Capital press. (Salem, OR) 19??-current, June 19, 2015, Page 13, Image 13

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    June 19, 2015
CapitalPress.com
13
Judge: Logging project won’t affect wolves
Judge says U.S. Forest Service suffi ciently studied wolf issue
Ore.
138
Area in
detail
By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI
Capital Press
230
The U.S. Forest Service
doesn’t have to study the
impact of logging on wolves
before proceeding with a
thinning project in Oregon’s
Rogue River-Siskiyou Na-
tional Forest, a federal judge
ruled.
The agency plans to treat
about 3,200 acres as part of
the Bybee project, which is
aimed at reducing the risk of
ZLOG¿UHLQRYHUVWRFNHGIRUHVW
stands.
Oregon Wild, an environ-
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complaint claiming the Forest
Service should have supple-
mented its environmental as-
CR
CRATER
R
LAKE
NAT’L
’
PARK
P R
UMPQUA
NATIONAL
FOREST
62
u
Rog
62
e
Bybee Project
planning area
ROGUE
RIVER 140
NAT’L FOR.
Medford
M
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife
OR-7, the wolf that wandered to the Rogue River drainage from
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an environmental group’s argument that a planned forest thinning
SURMHFWZRXOGLPSDFWWKHZROI
sessment of the project due to
the presence of wolves in the
area.
A male radio-collared wolf
originally from Northeast Or-
egon, known as OR-7, sired
two pups with a mate in the
area last year. Gray wolves
A
ROGUE
RIVER
NAT’L. FOR.
66
5
Ore.
Calif.
N
Alan Kenaga/Capital Press
are protected as an endan-
gered species in that part of
the state.
The Forest Service con-
ducted a “new information
review” to see if logging
would affect the wolves,
but concluded it would not
since their den was at least
15 miles away from the proj-
ect site.
U.S. District Judge Owen
Panner found that the agen-
cy took a sufficiently “hard
look” at the issue, given the
wolves’ distance and the
lack of designated critical
wolf habitat in the area.
Panner reached a simi-
lar conclusion in regard to
the northern spotted owl, a
threatened species, because
the Bybee project doesn’t re-
move any of critical habitat
or “take” any birds.
The Forest Service also
postponed thinning some
areas to preserve high value
wildlife habitat, he said.
Oregon Wild claimed that
the agency should have un-
dertaken a more comprehen-
sive “environmental impact
statement” of the project
because it contains poten-
tial federally designated ar-
eas and due to its proximity
to the Crater Lake National
Park.
The judge rejected these
arguments because the proj-
ect only has a small amount
of acreage eligible for wilder-
ness designation, the strictest
form of federal land protec-
tion.
Panner said the Forest Ser-
vice addressed concerns about
Crater Lake National Park by
scaling back the project near
the park’s border, and he
agreed that thinning will help
SURWHFWWKHDUHDIURP¿UH
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