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Action Alert for Blue Mountains Forest Plan Revision

The Forest Service has recently begun the process of revising Forest Plans for the Malheur, Umatilla, and Wallowa-Whitman National Forests in the Blue Mountains, encompassing approximately five million acres in eastern Oregon and southeastern Washington.

It’s urgent that the Forest Service hears from you! The Forest Service needs to hear that the public wants strong protections for forests– and opposes rolling back or weakening existing protections, as is currently proposed. Tell the Forest Service to include strong, enforceable, and mandatory standards that protect wildlife, clean water, carbon, and ecosystem integrity in the Blue Mountains Forest Plan Revision. Widespread public pressure during the Plan Revision process is essential. We need strong standards to protect forests, not more logging! 

We are urging people to contact the Forest Service, and continue to submit comments even though the recent public comment period is now closed. We want to keep up the pressure, and make sure the agency hears loudly and clearly that the public supports strong protections for forests and opposes weakening or rolling back existing protections. 

Emails can be sent to: sm.fs.bluesforests@usda.gov

Written comments can be sent to:
Umatilla National Forest Supervisor’s Office, Attn: Blue Mountains Forest Plan Revision, 72510 Coyote Road, Pendleton, OR 97801

You can also check out this webinar from Blue Mountains Biodiversity Project and Greater Hell’s Canyon Council, which talks about major concerns and how to comment:

What are Forest Plans? Forest Plans are the basis for virtually all management actions on National Forests, dictating everything from timber volume outputs to protections (or lack thereof) for wildlife and stream habitats. These plans will guide forest management for decades, and have lasting implications for the climate, biodiversity, and clean water for generations to come. Regardless of where you live, please speak up on behalf of these forests.

We are also asking the members of the public who live in Oregon and Washington to contact their elected officials, and ask them to advocate for forests in the Blue Mountains by telling the Forest Service that forests need more protection, not more logging. Ask your elected representatives to clearly oppose any increases in logging, mining, or drilling on federal public lands in Oregon and Washington.

You can find your elected official and their contact information here: https://www.usa.gov/elected-officials

More information from the Forest Service about the Blue Mountains Forest Plan Revision process can be found on their webpage: https://www.fs.usda.gov/r06/umatilla/planning/blue-mountains-forest-plan-revision

Toolkit with more info and additional talking points:

Tell the Forest Service! The revised Forest Plan must contain strong, enforceable standards with measurable objectives that protect mature and old forests, streams and water quality, wildlife, connectivity, unroaded areas, and carbon storage.

WILDLIFE NEED MORE PROTECTION, NOT LESS

Tell the Forest Service! Prioritize protections for wildlife and wildlife habitats, large habitat blocks, and landscape-level connectivity. The Blue Mountains contain unique and irreplaceable habitat for numerous imperiled species such as wolverine, lynx, wolves, moose, and more. Tell the Forest Service to strengthen existing standards for connectivity between blocks of mature and old forests– NOT weaken or eliminate them.

This map Migrations on the Move: Visualizing Species Movements Due to Climate Change by the Nature Conservancy includes key connectivity corridors that are encompassed by the Blue Mountains and connect the Northern Rockies to the Eastern Oregon Cascades. 

PROTECT LARGE TREES AND MATURE AND OLD FORESTS 

Tell the Forest Service! Protect large trees and mature and old forests. Tell the Forest Service to keep– and strengthen– the protective standards for large trees that have been in place for the past 30 years. Despite the clear benefits of large trees for fire resistance, wildlife habitat, providing clean water, and carbon storage– the Forest Service is severely weakening protections for large trees in their new Forest Plan revision. They are proposing to roll back the clear, enforceable standards that have protected large trees since 1996.

These bullet points above are from the Eastside Forest Coalition’s “In Defense of Grand Fir” factsheet. You can see the full factsheet here

STREAMS AND FISH ARE SLATED TO LOSE PROTECTIONS

Tell the Forest Service! Strong, enforceable standards are needed to protect streams, fish, and water quality. A central component of any Forest Plan Revision for the Blue Mountains must include safeguards for fish and other aquatic and riparian species that depend on a sufficient quantity of clean, cold water in streams, rivers, tributaries, and wetlands.

LOGGING IS A FALSE SOLUTION TO COMMUNITY SAFETY AND FIRE

Tell the Forest Service! We need more environmental protections to keep communities safe– NOT more logging. Unfortunately, the draft Forest Plan proposes to greatly increase logging under the guise of “hazardous fuel mitigation”.

Please see our “Logging is a False Solution to Wildfire and Community Safety” page for citations and more detailed information on fire and logging. 

JUST SAY NO TO POST-FIRE LOGGING AND “SALVAGE” LOGGING

Tell the Forest Service! Burned forests provide vital and delicate wildlife habitat that is essential for many species and is rare compared to historic norms. These rare “snag forests” should be left to their own natural recovery processes. 

Please see BMBP’s “Post-fire Logging” webpage for citations and more detailed information on fire and logging.

WE NEED MORE WILDERNESS

Tell the Forest Service! We need more Wilderness to help preserve mature and old forests, clean water, and biodiversity. All undeveloped roadless areas that satisfy the definition of Wilderness found in the Wilderness Act must be evaluated and considered for recommendation as potential Wilderness areas during forest plan revisions.

WOLVES AND LARGE CARNIVORES 

Tell the Forest Service! Stop killing large carnivores and other native wildlife on public lands, and provide the strongest possible standards to protect them. 

ROADS… SO MANY ROADS

Tell the Forest Service! Analysis and planning for the bloated roads system on these National Forests must be conducted before or as part of the Blue Mountains Forest Plan Revision process. The agency cannot adequately assess the effects of Forest Planning while ignoring the ubiquitous and widespread impacts of roads across the landscape. The Forest Service must conduct Travel Planning in order to have an accurate and relevant analysis of baseline and future conditions across the landscape.

Please see our “Roads are a Widespread Threat to Streams, Water Quality, and Wildlife” page for citations and more detailed information on fire and logging. 

ADDRESS WIDESPREAD DAMAGE FROM LIVESTOCK GRAZING 

Tell the Forest Service! Stricter standards are needed to protect aquatic ecosystems and sensitive habitats from livestock grazing. 

LET FORESTS BE PART OF THE CLIMATE SOLUTION

Tell the Forest Service! Prioritize protecting ecosystem resilience to climate change. The Forest Plan Revision must include the strongest possible protections in order to give species and ecosystems the best chances at adapting to and surviving climate change. 

A PARADIGM SHIFT IS URGENTLY NEEDED

Tell the Forest Service! A paradigm shift is needed in order to protect forests in the Blue Mountains and across the region. We are in the midst of the intertwined climate and biodiversity emergencies. It is time to take decisive actions to ensure that our forests are allowed to be a vital part of the solution to these crises. We urgently need a new model that prioritizes mature and old forests, wildlife and core habitats, landscape level connectivity, streams and clean water, soils, and carbon storage. We need to focus on protecting biodiversity and ecological integrity.

Really want to dig deep? You can read Blue Mountains Biodiversity Project’s comments on the Forest Service’s attempt to rollback protections for large trees in 2020 here, and our comments on the agency’s previous attempt to revise their Forest Plans in 2018 here.

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