News Blue Mountain Eagle FOREST Continued from Page A1 “The fire funding fix is coming on board next year, so that is going to provide some additional funding across the Forest Service to address some of these critical issues,” Bev- erlin said. “So we’re excited about that.” Timber harvest One oft-cited issue is the sheer amount of timber and undergrowth building up in the forests, feeding ever-larger wildfires such as the 110,000- acre Canyon Creek Complex near John Day in 2015. Warness, with Boise Cas- cade, said the Umatilla, Wal- lowa-Whitman and Malheur forests grow about 800 million board-feet of timber every year, of which approximately 400 million board-feet — enough for 30,000 houses — is left to deteriorate. As a result, Warness said the situation has compounded over the last 20 years and left the woods severely overstocked and prone to massive wildfires, as well as insect and disease outbreaks. “We believe that logging is an important tool that can be used on this landscape,” War- ness said. Doubling timber harvest would provide some certainty for the industry, Warness said, but the plan does not offer any guarantees the Forest Service will be able to meet those tar- gets each year. Lawson Fite, an attorney with the American Forest Re- EO Media Group/George Plaven Todd Nash, a rancher and Wallowa County commissioner, looks at a map showing grazing allotments within the Wallowa Valley Ranger District of the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest. The areas in green show active allotments, while the areas in pink are vacant allotments and the areas in yellow are closed allotments. source Council in Portland, agreed the plan does not pro- vide a clear enough direction for timber harvests that would maintain the mill infrastructure in Eastern Oregon. “It’s not a directional docu- ment, like a forest plan should be,” Fite said. “There’s no get- ting from A to B in there.” Fite said the organization is still reviewing all 5,000 pages of documents, but is “seriously considering” filing an objec- tion. “So many mills have closed, and the level of timber that’s being processed in Eastern Oregon is just a fraction of what it used to be,” Fite said. “What we have now is a level of infrastructure that is really a minimum for what the Forest Service will need to manage the landscape for forest health and fire resilience.” Livestock grazing The national forests are like- wise critical for Eastern Oregon ranchers, who are a vital cog in the region’s economy. John Williams, a recently retired livestock agent for Ore- gon State University Extension in Wallowa County, said local agriculture is a $60 million a year business, and the vast ma- jority comes from raising cattle. “It’s the economic base for our county,” Williams said. “We want to produce as much as we can.” Alternative E-Modified does call for potentially adding 51,600 animal unit months, or AUMs, associated with vacant allotments for livestock across the three forests. An AUM de- scribes the amount of forage one cow and her calf, one horse or five sheep or goats would eat during a month. Todd Nash, a longtime rancher and a Wallowa County commissioner, remains skep- tical whether that will come to fruition. He said the plan lends itself to more stagnation, and appears to favor vacant grazing allotments as “grass banks,” rather than issuing new grazing permits. At the same time, grazing restrictions continue to get tighter for riparian protections and threatened plant species, Nash said. He specifical- ly mentioned a lawsuit filed in January to block grazing around Spalding’s catchfly, a summer-blooming member of the carnation family, on 44,000 acres within the Hells Canyon National Recreation Area. “Cattle are always pointed at as the villain,” Nash said. “We think that they have a role here in Wallowa County, one of which is reducing fine fu- els availability. ... All the fire managers will tell you that fine fuels, a.k.a. grasses, are what carry the flames.” Matt McElligott, owner of LM Ranch in North Powder and public lands chairman of the Oregon Cattlemen’s As- sociation, said ranchers made significant progress on easing some restrictions in the plan last year. Watershed health is now linked to trends in individ- ual allotments, he said, which in turn dictate grazing stan- dards such as stubble height and stream bank alterations. “What they had placed in there earlier, it wasn’t going to work,” McElligott said. “It was just too restrictive for grazing.” McElligott said he does still worry that biological opinions WATER Continued from Page A1 town and look for green lawns, Hamsher said. City meter re- cords also show who’s using water for sprinkling. The city sent warning notices to about 40 customers who are known to use 20,000-100,000 gallons per month, City Record- er Bobbie Brown said. If they don’t restrict usage, they’ll face a stiff fine, she said. Irate public Water customers expressed their displeasure with the situ- ation during heated discussion at the city council’s Aug. 8 meeting. City officials sought to dispel rumors about the water situation, but they got an earful of complaints in an election year with the mayor and three coun- cil positions on the ballot. Heidi Cearns asked why the city has experienced water prob- lems every year for the past five years and demanded the coun- cil, as elected officials, do their job. This elicited a sharp rebuke from Councilor Les Church. “You want my job?” he asked. Jeannine Sibley told the council people should be al- lowed to grow food crops in their gardens if other people are allowed to water their cattle. She later criticized the council meet- ing on Facebook. “Tonight was a train wreck,” she said, adding, “I was appalled Wednesday, August 15, 2018 for endangered fish issued by federal agencies will supersede the Forest Plan. One such opin- ion on the Malheur National Forest, he said, is “more an- ti-grazing than anything else I’ve read.” “I’d like for the Blue Moun- tains plan to be the plan that everybody runs under,” McEl- ligott said. Access, wilderness On the other hand, some environmental groups