[MCN] BREAKING: USFWS bull-trout opinion halts Swan Valley logging project
Matthew Koehler
mattykoehler at gmail.com
Thu May 18 12:32:38 EDT 2017
Why science, the law and citizen oversight still matters when it comes to
management of America's public lands....
*USFWS bull-trout opinion halts Swan Valley logging project*
MAY 17, 2017 BY LAURA LUNDQUIST
http://www.montanaotg.com/blog-native/2017/5/17/usfws-bull-trout-opinion-halts-swan-valley-logging-project
After four groups challenged a 2015 finding that logging wouldn’t affect
bull trout, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service recently reversed itself,
stopping a logging project at the edge of the Mission Mountain Wilderness.
On Friday, Flathead National Forest Supervisor Chip Weber announced he was
withdrawing his Notice of No Significant Impact involving the Cold Jim
Fuels Reduction and Forest Health Project in the Swan Lake District. The
project about 3 miles northwest of Condon was intended to be part of an
effort to reduce fuels in the wildland-urban interface where homes have
proliferated on private parcels. In a May 12 letter, Weber said his
September 2016 decision to allow the logging project to move forward was
based on USFWS biologists agreeing that bull trout in the area would not be
affected.
Their opinion turned out to be wrong.
Shortly after Weber issued his decision, four organizations – the Swan View
Coalition, Friends of the Wild Swan, Native Ecosystems Council and Alliance
for the Wild Rockies – said they would sue Weber, the U.S. Forest Service
and the USFWS for not doing a proper study of the project’s effects on wild
or endangered species including lynx, grizzly bears, fishers, wolverines
and bull trout.
For example, Cold Creek and Jim Creek are key bull trout spawning streams
so they’ve been designated critical habitat. Roads are known to adversely
impact bull trout habitat by clogging spawning beds with fine sediment,
which reduces fry emergence and spawning success. Jim Creek is already
listed as an impaired waterbody due to logging and roads. Approximately 179
miles of road already cross that area. Yet, the Cold Jim Project proposed
1,155 acres of logging and thinning, the construction of 3.1 miles of
temporary roads and decommissioning 1.9 miles of road.
In its 2015 input into the Flathead National Forest Plan, Montana Trout
Unlimited had also emphasized preserving existing bull trout habitat in the
Swan valley, especially since so much money has been spent trying to
eradicate lake trout from Swan Lake. Lake trout have had a negative affect
on bull trout populations in northwestern Montana.
“As fisheries managers actively work to address the threats posed by
non-native fish, maintaining high-quality aquatic habitat on the forest is
and will continue to be essential for the conservation and recovery of
at-risk native trout on the Flathead National Forest,” MTU executive
director Bruce Farling wrote.
Facing a lawsuit, the USFWS reviewed their information and agreed that a
formal assessment was necessary.
On April 27, the USFWS issued its Biological Opinion that the project was
“likely to adversely affect” bull trout and their habitat. Weber has pulled
the project for now.
“The Forest Service intends to prepare a supplemental Environmental
Assessment to consider whether effects of the Project to bull trout and
bull trout habitat are significant under the National Environmental Policy
Act,” Weber wrote. “The Forest Service will not take any on-the-ground
action to implement activities unless the agency makes a new decision.”
Arlene Montgomery, Friends of the Wild Swan program director, questioned
why the project had been approved in the first place.
“It is ironic that the agencies were fine with this project until we raised
concerns and threatened to sue,” Montgomery said in an email. “Once they
went back and fully analyzed the project, they determined it would indeed
adversely impact bull trout. This is why citizen oversight is so important.”
Mike Garrity, Alliance for the Wild Rockies executive director, pointed out
that fishers should live in the area and might be able to if it could be
left alone for a while. Much of the Swan River Valley was owned and logged
by Plum Creek Timber prior to being transferred to the Forest Service as
part of the Legacy Project.
“We hope that in addition to studying the effects of logging and bulldozing
new roads in bull trout critical habitat, the Forest Service will also look
at the effects of further habitat destruction when you consider that the
Forest Service has been unable to find a single fisher in recent years,
despite using tracking and bait stations throughout the entire Southwest
Crown of the Continent,” Garrity said.
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