'EZ form' timber harvest plan for light-touch logging

More than 90 percent of the Mattole's primeval forests were cut between 1947 and 1988, and nearly all the remaining old-growth is now under permanent protection. As the forest grows back in our watershed - about 80 percent of which is in private hands - coming decades will see at least some owners decide to log.

The Mattole Restoration Council is preparing a Program Timberland Environmental Impact Report (PTEIR) that will give landowners streamlined approval for their logging plans, provided they are conducting light-touch harvesting as described in the PTEIR. The selective harvesting to be allowed under our plan is designed to hasten the recovery of the second-growth forest to provide habitat for birds, mammals, and amphibians that thrive amid older, larger trees.

Not only that, it will help large landowners keep their holdings intact without subdivision, reducing further demands on the already-scarce summer flows that sustain our Chinook, coho and steelhead. To the extent that such harvest takes place under our logging program (instead of under regular Timber Harvest Plans and Non-Industrial Timber Management Plans, which will still be available to Mattole landowners), the forests will be healthier, will face lower risk of catastrophic fire, and will see fewer trees cut simply to pay for the cost of the permits. As regulations have become more complex, a standard timber harvest plan has come to cost more than $30,000 -- a cost that ultimately is borne by the harvest of more trees.

Other PTEIR pages:

• On the specific kinds of logging that would be allowed under the PTEIR, and the extra care that would be required during logging, please click to the current draft of our project summary, or to the full draft of the project description.

Frequently asked questions

• An in-depth explanation of the PTEIR process.

MRC Receives Grant to Study New Markets for Mattole Forests

Humboldt County Seal
On Tuesday Jan. 19, 2010, the Humboldt County Board of Supervisors approved a $16,000 Headwaters Fund grant to the Mattole Restoration Council to pay for a study that will look at how forest land owners can capitalize on forest-based businesses; such as light touch logging, medium scale milling, fuel wood production, wood-to-energy projects, and the sale of carbon credits into the emerging climate change mitigation market.

At the meeting, Wild & Working Lands program director Seth Zuckerman described how the market study proposal would dovetail with the MRC's permit streamlining program for light-touch forestry (PTEIR Program Timberland Environmental Impact Report).

Excerpts of Seth's presentation were featured on the KMUD radio news on Wednesday Jan. 20, 2010. You can click on the link below to hear the KMUD report, or read the North Coast Journal article about this round of grants from the Headwaters Fund.
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Seth's KMUD interview Jan. 20, 20102.56 MB