say the plan places too much empha- sis on resource extraction, and does not do enough to protect old-growth trees and wildlife. Doug Heiken, conserva- tion and restoration coordi- nator for the Portland-based Oregon Wild, said untouched wilderness areas have become increasingly fragmented over the years, and the Forest Plan now overemphasizes logging and grazing at the expense of habitat. “We’re really afraid the For- est Service is going to lose sight of the entire reason we had pro- tections for these large trees,” Heiken said. “That’s especially important in light of climate change. Those trees are big res- ervoirs for carbon.” Species such as wolves, goshawks, pileated woodpeck- ers and Endangered Species Act-listed fish would all do better in greater unmanaged wilderness, he said. He agreed there is a need for more active forest management, but argued that should take the form of thinning, using fire as a man- agement tool when the weather is favorable, and perhaps most controversially, closing roads. at the way a couple city council members spoke (or) yelled at concerned citizens in tonight’s meeting.” One man said the expensive landscaping he installed since moving to Prairie City three years ago is nearly dead. He and several other residents said they were willing to pay $10-15 more per month for water if necessary. That position is not repre- sentative of the city as a whole, Hamsher told the Eagle, recall- ing how upset residents were when presented with a 50 cent per month increase for water and sewer just three years ago. He also noted that elderly peo- ple and people on fixed incomes cannot afford a rate increase like that. Systemic problems The problem with the city’s water system is supply and debt — it’s not leaks in the pipes, Hamsher said. “If we know where a leak is, we fix it,” he said. Some residents confuse water problems with sewer problems, Public Works Di- rector Chris Camarena told the council. Plans are in the works to address leaking sewer mains and faulty sewer pumps, but the problem with the water system is supply hampered by drought, he said. The city borrowed $2 million to build a slow-sand filtration unit in 2008 to treat water drawn from Dixie Creek by infiltration galleries. But Dixie Creek typi- 73767 A18 “Nobody needs all of those roads,” Heiken said. “We do need reasonable access to our forests, obviously. ... We can have reasonable access to lands and still conserve our water quality, conserve our salmon and save our big game from disturbances.” Road closures remain a major source of contention in the plan. The three for- ests have a combined 23,421 miles of roads, while the pro- jected annual maintenance of roads is just 2,007 miles, creating a backlog of mainte- nance needs. The Forest Service has repeatedly said the plan does not close any roads, and those decisions will be made at a project-specific level. Howev- er, Bruce Dunn, a forester for RY Timber in Joseph and a Wallowa County commission- er-elect, said the plan does set the stage for roads to be closed, cutting off a vital link to resi- dents’ way of life — from wild- life viewing to accessing fire- wood and picking mushrooms and berries. “You add all that together, and that’s why we have this op- position to it,” he said. “I think this is going to be a big thing when we get back into travel management.” The Forest Service said it received its first two objections to the plan last week. Beverlin said the agency looks forward to working with the public to bring the plan across the finish line and start accelerating resto- ration in the forests. “We’re optimistic we’re go- ing to be able to do that across the Blues,” Beverlin said. cally runs dry this time of year in severe drought conditions. Brown said the creek has run dry every year in the 11 years she’s lived in Prairie City. The city needs to recognize that Dixie Creek is not a viable water source anymore, Camare- na told the council. The project saddled the city with debt and made finding money for water projects dif- ficult. Perforation work on the No. 2 well boosted output from 50 gpm to 100 gpm, and the city spent about $55,000 drilling the No. 3 well about 60 feet deeper, which increased production by about 60 gpm. With those improvements, the wells are putting out 175 gal- lons per minute under drought conditions, but they’re not keep- ing up with demand, Camarena said. The city could drill the No. 3 well to 800 feet, but there’s no guarantee they’ll hit a bigger aquifer, he said. In any case, the drilling can’t be done now be- cause the well is needed to keep up with demand. A new well site Hamsher has long supported establishing a new well site at Fainman Springs. The $900,000 project calls for running about two miles of pipe and electrical power, but the well could pro- duce up to 600 gpm — about twice what the city uses. The council directed Ham- sher to continue negotiations with John Combs, who owns Fainman Springs. Hamsher said Joe Hitz at Sisul Engineering was looking at several routes in- volving different landowners to access the site. The Grant County Road De- partment could assist with the road work, Hamsher said, but he wants to conduct well tests at Fainman Springs before invest- ing in pipes, power and roads. Finding money for water projects is difficult compared to sewer projects, Hamsher said. He said he’s talked to Scott Fairley at Business Oregon, the governor’s office and Rep. Lynn Findlay about help without suc- cess. A U.S. Department of Agri- culture grant for small, impov- erished communities that have declared an emergency could offer hope, Camarena told the council. The grant could provide up to $150,000 for water mains and up to $1 million for wells. But negotiations with the property owner and infrastruc- ture construction means the Fainman Springs option is months away from completion. In the meantime, the city is looking at emergency options — using water from wells at the Prairie Wood Products mill and the Depot RV Park to supply fire trucks, calling in the National Guard to truck water from John Day and restarting the city’s No. 1 well.