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Conservationists Vie To
Buy Forest Habitat
Timber Firms' Sell-Off Worries Groups
By Juliet Eilperin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 21, 2006; A01
FORT BRAGG, Calif. -- The Big River tract in California's
Mendocino County is a sprawling expanse of towering redwoods and Douglas firs,
woods that for years have provided an ideal habitat for rare spotted owls and
endangered coho salmon and steelhead trout. Now, it's all up for sale.
Big River, neighboring Salmon Creek and dozens of other
forests across the nation have come on the market in recent years as timber
companies shed holdings that are worth more as real estate than as a source of
lumber. The trend has spurred a land rush that has conservation groups
scrambling to raise money to buy environmentally sensitive tracts in
competition with private investors seeking to snap up the land for development.
A recent U.S. Forest Service study predicted that more than
44 million acres of private forest land, an area twice the size of Maine, will
be sold over the next 25 years. The consulting firm U.S. Forest Capital
estimates that half of all U.S. timberland has changed hands in the past
decade. The Bush administration also wants to sell off forest land, by
auctioning more than 300,000 acres of national forest to fund a rural school
program.
"The nation has never seen anything like this," said
Conservation Fund President Lawrence A. Selzer, whose 20-year-old group is
hoping to raise $48 million in the coming months to buy the 16,000 acres that
make up Big River and Salmon Creek. "It has the potential to permanently and
profoundly change the landscape of America."
The United States still has large swaths of forest -- much
of it private -- that provide critical habitat for large animals such as bears
and cougars as well as recreational opportunities for the public. But if the
selling spree continues, environmentalists fear, these areas could be cut up
into much smaller parcels in which condominiums and trailer parks would replace
soaring trees.
The sales have attracted limited national attention because
they are mostly private transactions and involve local planning decisions, but
the stakes are enormous. In the Pacific Northwest, New England, Southeast and
parts of the upper Midwest, traditional timber companies or newly emerging
timber investment management organizations, known as TIMOs, own vast stretches
of forest that rival the national forest system.
Today, a third of the U.S. land mass is forest -- the same
proportion as in 1907 but just 71 percent of what existed before settlement by
Europeans -- and 57 percent of it is privately owned. But competition from
cheap imported lumber, soaring land prices and pressure from Wall Street are
now prompting timber companies to sell.
Stephen Levesque, the Campbell Timberland Management area
manager who oversees the company's forest holdings in Mendocino, said new state
regulations have made lumber operations increasingly expensive and developers
have come by with tempting offers. The company recently sold off 160 acres that
are likely to become lots for residential homes. "There's tremendous pressure
for development," Levesque said.
International Paper Co. spokeswoman Amy J. Sawyer said her
company is "contemplating selling some or all" of its 6.8 million acres of
forest land scattered across the country and focusing on producing more
profitable products such as uncoated papers and packages.
"We're exploring whether there's more value in holding and
operating the land or in selling it," Sawyer said. "That's what we're
weighing."
And the St. Joe Co., a onetime timber and paper outfit, is
pushing to build on tens of thousands of its acres on Florida's Emerald Coast.
Advocacy groups such as the Natural Resources Defense Council are fighting to
preserve the land, whose long-leaf pine forests, cypress swamps and wetlands
sustain red cockaded woodpeckers and dozens of other endangered and threatened
species.
Environmental groups such as the Conservation Fund, the
Nature Conservancy and the New England Forest Foundation have tried to limit
the environmental impact of the sell-off by purchasing habitats that hold the
greatest ecological value, but they cannot afford to buy all the vast expanses
and halt this trend outright.
Chris Larson, executive director of Northern California's
Mattole Restoration Council, an environmental group, said groups such as his
are analyzing the Securities and Exchange Commission filings of timber
companies to gauge whether they might sell their holdings to ease their debt.
"People are just learning how to do this," he said.
In several instances, they have been able to close a deal.
In 2004, the Conservation Fund bought 24,000 acres of working forest along the
Garcia River in Mendocino County from Hawthorne Timber Co. for $18 million. It
plans to begin logging some trees there this summer to make enough money to pay
property taxes and restore key ecological areas.
Now the fund is hoping to buy the Big River and Salmon Creek
tracts from Hawthorne and to create a business model other environmental groups
can follow.
"We need to move away from this black-or-white idea that
either it's preserved or destroyed, it's a national park or not enough," said
Chris Kelly, who heads the fund's California office. "If you're trying to
protect a landscape, if you're trying to protect 300,000 acres, it's
impractical" to preserve the entire area as pristine wilderness, Kelly said.
In November, the Conservation Fund bought nearly 7,700 acres
of the most sensitive lands along the headwaters of Maine's Machias River. A
month later, it bought 1,600 acres of land in Georgia, just a fraction of the
roughly 300,000 acres timber giant Weyerhaeuser recently sold in the state.
Fund officials resold the tract to state officials, who plan to turn the area
into a nature preserve.
Rex R. Boner, a vice president at the fund, said his and
other environmental groups would like to buy more land but "we just don't have
the collective ability to do that."
The forest sales have sparked a sense of urgency among
conservationists because the holdings constitute much of the remaining intact
ecosystems outside of public lands, he said: "It's sort of like Humpty Dumpty.
If they're sold, we'll never get them back together again."
Like Georgia, Maine reveals both the promise and the
pitfalls of the forest land rush. Maine has the largest contiguous block of
undeveloped forest east of the Mississippi -- at least 10 million acres, or
more than half of the state's entire land mass. Most of it was once owned by
paper companies, but this is shifting quickly. According to the
Massachusetts-based Manomet Center for Conservation Sciences, 20 million acres
changed hands in Maine's North Woods, north of Bangor, between 1980 and 2000.
In several cases, conservationists, working with local
communities and business owners, have been able to stem development's tide.
Jeff McEvoy owns Weatherby's lodge in Grand Lake Stream, a town on the edge of
Maine's North Woods. When Typhoon LLC, a timber investment company, wanted to
sell off 339,000 acres in the region, the New England Forestry Foundation
raised $30 million along with locals, enough to buy the development rights and
create a 27,000-acre working forest that is logged but supports wildlife.
"People come here for the pristine wilderness experience,"
said McEvoy, who runs hunting and fishing trips out of a lodge that has thrived
for 130 years.
In the nearby town of Greenville, however, a real estate
investment trust called Plum Creek Timber Co. has been buying and converting
forests into residential and vacation homes. Last year, it proposed turning a
stretch of forest into two resorts and nearly 1,000 private lots. Maine's Land
Use Regulatory Commission initially rejected the application, and in the coming
weeks the company is expected to submit a more environmentally friendly
proposal.
In Big River, however, timber companies and conservationists
have been able to make common cause. Levesque and his bosses at Campbell
Timberland Management would prefer to sell some of their forest to the
Conservation Fund so the community can keep its logging jobs and wildlife can
continue to thrive. A fisheries biologist with a master's degree in forest
hydrology and engineering, Levesque is as enamored of Big Creek as the
environmentalists hoping to buy it.
"These are special places," he said, looking up at the
redwoods standing by the river's edge. "It's kind of an ecologist's dream."
Researcher Carmen Chapin contributed to this report.
C 2006 The Washington Post Company
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