Comments on Plumas Natl. Forest “Community Protection” Logging Plan

The U.S. Forest Service Community Protection Central and West Slope project would spray $30 million of carcinogenic herbicides and unleash an unprecedented industrial logging assault on mature forests including trees nearly eight feet around, across 200,000+ acres along the Feather River corridor and elsewhere in Plumas, Butte, and Sierra Counties.

Feather River Action is strongly opposing this project and supporting a No Action alternative until a plan that scales up underburning and true community protection is considered.

Click the following link to download a pdf of our recent comments to the Forest Service on the “Community Protection” Plan that would protect logging company profits but leave human and wildlife communities vulnerable to massive pesticide drift in air, water, and soil and faster, less predictable wildfires near communities. Do the research and speak out to elected officials and the Forest Service today and demand a halt to this expensive assault on forests.

Feather River Action! USFS Community Protection Project Comments

John O’Brien PhD Comments on Plumas Natl. Forest CPP Plan

John O’Brien Qualifications and CV

Chad Hanson / Center for Biological Diversity / John Muir Project CPP Comments

Plumas Forest Project Comments on CPP

David Arsenault comments on CPP

Native Tree Society CPP Comments

Above: A mechanically thinned landscape in Plumas County : The photo above is not actually a forest at all. It is a tree plantation. Real, truly healthy forests include shrubs, plants, insects (even some diseases), and complex, often dense habitat. Notice how much of the soil is exposed to the drying effects of sun and wind, which are very powerful at this elevation. Truly healthy forests almost always generate a layer of mulch that prevents moisture loss and erosion. There is no mulch or even a wildflower or plant visible. A wind driven wildfire could spread very quickly through this type of landscape toward communities and in fact that is exactly what happened in Paradise and during other recent wildfires that have claimed homes and lives. When a wildfire moves quickly, there is diminished time for firefighters to respond and for local people to evacuate. And time is everything in this kind of situation.

Regardless, the (remaining) trees in the photo likely would have been logged according to “Community Protection Project” CPP guidelines that allow the logging of trees nearly eight feet around.

Recreation also suffers when we create homogenous, mechanically scarred and habitat-poor landscapes. Who wants to hike or bike for miles through such a boring landscape of trees of similar age and species? Not only are these heavily “treated” landscaped less appealing to humans and their wild cousins, they are also habitat poor and (perhaps counterintuitively) high in fire risk.

Above: Crocker Grove, Plumas County— this area of large conifers and aspen in a moist valley between Lake Davis and Portola is included in the CPP, already marked for removal from the Mapes Project, which was likely abandoned in part due to public opposition, enflamed by the USFS not waiting for public comment before going ahead and marking trees on the Lake Davis Trail.

Larger, fire-resilient and carbon storing trees marked for removal in Crocker Grove between Portola and Lake Davis in the name of fire mitigation. These trees need to be kept on the landscape not be sent to the saw mill at taxpayer expense. We’re paying the cost of the climate crisis every day and the CPP plan will make it worse.

Setting the Record Straight: “Thinning” = Logging

This is a very informative interview with Chad Hanson, author of Smokescreen, a book about preserving a stable climate by preserving forests. Hanson refutes wildfire risk as a justification for further forest destruction. It’s about the corporate takeover of public lands and forests, the public agencies inappropriately in the business of logging, and those who use “Orwellian language” to cover up the truth about what is happening. If you still think mechanical “thinning” (AKA logging)  is the answer to wildfire, just ask the residents of Paradise. The  USFS “Protection Project” is not about the “protection” of anything other than logging industry profits. Read what they want to do to OUR forest and make sure to comment by July 18th.

“Community Protection Project”: Plumas National Forest at Risk from Herbicides, Industrial Logging, Likely Worsening Fire Safety

Sorry to interrupt your summer vacation but this is important……

If you love the Plumas National Forest you need to be aware of this: The Forest Service has opened a 30 day comment period starting June 19th, 2023 for a project that could let loose industrial logging on more than 175,000 acres near communities and hazardous herbicides on more than 200,000 acres, potentially leaving lush diverse forestlands a dry, dead and dying tinderbox, as in the photo below of Crocker Mtn. Rd. off of Grizzly Rd. This whole area was clearcut as a fire break after the Forest Service failed for many years to underburn the area, as was planned.

The US Forest Service considers competition, never cooperation between plants and trees (despite much peer reviewed evidence to the contrary) and focuses on reducing fuels while ignoring how mechanical “thinning” (AKA logging) lets sunlight and winds into the canopy and results in dried out and heated up environments that are more- not less- prone to fire. Plus, often piles of slash are left to burn and spread embers across the landscape.

While the USFS claims that the Dixie and other recent fires are a result of accumulation of fuels in the forest, a recent analysis points directly to the human-caused climate crisis as being directly responsible for additional land burned in California over the past fifty years. We should not be running projects on public land that exacerbate — rather than heal– the climate crisis.

Make sure to read the Environmental Assessment and submit your comments ASAP, tell everyone you know, especially in this area, to do the same.

Middle aged trees marked for cutting in the Mapes project, now slated for felling in the “Protection” Project. These more fire-resistant trees could grow old, truly “protect” local communities and absorb unwanted carbon from the atmosphere over their lives if they are allowed to do so.