Pqge 10 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon July 7, 2005 Tribal members comment By Dill Rhoadca for the Spilyay Tymoo An interdisciplinary team from the Forestry and Natural Resources branches has been collecting tribal member com ments on Wildland Urban Inter face (WUI) projects proposed for 2(K)5. Responses to a num ber of comments and concerns arc included with this article pro duced for Spilyay Tymoo read ers. The focus of WUI is to pro tect rural homes and communi ties from wildfire. This objective is achieved by thinning over stocked stands of timber and mowing underbrush throughout the urban interface where wild fire is a perceived threat. The 2005 WUI projects will treat approximately 8,800 acres in the Sidwaltcr, County Line and Warm Springs community areas over the next five years. The process for planning this project officially began in March of 2005 when the project inter disciplinary team (PIDT) com pleted its second and final scoping meeting with the tribal public. Meetings were held for Agency, Seekseccjua and Simnasho districts, initiating the process to complete a draft plan. A field review of the pro posed project areas will be scheduled with the annual Tim ber Tour this summer. Fish scientists report pressure to alter science (AP) - Many scientists at NOAA Fisheries, the federal agency responsible for balanc ing hydroelectric dams against endangered salmon, say they know of cases where scientific findings were altered at the re quest of commercial interests, according to a survey released Tuesday by two watchdog groups. The survey was conducted by the Union of Concerned Scien tists and Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility. The survey posed 34 questions and was sent to 460 NOAA Fisheries scientists across the country. Responses came back from 124, or 27 percent. "The conclusion is that po litical interference is a serious problem at NOAA Fisheries," Lexis Schulz, Washington repre sentative of the Union of Con cerned Scientists, said from Washington. Among the findings: (TORE P0UER I! I 0GXDI 1 iul9ClwyttfTnKi! 1 ' , Jl 1 I The PIOT, which presents information about the proposed project to interested tribal mem bers, is comprised of individu als from the technical staff and committees. The team includes a fish biologist, forester, wildlife ccologist, hydrologist, fuels man ager, forest engineer, silvicultur ist, archeologist, range conser vationist, soil scientist, writer editor, representatives from tribal committees, and a repre sentative from Warm Springs Forest Products Industries (WSFPI). Presentations made during the scoping meetings con tain general information regard ing the project area and treat ment objectives. All team mem bers and members of the tribal public arc encouraged to attend the meetings. Comments from the scoping meetings are used to develop a planning document known as a project assessment. The assess ment contains alternatives for implementing the project, a strategy to monitor the project after it has been implemented, and mitigation measures to off set negative impacts. The project assessment will include analysis of the affected environment, environmental consequences and cumulative effects. After considering input from the tribal public, the PIDT will de velop at least two alternatives, 58 percent of respondents said they knew of cases where high-level Commerce Depart ment appointees or managers inappropriately altered NOAA Fisheries determinations. 53 percent said they were aware of cases in which com mercial interests inappropriately induced the reversal or with drawal of NOAA Fisheries sci entific conclusions or decisions through political intervention. 13 percent said they knew of cases where environmental in terests inappropriately induced the reversal or withdrawal of NOAA Fisheries scientific con clusions or decisions through political intervention. 44 percent said NOAA Fish eries routinely makes determi nations using its best scientific judgment, even when political pressure is applied, while 37 percent disagreed. Steven Murawski, director of scientific programs and chief Diesel 4 inch Exhaust System Installed $499.99 Diesel Save Fuel with the pulling power you need 'V: 1,71;? 1 Example of trees in a wildland one emphasizing a balanced ap proach to resource management and another focusing on the sta tus quo, often referred to as the no action alternative. The PIDT will present their assessment and recommended alternative to the Resource Management Interdisciplinary Team (RMIDT) and they in turn release the assessment for public review. Following a 30-day review, RMIDT approves one of the alternatives and attaches a decision document to the project assessment, which is then forwarded to the BIA superin tendent for concurrence. Tribal member comments are accepted throughout the process at the main office of the Forestry science adviser for NOAA Fish eries, said from Washington that the survey represented about six percent of the nearly 2,000 sci entists at the agency, and prima