TIm ll.'iii.. r fiaette-Times, Heppner, Oregon, Thursday, August 16, 1979 NINE
F
orem iserYice cilevceioTO regional plan
An over-all regional plan for
the national forests in Oregon
and Washington is being
developed to guide the use of
renewable and non-renewable
resources for years to come,
according to R.E. Worthing
ton, Pacific Northwest Reg
ional Forester for the U S
Forest Service.
The plan will complement
plans also being developed by
each of the 19 national forests
and will include proposals for
cooperative forestry assist
ance to state governments and
private landowners in two
states. It will also relate to a
national plan encompassing
all national forest land in the
nation.
All plans are being develop
ed under provisions of the
National Forest Management
Act of 1976, by teams of
persons representing several
branches of knowledge phys
ical, biological, economic, and
social sciences.
An environmental impact
statement for the plan will be
prepared for filing with the
Environmental Protection
Agency a year from now,
Worthington said. Public com
ment on the issues to be
addressed in the draft state
ment will be accepted until
October this year.
Worthington said the plan
will discuss:
Long-range policy, goals,
and objectives assigned to the
region by the national program.
How the region can
achieve the assigned' object
ives. How regionwide targets
should be distributed among
the national forests.
How public issues and
management concerns may
he resolved.
In addition to public issues
and management concerns
identified through public par
ticipation and coordination,
the regional plan will address
issues and concerns referred
from national and forest
planning.
The regional plan will en-
sic
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b4fwMU6toHnAt9.il. 1979
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Sales limited to Retail Quantitiei Onlv
9
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compass the tentative issues,
concerns, and opportunities
identified from previous pub
lic comment on the Roadless
Area Review and Evaluation
(RARE II), unit plans dev
eloped in the national forests,
proposals for the Forest and
Rangeland Renewable Re
sources Planning Act pro
gram that are now being
updated, and from other
Forest Service activities.
Very little new data will be
gathered.
Information on the proposed
plan and process is being
mailed to interested persons
with the request for oral and
written response by October 1,
1979. Public comment should
be made to Land Management
Planning Team Leader,
USFS, P.O. Box 3623, Portland
97208. Oral comments can be
made by calling 503-221-3628.
No formal public meetings
are planned at this time,
Worthington said. A set of
issues, concerns and oppor
tunities that will guide the
planning process will be
developed from comment re
ceived and from Forest Ser
vice administrators and rep
resentatives of state and local
and other federal agencies.
Boardman
windsite
delayed
Cont. from page 1
said the Boardman site was a
strong possibility before last
week when DOE officials in
Washington D.C. said !h
agency was looking at other
sites. The Boardman area has
not yet been ruled out but a
decision to locate it there has
been postponed for about two
months.
"It came as a surprise to
us," the spokesman said.
There are other wind ma
chines currently in operation.
In 1974, a 100 kilowatt experi
mental model was developed
near Sandusky, Ohio. The
second was a 200 kilowatt
system with the same design
installed at Clayton, New
Mexico in early 1978, a third
built in mid-1978 in Puerto
Rico and another on Block
Island, Rhode Island.
About three weeks ago, the
largest wind generator so far
was completed at Boone,
North Carolina by the General
Electric Company with 200 ft.
rotor blades and turning out 2
megawatts of power at wind
speeds of 25 m.p.h., gener
ating electricity for about 500
average homes.
Boeing's generator would be
about 25 percent larger and
expected to start rotating as
early as next spring under a
$20 million contract.
In an article August 5 in the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer,
Boeing spokesman Joe Homes
said sites along the Columbia
River Gorge separating Ore
gon and Washington were
among a number of locations
under consideration by the
Department of Energy work
ing with NASA.
Some utilities, Holmes said,
have expressed interest in
buying the Mod-2 version.
However, the company's mar
keting effort is reported to be
at low key. Although it is one
of the leading industries in
research and development in
the wind turbine field, Boeing
is working on other solar
developments.
RUBBER
STAMPS
Moda To Order At
The
Gazette-Times
676-922S