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                                                Forest Service uses false information to justify timber management 05/05/2010
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                                                Kentucky Heartwood submitted comments to the Forest Service regarding the 7,000 acre Redbird Midstory Removal Project. The project documents can be seen here. The Forest Service used faulty information to justify the project, which they plan to implement with a Categorical Exclusion, circumventing the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and its standards of review. The project would force an unnatural one- and two-aged structure on this recovering forest to simplify future timber harvests and regeneration, rather than helping the forest to recover its native range of structures and functions. You can download and read our comments below.
                                                rb_midstoryremoval.pdf
                                                File Size: 192 kb
                                                File Type: pdf
                                                Download File

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                                                Kentucky Heartwood comments on DBNF Hemlock Woolly Adelgid Proposal 08/04/2009
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                                                Kentucky Heartwood recently submitted comments for scoping on a proposal by the Daniel Boone National Forest to save some hemlock stands in the face of the Hemlock Woolly Adelgid. You can learn more about the Hemlock Woolly Adelgid and its effects on Hemlocks on the Save Kentucky's Hemlocks webpage.


                                                To read the full Forest Service proposal, click here.


                                                To read Kentucky Heartwood's comments, download the following file:
                                                scoping_comments_hwa_forestwide.pdf
                                                File Size: 100 kb
                                                File Type: pdf
                                                Download File

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                                                Kentucky Heartwood Appeals Forest Plan Lawsuit to 6th Circuit 08/04/2009
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                                                For Immediate Release

                                                 

                                                Kentucky Heartwood Appeals Forest Plan Decision to Sixth Circuit


                                                Claims faulty analysis ignored public sentiment, over-emphasizes commercial logging on Daniel Boone National Forest


                                                (Lexington), KY - Kentucky Heartwood recently filed a Notice of Appeal to the 6th Circuit challenging the April 27, 2009 decision of federal judge Karl Forester. Forester ruled against Kentucky Heartwood and Heartwood in a lawsuit charging that the U.S. Forest Service had violated the law in implementing its revised forest management plan and the Morehead Ice Storm Recovery Project.


                                                The forest advocacy organizations initially brought the suit to federal court on the grounds that public input was ignored; effects of herbicides were not analyzed; and the endangered Indiana Bat was not adequately protected. The appeal to Circuit Court charges that District Judge Forester failed to address the issues raised in the original complaint.


                                                In its 2003 revision of the Forest Plan, the Forest Service contemplated several management scenarios for the 700,000-acre Daniel Boone National Forest in Southeastern Kentucky. Unprecedented public input during the planning process resulted in 1,109 letters and 2,658 petition signatures submitted for the Forest Service to consider on the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) alone. Ninety-four percent of the individuals who submitted comments on the DEIS urged the federal agency to stop commercial logging on Kentucky's only national forest. The Forest Service considered 6 alternatives in detail; none of them represented a no-logging option.


                                                During the course of the nine-year forest plan revision process, two citizens’ alternatives for managing the forest without commercial logging were submitted to the agency, which ignored them both. Despite the fact that places like Big South Fork and Great Smoky Mountains National Park are successfully managed without the use of commercial logging, the Forest Service attempted to characterize a no-logging option as non-management of the forest and deemed it unworkable without any analysis. Judge Forester accepted their argument without addressing the National Forest Management Act regulations that require the range of alternatives to respond to significant public concerns.
                                                 

                                                "The Daniel Boone National Forest and the people of Kentucky deserve a management plan rooted in a healthy, functioning forest ecosystem – not a patchwork of logging roads and subsidized commercial harvests. But the Forest Service says this is unworkable, without even taking a serious look at how to do it,” stated Kentucky Heartwood Director, Jim Scheff.
                                                 

                                                The 2003 Plan approves the use of herbicides across the forest. Kentucky Heartwood and Heartwood pointed out that the plan analysis failed to address the forest-wide impacts of herbicide use. The Forest Service claimed that analysis need only take place when a particular project is approved. The judge agreed with the agency without addressing the fact that at the project level the Forest Service continues to fail to consider the cumulative impacts of forest-wide herbicide use.
                                                 