rily represented the views of low-level staff who evaluate the work of others to develop man agement policy, not research scientists. Murawski would not say there was no political influ ence over science at the agency but said science is the founda tion of policy decisions that must take into account social and economic factors. "To say it is politicized is a cheap shot, really," he said. "These are complex decisions, and many times people don't like the outcomes for one reason or the other." Schulz said one of the inspi rations for the survey was a re cent case where NOAA Fisher ies adopted a policy that counts some hatchery salmon and wild salmon together when assessing Chips & Exhaust Package Installed $99999 on fire protection 'II Y'WiV) SP-j lie, m 3 3 A BuiHnoadnSpilyty urban interface area. Branch. The entire process and all management activities related to the forested area must adhere to goals, standards and best management practices adopted under the Integrated Resources Management Plan (1RMP) for the Forested Area. The plan is reviewed and updated every five years. The 2005 WUI project is being proposed to reduce the threat of catastrophic fire on communities and rural home sites in the planning areas. Treat ment costs arc offset through federal funding under the Wild land Urban Interface program. Some of the harvested trees will be chipped to provide hogg their status as endangered spe cies. The policy was adopted despite advice from the Salmon Recovery Science Review Panel, made up of independent scien tists, that they should adopt rules to keep hatchery and wild fish separate. At the time, NOAA Fisher ies Northwest Regional Admin istrator Bob Lohn said the hatchery policy was guided by a federal court ruling and staff scientists. Robert T. Paine, pro fessor emeritus of biology at the University of Washington served as chairman of the re view panel. I le said from Seatde that NOAA Fisheries rejected the first part of their report when they saw it dealt with the 2001 ruling by U.S. District Judge Michael Ilogan that the fisheries agency could not give Endangered Species Act protec tion just to wild fish if it had previously lumped hatchery fish into the same population. fuel for the Warm Springs For est Products Industries boiler. A subcontractor capable of per forming the job, which is bid by the mill, will do the chipping. This work is currently being done by Van Meter Ag. Forest I lealth There was a great deal of interest in pine beetles and their impact on the forest, and tribal members wanted to know if cutting trees actually attracts the beetles. The Ips (pine engraver) insect will bore into recently cut low-elevation pine trees in the spring and summer to lay eggs. The adult insects bore out and move into green trees, girdling and killing them. Cutting and chipping in the summer and fall should prevent the insects from going into the young pine stands. In regards to the size of trees being taken for chips, the silvi culturist noted there has been an increase in the number of small trees over the past few decades, in part because the fires that once thinned these stands arc now being suppressed. Un der the WUI project, trees up to 1 1 inches in diameter will be removed to provide space for the remaining trees to grow. This treatment will reduce the risk of catastrophic fire and more closely mimic a natural setting. Jobs will be created as a re sult of these projects. While the Don't forget.. t Superior Livestock Auction's 1 Video Royale in Winnemucca, NV July 25-29 Catalog Oaadllna: July 1 1 We offer PROGRESSIVE MARKETING with weekly livestock sales, large ring scale, weekly Northwest Buyers, monthly special sales, AND a new feedfot located just out the back gate! Consignments always welcome... Butchmrm start mt 10am Faadara start at Noon Central Oregon Livestock Auction ' 541-475-3851 Trent Stewart ClayTanler 480-5540 419-6060 System project chipping operation, which re quires special equipment, may be awarded to an outside con tractor, there will be jobs for tribal members. Hand felling juniper, clipping ponderosa pine, and jobs at the mill boiler will go primarily to tribal members. One tribal member said the pine ground had been harvested too extensively in the past and he wanted to know what was planned for this area in the months ahead. The most recent edition of 1RMP provides an average allowable cut of up to 2.5 million board feet per year from the pine ground. Treat ments in this area call for thin ning of overstocked stands, and harvests that target insect or disease control, as prescribed in the Forest Management Imple mentation Plan. A number of concerns were raised regarding the threat of fire in juniper woodlands and in timber stands near the commu nity such as lower Shitike Can yon. Areas being treated for ju niper removal will not be re planted, so the threat of cata strophic fire will be reduced. Any restocking of juniper will occur through natural regeneration. (Note: This article will con clude in the next edition of the Spilyay.) I ! QS