YSS News

Collaborative Group Supports Rim Fire Salvage Plan

PRESS RELEASE
FOR RELEASE NOW – August 27, 2014

Contacts:
Mike Albrecht, TuCARE (209) 984-1146 mikealbrecht@mlode.com
John Buckley, CSERC (209) 586-7440
jbuckley@cserc.org

The Yosemite Stanislaus Solutions (YSS) collaborative group supports the U.S. Forest Service moving forward with its newly released plan to selectively treat portions of the Rim Fire by salvage logging a portion of the dead trees.

Over the past year, the Forest Service went to great lengths to engage the public in the planning process that led to the approval of the newly released final environmental impact statement (FEIS) and Record of Decision. Not only were materials provided through the normal channels, but the Stanislaus Forest and the Regional Office of the Forest Service also sponsored webinars, open house sessions, and two major Rim Fire science meetings for stakeholders in Sacramento.

Mike Albrecht, chair of the YSS group, pointed out, “Because there are such vast numbers of dead trees that blanket many areas of the Rim Fire, there are plenty of dead trees for every need. This plan assures that enough timber can be salvaged to meet our timber industry needs while leaving more than enough behind for wildlife and watershed purposes. This is a win-win plan.”

John Buckley, co-chair of the YSS group, agreed, “If the Stanislaus Forest plan failed to remove some significant amount of the millions of dead trees, the resulting fuel accumulation as the trees fell over would pose extreme risk for another devastating fire. By strategically removing dense thickets of snags in some areas that can be managed for low fuel levels, the Forest staff can better ensure that a new re-growing forest will actually survive.”

YSS is an independent collaborative group made up of business interests, conservation groups, the timber industry, tribal representatives, motorized recreation representatives, and other diverse interests. The collaborative group earlier this year publicly supported salvage logging treatments being done before the dead trees deteriorate to the point that they no longer have any economic value as wood products. At that point, taxpayers would have to pay to have the dead trees removed to reduce fuel risk, rather than have the timber industry pay to remove the dead trees for lumber.

YSS also supports the Forest Service moving as quickly as possible to the next important phase of restoration, which is replanting high severity burn areas where no green trees survived to provide seeds for new young conifers. That reforestation planning effort is the next stage for the Forest Service in its extensive restoration efforts for the national forest portion of the Rim Fire area.

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National forests begin new era of cooperation after Rim Fire

Excerpt from article by William Wade Keye in “The Forester Artist”

A Tuolumne County group, which includes both timber industry and environmental representatives, had been meeting prior to the Rim Fire, searching for – and finding – common ground on previously deadlocked issues of forest management. Formed under the auspices of a 2009 law promoting ecological restoration, the Yosemite-Stanislaus Solutions collaborative is at the forefront of a new approach that is bringing people together to heal broken landscapes. The old “spotted owl versus logger” polarities have given way to fresh consensus, with fire ecology at its core.  Read more at:  https://theforesterartist.com/2014/06/

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Groups push for expedited Rim Fire logging

Excerpt from the article written by Alex MacLean, The Union Democrat, April 24, 2014 11:30 am

Local environmental organizations, the timber industry and others have joined forces to urge the Forest Service to approve fast removal of burned trees from the Rim Fire area. Yosemite Stanislaus Solutions, a coalition of environmental and logging groups, sent a letter to U.S. Forest Service Regional Forester Randy Moore on Tuesday, stressing the need for swift action to begin “salvage logging” projects on scorched parts of the Stanislaus National Forest.

“Unless speedy implementation is quickly allowed for whatever salvage logging is ultimately approved by the Forest Service, a tremendous amount of sawlog wood material will deteriorate past the point of having economic value,” the letter stated. “This would mean that the public would then need to pay in the future to have that fuel removed from the burn area.”

Delays could also lead to the build-up of flammable material that would create an “extremely high risk when future fires ignite,” the letter said.

Fast action is needed so that reforestation projects can begin. After removing the burned wood, the Forest Service can replant trees and restore habitats and watersheds.

For the complete story, see the April 24, 2014, edition of The Union Democrat.

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Diverse Interests Support Speedy Implementation Of Rim Fire Salvage Logging

PRESS RELEASE
FOR RELEASE NOW – APRIL 22, 2014

Contacts:
Mike Albrecht, TuCARE (209) 984-1146 mikealbrecht@mlode.com
John Buckley, CSERC (209) 586-7440 jbuckley@cserc.org

Diverse Interests Support Speedy Implementation Of Rim Fire Salvage Logging

Background: In 2010, a variety of forest interest organizations and agencies formed a collaborative group called Yosemite Stanislaus Solutions (YSS) under the auspices of the U.S. Forest Service. In January of this year, YSS became an independent organization as representatives of the timber industry, environmental groups, business interests, local government, state and federal agencies, tribal organizations, and recreational interests created a charter, approved governance agreements, and elected officers for the collaborative. Over recent months, YSS has engaged in outreach — searching for grants and other funding to help implement highly needed restoration and fire recovery work within the massive 257,000-acre Rim Fire that burned so severely last summer.

The Key Action: On Friday, April 18, 2014, twenty-one members of YSS jointly approved a letter to U.S. Forest Service Regional Forester Randy Moore. The letter describes YSS members’ strong support for speedy implementation of Rim Fire salvage logging projects that are currently being planned on Stanislaus National Forest lands. In particular, the letter underscores the belief by those signing the YSS letter that any delays due to litigation or other reasons could jeopardize the multiple economic and environmental benefits that salvage logging treatments will yield.

At a time of often-divisive polarization and competing goals for resources, YSS is a visible example of many diverse interests focusing on areas of common agreement, rather than areas where members may hold differing views. The jointly supported position letter addressed to Regional Forester Moore is also being provided to federal politicians in order to emphasize YSS agreement that salvage logging, reforestation, and restoration projects need to be funded and to move forward expeditiously.

Mike Albrecht, YSS Chair stated, “We stand united in opposing any delay.” Vice-chair John Buckley agreed, “It is far more logical to have the industry remove dead trees with a return for taxpayers than to let the wood deteriorate so it loses saw-log value. In that case, taxpayers would end up having to pay huge amounts of money to remove the dead wood to reduce unsafe fuel levels. Delay makes no sense.”

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