Opinion A4 Saturday, June 25, 2022 OUR VIEW A tip of the hat to the area’s graduates W e salute the host of college and high school graduates who strolled across the stage this month, clutching their diplomas. While graduation is certainly a recognized rite of passage, it is also a time of refl ection and hope. Now, more than ever, we need every area graduate. Lofty goals and sentiments are often legion during graduation — as they should be — but the basic fact remains that the nation, the state and the local community needs every one of those graduates to step out into the adult world with a goal to make a diff erence. It may appear easy to dismiss the notion that a single person can make an impact, but the truth is each young man and woman who walks off the graduation stage this month can make a diff erence. And we need those who want and can make a diff erence. At a time when the nation is rife with division, where discord is consumed like an energy drink, America, Oregon, Union and Wallowa counties need young people who still retain the determi- nation of their youth. People who are ready and eager to step up and seek change. Our greatest resource as a nation is our youth. Our prospects, our opportunities for success as a county, state and nation rest on the hopes and desires of our young people. Our young are the agents of our future, and the potential they represent is as valuable as any new policy, law or idea. Granted, we remain the greatest nation on Earth in terms of goals and values, and at no time in our shared history has chances of a happy life for our youth been more acute than now. Yet challenges, risks, also remain for our youth. There is no way to deny that the obstacles the nation and the state face are signifi cant. The perceived problems stack up easily, and solutions often are fl eeting. That is why the views, the ambitions, of those who have just graduated are so important to our collective prosperity. We need every one of the new graduates to feel they can make a diff erence, that they can help their community, their state and even their nation. We salute every single graduate from Eastern Oregon University and all of our area high schools. We hope that they will be able to move ahead in life with a calm but steady resolve to give back to their community and spark change for the good of all. EDITORIALS Unsigned editorials are the opinion of The Observer editorial board. Other columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of The Observer. LETTERS • The Observer welcomes letters to the editor. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We will not publish con- sumer complaints against busi- nesses, personal attacks against private individuals or comments that can incite violence. We also discourage thank-you letters. • Letters should be no longer than 350 words and must be signed and carry the author’s name, address and phone number (for verifi - cation only). We will not publish anonymous letters. • Letter writers are limited to one letter every two weeks. • Longer community comment columns, such as Other Views, must be no more than 700 words. Writers must provide a recent headshot and a one-sentence biography. Like letters to the editor, columns must refrain from complaints against businesses or personal attacks against private individuals. Submissions must carry the author’s name, address and phone number. • Submission does not guarantee publication, which is at the discre- tion of the editor. SEND LETTERS TO: letters@lagrandeobserver.com or via mail to Editor, 911 Jeff erson Ave., La Grande, OR 97850 Anti-forestry lawsuit puts forests and communities at risk made it harder for the Forest Service to remove tree species that compete NICK with native pine and are less resilient SMITH to fi re such as grand fi r or white fi r. OTHER VIEWS This compelled the national forests in Eastern Oregon to pursue dozens ix anti-forestry groups are of project-specifi c amendments to suing to block a new policy the 21-inch rule over the past 20 that would make it a little years in order to meet desired forest easier for the U.S. Forest Service conditions. to reduce wildfi re risks and restore This arbitrary rule created an forest health on national forestlands expensive and time-consuming pro- in Eastern Oregon and Washington. cess, and as a result, the Forest Service In doing so, their lawsuit aff ects sev- has struggled to keep pace with the eral projects that would conduct growing risks and restoration needs of hazardous fuel reduction on at least these forests, which places a variety of 209,000 acres of land that’s vulner- forest values and uses at risk. able to severe fi re. During the 30 years of this tem- The lawsuit aims porary rule, anti-for- to preserve an out- estry groups enjoyed One thing all of dated and unscien- the status quo these projects have tifi c rule from the because it tied the Clinton-era, known hands of our public in common is their as the “Eastside lands managers. primary objective Screens.” It origi- They could also use nally imposed a tem- it to block resto- is not necessarily porary rule prohib- ration projects they iting the removal of did not like, even if timber harvest, but trees larger than 21 the science-based hazardous fuels inches in diameter treatments were sup- on national forests by collabo- reduction and forest ported east of the Cascades, ratives with diverse including the interests. resiliency. Malheur, Umatilla, Rather than accel- Wallowa-Whitman, Deschutes, erate the trajectory of forests toward Ochoco and Fremont-Winema. a late-seral structure, as sound forest With little public involvement and management would help accomplish, no scientifi c justifi cation, this tempo- this temporary, arbitrary and unsci- rary and arbitrary rule became per- entifi c rule created forest conditions manent when it was amended into that are unnaturally dense and exac- the management plans as standards erbate risk to wildfi re, insect and for these federally owned forests. disease infestations, and drought. In theory, the rule was intended Rather than lifting this rule com- to protect and improve forest condi- pletely, the Forest Service made only tions associated with old and mature modest changes to its policy. In Jan- forest habitat. But in practice, it uary 2021, the agency adopted the S SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION Subscription rates: Monthly Autopay ...............................$10.75 13 weeks.................................................$37.00 26 weeks.................................................$71.00 52 weeks ..............................................$135.00 █ Nick Smith is the executive director of Healthy Forests, Healthy Communities, a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization supporting active forest management on federal lands. STAFF SUBSCRIBEAND SAVE NEWSSTAND PRICE: $1.50 You can save up to 55% off the single-copy price with home delivery. Call 800-781-3214 to subscribe. “Old Tree and Large Tree Guide- lines,” which includes diameter limits for tree removal ranging from 21 to 30 inches, depending on tree species, and an overarching age limit on tree removal of 150 years. In announcing their lawsuit, anti-forestry groups labeled this modest change as a “Trump-era” rule allowing wholesale “logging of old growth.” Yet the new guide- line has given our public lands man- agers some fl exibility to restore unhealthy forests by implementing science-based treatments that are appropriate to the landscape. The Forest Service is using this new guideline to develop several projects on six national forests. One thing all of these projects have in common is their primary objective is not necessarily timber harvest, but hazardous fuels reduction and forest resiliency. Some projects are located in areas identifi ed as Wildland Urban Interface (WUI) where the wildfi re threat to communities is heightened. It’s unfortunate these groups would sue to block projects that would improve the health of our forests and reduce the risks to our public lands and nearby communi- ties. As climate change continues to impact our forests, the Forest Ser- vice should be doing everything possible to prevent large-scale, car- bon-emitting wildfi res, while max- imizing the ability of our forests to sequester more carbon and store more carbon in both healthy trees and wood products. Anindependent newspaper foundedin1896 www.lagrandeobserver.com Periodicals postage paid at Pendleton, Oregon 97801 Published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays (except postal holidays) by EO Media Group, 911 Jefferson Ave., La Grande, OR 97850 (USPS 299-260) The Observer retains ownership and copyright protection of all staff-prepared news copy, advertising copy, photos and news or ad illustrations. They may not be reproduced without explicit prior approval. COPYRIGHT © 2022 Phone: 541-963-3161 Regional publisher ....................... Karrine Brogoitti Home delivery adviser.......... 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