                                                Chris Schimmoeller, boardmember of Kentucky Heartwood, stated, "At a time when the devastating effects of long-term, cumulative herbicide exposure are becoming well known, we are extremely disappointed that Judge Forester was fooled by the Forest Service’s shell game."
                                                 

                                                For more information:

                                                Jim Scheff, Kentucky Heartwood Director

                                                (859) 893-0262

                                                quercusstellata@gmail.com

                                                 
                                                Jim Bensman

                                                Heartwood Forest Watch Director

                                                (618) 463-0714

                                                jbensman1@charter.net
                                                 

                                                Chris Schimmoeller

                                                Kentucky Heartwood Council Member

                                                (502) 226-5751, ext. 3

                                                 

                                                ###

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                                                Men welcome jobs clearing forest 04/16/2009
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                                                Reposted from http://www.kentucky.com/181/story/762526.html

                                                By Andy Mead - amead@herald-leader.com


                                                CLIFTY WILDERNESS — The federal stimulus package is at work in some of Kentucky's most rugged back country.

                                                It's hard, sometimes dangerous work. But in Menifee County, where one of every five is out of work, a temporary job making $15.50 an hour clearing ice-storm debris from trails is a blessing.

                                                Darrell Hess, who with his general contractor partner Leonard Brown hired the other three men in the crew, gives the rundown.

                                                There is Bill Peck, who usually works in construction, then got a factory job, then got laid off. There is Walter Centers, who worked off and on for Hess for years, then left for a regular job a year ago — and was laid off. There is Dave Holdorff, who owns a welding business, but hasn't had enough work lately to keep the shop lights on.

                                                Hess and Brown do all sorts of work: some logging, excavating, building fences, a little farming.

                                                But, with the economy like it is, all those things had been slow.

                                                "I'll be honest with you," Hess said. "I was glad to hear about this because I didn't know where my next job was going to come from."

                                                The men were working Wednesday on Osborne Bend Trail, known to local horse riders at Powderhouse Trail, in the Clifty Wilderness. The 13,000-acre wilderness is part of the Red River Gorge in the Daniel Boone National Forest.

                                                The Daniel Boone was one of the first national forests to get some of the $1.15 billion in stimulus money being funneled through the Forest Service. The Boone forest's portion was $550,000. The Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area in Western Kentucky, where damage from the January ice storm was more severe, got $3 million.

                                                The Daniel Boone hired Swift & Staley, a Western Kentucky contractor that already had been approved to do work in Land Between the Lakes, and that company hired local subcontractors in Eastern Kentucky.

                                                Five crews totaling two dozen people are clearing trails and roads in the gorge and other parts of Daniel Boone's Cumberland Ranger District.

                                                Two crews with a total of eight people are clearing damage from a February wind storm from the Redbird Crest Trail in the Boone's Redbird Ranger District.

                                                Most of the crews are using chain saws or whatever power equipment they need.

                                                But because of rules governing a nationally designated wilderness, no motorized vehicles or tools may be used to clear trails that cross the Clifty.

                                                You might hear them work before you see them, but you would have to listen carefully for the whinnying of a horse or the soft rasping of a cross-cut saw.

                                                The men pack their tools, their lunch and themselves on four horses and a mule. They use cross-cut and bow saws and axes to clear trees and limbs that had been blocking trails since late January.

                                                The work can be back-breaking — sawing through a thick red oak trunk quickly teaches why a 6-foot cross-cut saw is also called a "misery whip." But the men are all from Menifee County. Although they all needed the work, Hess said, more than just money is involved.

                                                All the men had grown up running up and down the steep hills that now are the Clifty. They all ride horses on the trails, even when they aren't coming in to work.

                                                And there's the larger economic picture. Hess's father runs a horse camp, and already people are calling from distant places, trying to make summer plans and wondering if the trails will be open.

                                                "This part of the forest holds a great interest for tourists and for our local merchants and our community because a lot of people come to visit this area," he said. "This is an important project to a lot of people."

                                                Standing on a ridge in the thick forest on Wednesday, when an overcast sky was keeping the men cool and the horses frisky, Hess also noted the advantage of working in a place where most people come to get away from it all.

                                                "It's the most beautiful office I ever set in," he said.

                                                Reach Andy Mead at (859) 231-3319 or 1-800-950-6397, ext. 3319.

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