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| Forest Practices Review Program
'EZ
form' timber harvest plans 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.
For more information 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.
For more detail about the PTEIR, we invite
you to browse to our frequently asked questions
or to this in-depth explanation of
our PTEIR process.
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