NEWS RELEASE
June 10, 2003
Teusday
morning, June 10, Montanans For Multiple Use (MFMU) and 13
coplaintiffs have filed a lawsuit in Washington DC against the US
Department of Agriculture, US Forest Service and numerous Federal
personnel. The objective of the lawsuit is to stop the incremental
shutdown of National Forests to public access and active professional
management.
For nearly two decades extremist preservationist groups
have abused the no risk litigation rights available to them under the Equal
Access to Justice Act (EAJA) and other Federal statutes. Under the
provisions of EAJA and other federal laws, non-profit corporations are
not responsible for the actual cost to the Government if they file a
frivolous suit and lose every claim. If they win one claim, then the
Government pays them all the outrageous costs they turn in (e.g. "Friends of
the Bitterroot" were paid nearly a quarter million dollars to block 90% of
the planned timber salvage on only 10% of the burned area).
The
effect of this endless stream of preservationist lawsuits has discouraged
the USFS from implementing any significant active forest management.
The cumulative effect of the extremist actions have reduced the timber
supplies, forced the closure of twenty sawmills in Montana, prevented
responsible mining, prevented oil and gas extraction, and prevented
meaningful agricultural production and recreation in the National
Forests. In Montana, as a result, citizens have endured the reduction
of their per capita income to the point where they are nearly last in the
Nation. At the same time, they have had to shoulder increasing per
capita tax burdens as jobs and state tax revenues
decline.
Unfortunately, the USFS does not report the costs and effects of
obstructionist appeals and litigation to the public or to Congress.
Instead the USFS abdictates their management responsibilities to the US
Fish and Wildlife Service, activist extremist environmental groups, and the
courts. The USFS has made no real efforts to adhere to their statutory
responsibilities for protecting and managing the National Forests and to
ensure that National Forests contribute to local economic, social, and
ecologic sustainability. The USFS has failed to implement existing
Forest Plans, illegally revised Forest Plans by piecemeal amendments and
site specific actions, failed to disclose the cumulative effects of actions
and inactions, failed to revise the Forest Plan as required by law, failed
to monitor and evaluate consequences of past management actions, failed to
protect existing forests and watersheds, failed to provide a sustainable
flow of timber for local and national economic and social sustainability,
and failed to collaborate with local communities and tribes.
The suit
seeks an injunction to stop any additional implementation of illegal Forest
Plan amendment provisions including amendments that call for obliteration of
public roads. The injuction will seek to stop any additional
amendments to Forest Plans over 10 years old. The suit will seek restoration
of illegally obliterated roads, restoration of healthy fire resistant forest
stands through active commercial timber management, and to force the USFS to
immediately revise existing Forest Plans over 10 years old, make full public
disclosure, as required by the National Forest Management
Act.
Co-plaintiffs joining Montanans For Multiple Use in this action
represent a wide spectrum of forest user groups, business, political and
local governments. Coplaintiffs are: Northwest Montana Gold
Prospectors Association, Leland's Honda, Leland J. Moore, Montanans For
Property Rights, Capital Trail Vehicle Association, Flathead Snowmobile
Association, North American Wolf Watch, Owens and Hurst Lumber Co., Senator
Jerry O'Niel, Representative George Everett, Flathead County, Sanders
County, and Flathead Business and Industry Association.
Montanans For
Multiple Use expect this lawsuit to set a precedent for all National
Forests, forcing them to obey all the laws that govern their actions.
In addition MFMU intends for the suit to encourage citizens who are fed up
with a plan which lets our forests burn to band together and file lawsuits
through multiple use non-profit corporations to counteract the extreme
preservationists. Perhaps Congress will finally realize that the Equal
Access to Justice Act and The Endangered Species Act must be reformed if
Congress intends for the USFS professionals to manage the National Forests,
not the courts.
Submitted by Fred D. Hodgeboom, Vice President,
Montanans for Multiple Use.